Brian Beacock is an actor, writer, producer and musician from the San Francisco Bay Area. After completing the National Tour of "Les Miserables," he moved to Los Angeles where he created a diverse career including; Voice-overs for more than 30 animated series and video games including various "Digimon" series, "Naruto," "Bleach," "Durarara," Monokukma in the "Danganronpa" game series, "Doreamon," "Blue Exorcist," "Tenkei Knights," "Code Geass," "Blue Dragon," "Battle B-Daman," "Toradora," "Tales of Symphonia," "Dragon Ball," "Dragon Ball Super (Toonami Asia)", "Bobobo-Bobobobo", "Sailor Moon" and more. Television appearances: "Imagination Movers," "Kath & Kim," "CSI," "Passions," NBC's "The Rerun Show." Films include: "Colt Racer," "To The Beat", "Mulholland Drive," "Buying The Cow," "Globehunters," "Circuit," and the upcoming horror feature "Hollow Scream." Brian has been a featured performer at the world famous Roxy on The Sunset Strip, PS 122 in NYC, and as the featured musical guest on "The Conan O'Brien Show" and "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" (singing for Betty White). Theatre credits include: the West Coast Premiere of "Elegies," "When Pigs Fly," "Pageant," "The Last Hairdresser," "Naked Boys Singing," and the insane 35-character one-man show "Fully Committed." He and his work have been featured in the New York Times, US Magazine, People Magazine, TV Guide, Rolling Stone, Backstage West, LA Times, LA Weekly, USA Today, Daily Variety, and Entertainment Weekly. Not just an actor, Brian won the Royal Television Society's "Best Main Title Theme" Award for his lyrical composition work in "Playing It Straight," the UK's hit musical reality program, for which he wrote and produced 30 songs on location, performing them live on-set. As a writer/producer he is behind the much lauded and hugely successful web series "McCracken Live!" which won numerous awards and was one of only 22 shows in the world chosen to be in Europe's first webseries festival in Marseille France. Brian is the creator/writer/producer of the new insane zombie comedy "Acting Dead" which won a Primetime Emmy Award for actress Patrika Darbo, in addition to other numberous awards including best comedy and best writing at the Indie Series Awards. You can bite-and-binge watch all of Season 1 now on Amazon Prime Video. Stop by and say hi on Twitter and Instagram @brianbeacock, and check out www.mccrackenlive.com and www.actingdead.com.
Brian Becker is a director and producer, known for Father'sDaze (2020), Bhutan Height of Happiness? (2009) and Birmingham Now (2019).
Brian Beckerle is an actor, known for Koe no katachi (2016), Billions (2016) and Chang Can Dunk (2023).
Brian Beckman is an American actor and producer born on March 6, 1990. He grew up in Dallas, Texas, and, after studying Dramatic Arts at college, began writing and performing comedy in Los Angeles. Since, he has been working on both stage and screen since his television debut in American Horror Story (2015). He is of German and Spanish descent.
Brian Beezub is an actor, known for Ninja: Prophecy of Death (2011), Wendigo: Bound by Blood (2010) and Swamp Zombies 2 (2018).
Brian Bell was born on December 9, 1968 in Knoxville, Tennessee, USA. He is an actor and composer, known for Factory Girl (2006), Permission to Exist (2020) and Weezer: Buddy Holly (1994).
Charming, compactly built, extremely affable American actor Brian Edward Benben was born on June 18, 1956, in Winchester, Virginia, to Gloria Patricia (Coffman) and Peter Michael Benben, Sr., a produce buyer. His paternal grandparents were Polish. Deciding on an acting career while quite young, he started things out at age 17 performing in off-off-Broadway shows in New York. Such late 1970s theater works included "Wild Oats," "The Tooth of Crime," "The Overcoat," "Gossip," "A Moon for the Misbegotten" and the role of Bottom in "A Midsummer Night's Dream". During his early twenties he began to pursue TV work and made an auspicious debut on the very serious side with the infamous The Gangster Chronicles (1981), in which his Michael Lasker character was a barely disguised version of real-life mobster Meyer Lansky. He also played a gay lover in the TV movie drama American Playhouse: Family Business (1983), starring a straight-acting Milton Berle, and then portrayed Tom Hayden, the California senator who was once convicted, along with others, of inciting riots that disrupted the 1968 Democratic National Convention, in the redramatization of Conspiracy: The Trial of the Chicago 8 (1987). Brian also had supporting roles that also accentuated his serious side, in the feature films Clean and Sober (1988), Dark Angel (1990) and Mortal Sins (1989). He got regular series work in the late 1980s playing a chauvinistic hospital resident who felt women had no place being surgeons on the short-lived medical drama Kay O'Brien (1986). But it was the sexually frank sitcom Dream On (1990) that catapulted Brian to stardom as the self-effacing, newly divorced book editor Martin Tupper. The cable show, which took on a whimsical, if much more hormonal, Thurber-like feel, lasted six seasons. During that run he was given a choice starring part in the film Radioland Murders (1994). Had the series been on a first-rank network (it was on Fox briefly in 1995), his star power might have luminesced even more brightly. Nevertheless, this led to his second starring sitcom role, in which he used his real name to play a news co-anchor, on the very aptly titled The Brian Benben Show (1998) for CBS. The show, for which he was co-executive producer, had a much shorter life than "Dream On". Since then, Brian has maintained amenably on TV, particularly in mini-movies. He was found mixing it up with Diane Keaton in the irreverent Sister Mary Explains It All (2001), playing at odds with William Hurt in the drama The Flamingo Rising (2001) and returning to his mob roots in the mini-series Kingpin (2003), this time as a morally tormented surgeon. Other series work included a doctor in the "Grey's Anatomy" spinoff Private Practice (2007) and a clever grifter in Imposters (2017) On stage, Brian took his initial Broadway bow in "Slab Boys" alongside Sean Penn, Kevin Bacon and Val Kilmer. Brian has been married since 1982 to actress Madeleine Stowe, who played his wife Ruth Lasker in the "Gangster" series. The couple has a daughter (May Theodora, born 1996) and own a working cattle ranch in Texas.
Brian Benni is a writer, known for Family Karma (2020) and Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen (2009).
Brian Benschek is known for Killer Tales (2023).
Brian Bentley is an actor and writer, known for Friday Night Lights (2006), Temple Grandin (2010) and Smash It (2010).