James Moreland is known for The Nursery (2018) and Sheila and the Brainstem (1989).
James Morgan is an award-winning director of film, television and commercials. Recent work includes Becoming You, a six-part documentary series for Apple TV+, narrated by Olivia Colman, and Sea Dragon, a period heist film about the discovery of the first ichthyosaur. Both will be released this autumn. Previously, James made Jago: A Life Underwater - a feature documentary about an 80-year-old sea nomad in Indonesia. The film won numerous awards on the festival circuit and was distributed by Netflix and the BBC. (2020) James is currently developing a narrative feature based on his BFI-backed eco-thriller Seven. Set in the Norwegian Arctic, Seven plays out in real-time, telling the story of a young woman from a remote community who is forced to preside over an indigenous murder trial.
British actor James Morgan grew up in the town of Maesteg in the Llynfi valley in South Wales. With his natural aptitude for making people laugh he has been described as a "born entertainer" and from a young age he channeled this into theatre, which helped focus his boundless energy and enthusiasm. With thirteen years of acting experience behind him he is becoming a veteran of the South Wales stage. Years of treading the boards in his hometown resulted in his first lead role as Billy Crocker in "Anything Goes", and since then he has continued to enjoy prominent casting. He continued this trend in his transition from stage to screen, taking the lead roles in the short films Covered and The Things Unsaid (the former winning him the Best Actor award at the 2004 It's My Shout Awards, and the latter earning him his accreditation by the 59th Festival de Cannes in 2006) A versatile actor, James' wide range of performances has raised comparisons with namesakes James Cagney and Jim Carrey. Highlights of his career to date have included stepping into Donald O'Connor's tap shoes for the role of Cosmo Brown in "Singin' In The Rain", and joining the prestigious Swansea Little Theatre to play the role of George in Steinbeck's Of "Mice and Men". His work with the company, which once counted Dylan Thomas among its members, gained plaudits and news coverage that reached as far as New York in the summer of 2008 giving him cause to think about taking his career across the Atlantic. James also serves as a director of British indie film partnership Seraphim Pictures.
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James Morosini is an actor and filmmaker originally from Boston, MA. After his first micro-budget feature THREESOMETHING found distribution in 2018, James wrote his award-winning script for I LOVE MY DAD (Screencraft Winner 2020) which he directed and starred in opposite Patton Oswalt. I LOVE MY DAD had its World Premiere at SXSW 2022, winning both the Narrative Feature Grand Jury Award AND Audience Award. Variety's Peter Debruge praised the film as "funny, cringey, [and] all-too-credible." In addition to Morosini and Oswalt, I LOVE MY DAD stars Lil Rel Howery, Amy Landecker, Ricky Velez and Rachel Dratch. The film was bought by Magnolia Pictures and will be in theaters Nationwide August 5th. Along with writing/ directing, James has had major roles as an actor in AMERICAN HORROR STORY, FEUD, LETHAL WEAPON, and HBO's THE SEX LIVES OF COLLEGE GIRLS.
James Morris is known for Le Mans: Racing Is Everything (2017).
James Morris was born on April 26, 1988, in Provo, Utah. He started making films at an early age and was later able to hone his creative skills at East Hollywood High, a film charter school, from which he graduated in 2006. He is an actor, director, producer, and writer, known primarily for his work in the independent horror genre.
James Morris is an actor, known for 43: The Richard Petty Story (1972).
A filmmaker, playwright, poet, actor, singer/songwriter and yoga teacher, James Morrison was born in Utah and is a product of Alaska. He began his acting career as a clown and wire walker for the Carson and Barnes Wild Animal Circus and served his theatrical apprenticeship with the Alaska Repertory Theatre. Since then, he has appeared at some of America's foremost theatres including the McCarter Theatre, the La Jolla Playhouse, the Mark Taper Forum, LA TheatreWorks and The Old Globe with such renowned directors as Robert Egan, Emily Mann, Des McAnuff, Jack O'Brien, Charles Nelson Reilly, Jose Quintero, Martin Jarvis, and Harry Mastrogeorge, his acting teacher since 1982. He is the recipient of the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Performance and three Drama-Logue Awards. In 1985 he appeared in the London premiere of Emily Mann's Still Life at the West End's Donmar Warehouse and the Riverside Studios after a stint in The Edinburgh Festival at the Traverse Theatre where the production received a Fringe First Award. His radio credits include L.A.TheatreWorks productions of Pressure - as General Eisenhower, The Rainmaker as Starbuck with the cast of the Broadway revival, Ruby McCollum in which he stars as William Bradford Huie, Judgement at Nuremberg - starring as Chief Justice Dan Haywood, the U.S. tour of In the Heat of the Night and Julius Caesar. Morrison's short film, Parking (1996), which he wrote and directed, was produced by his wife, Riad Galayini. Parking screened at twenty film festivals world wide including New York's New Directors/New Films presented by Lincoln Center at the Museum of Modern Art, Slamdance (audience choice award for best short), Austin's South By Southwest Festival, the Central Florida Film Festival (third place narrative film award), the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival, the Montreal World Festival, The Festival of U.S. Shorts in Brisbane, Australia, Ireland's Cork International Film Festival, and the Northampton Film Festival where it received the Best Short of the Festival Award. Parking also ran on Sundance Channel for 18 months. With Ms. Galayini, he co-wrote and co-produced her directorial debut, Nude Descending (1997), which received The George Melies Award at the 1998 Taos Talking Picture Festival and has screened at the Nashville Independent Festival and Short Cuts in Paris. In 2000, Nude Descending was selected for special recognition by the Hitchcock International Director's Series presented by the American Cinematheque. Their latest film, the documentary, Showing Up (2014), is a feature-length conversation about the actor's audition. Most recently, James developed and performed his one-man play, Leave Your Fears Here at the Ojai Playwrights Conference. Morrison's plays have also been produced and/or developed at the Sundance Institute, Ensemble Studio Theatre, The Playwrights' Center of Minneapolis, L.A. TheatreWorks, The MET Theatre, Two Parts Theatre Company, The Classical Theatre Lab, City Theatre in Miami, The Road Theatre, The Mojo Ensemble, The Wooden O, The Philadelphia Fringe Festival and the Salt Lake Acting Company where he has directed several plays including those by Sam Shepard, John Robinson, Larry Shue and Beth Henley. As a singer/songwriter his albums, Son to the Boy and I Broke Free are available on iTunes CD Baby, Amazon and all digital outlets. James was a Lecture Fellow at Bournemouth University School of Media in England and received his certification to teach Hatha Yoga from Ganga White and Tracey Rich at the White Lotus Foundation in Santa Barbara where he sits on the Board of Trustees. He taught regular classes at the YogaWorks Center for Yoga in Los Angeles for 10 years. James and Riad live North of Los Angeles and their son, Seamus, who just graduated from UCSB.