Mark L. Young is an actor, known for We're the Millers (2013), Sex Drive (2008) and Movie 43 (2013).
Mark L. Young is an actor, known for We're the Millers (2013), Sex Drive (2008) and Movie 43 (2013).
Mark L. Young is an actor, known for We're the Millers (2013), Sex Drive (2008) and Movie 43 (2013).
Mark La Mura was born on October 18, 1948 in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, USA. He was an actor, known for All My Children (1970), Something Borrowed (2011) and Baked in Brooklyn (2016). He was married to Elizabeth Maclellan. He died on September 11, 2017 in New York City, New York, USA.
Mark La Pointe is an actor, known for Bizarre Murders (2018), Warframe (2013) and Dining Out (2001).
Mark LaBelle is an actor, known for Nighthawks (2012), Cascadia (2010) and A Frosty Affair (2015).
Mark Labbett was born on August 15, 1965 in Tiverton, Devon, England. He is a producer and actor, known for NGW British Wrestling Weekly (2014), Beat the Chasers (2020) and The Chase (2013). He has been married to Katie since October 11, 2014.
Mark Labella is a Cebu-born, San Diego-raised, award-winning screenwriter and actor, a veteran Hospital Corpsman of the United States Navy, and graduated with a doctorate in Medicine. He received his first screenwriting training at the WGA Veteran's screenwriting program and has produced, and written, multiple projects including the Chicago Screenplay Award-Winning "MisDiagnosed" medical comedy series, the murder-mystery thriller "Catholic School", and the comedy series "Soul & Spice". As an actor, he's appeared in features "The Plane" with Gerard Butler, television shows "NCIS:LA," "Magnum P.I.," "Chicago Fire," Disney's "Doogie Kamealoha," and more. His passion for storytelling at a young age, when he received the library's student of the month award at St. Columba because of his passion for books and poetry, and confusing many of his peers. He also began at a young age leading to a school musical at the age of 7 despite his parents, being in the medical industry, who did not encourage such a career. With his full array of experiences as an MD, as a first-generation immigrant, Mark Labella chooses to tell stories that promote perspectives rarely seen in Hollywood. He has seen the poorest of the poor, the most incredulous of medical emergencies, and the most gruesome of sides of humanity, and he aims to focus his career as a screenwriter and producer on stories that show heart, and humanity. Mark Labella boasts the record of being the ONLY sailor in the history of the United States Navy to have his very Asian mother show up at her only son's barracks because he did not answer his phone for two days. He uses such experiences growing up with his beautifully-strange Filipina mother in his writing, his array of adventures from his U.S. Navy days providing care for Marines and Sailors to his misadventures as a doctor that include delivering babies in the middle of the street during an earthquake. And though he has a medical doctorate, he gave his mother another reason to pop yet another blood vessel by quitting medicine for the much more stable and highly dependable work that is screenwriting and Hollywood. Today, he Hamilton-writes like he's running out of time, not simply because writing has always been his first love, and he's been writing since he can remember. But he fights to succeed and give back to my aging mother, who, despite her quirks, worked hard selling chewing gum and comic books in the streets of Cebu while going to nursing school to provide him a great life in America.
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Mark Lainer is originally from Worcester, MA, went to high school at Worcester Academy and graduated magna cum laude from Amherst College in Amherst, MA with a degree in Neuroscience. He spent time as a bookkeeper and accountant, interned as a research biologist for the Upjohn Pharmaceutical Company, and, while traveling in East Africa for six months, volunteered as a technician at a village hospital and taught bookkeeping and accounting at a small technical college in Kilifi, an island off the coast of Kenya. Bitten by the acting bug during junior high school, he finally decided to try to make a go of it as an actor and moved to New York City, where he did a great deal of stage work, as well as some TV and commercials. He trained as an improviser and writer with Groundlings East (later Gotham Improv), performed with improvisational and sketch comedy troupes in New York City (including the "New York Improv Squad," "Unexpected Company" and "Style Without Substance") and was brought to Orlando as a founding member of the "Who What and Warehouse Improv Company," the resident improv troupe at Disney's Comedy Warehouse on Pleasure Island. He later performed at a number of different venues at Walt Disney World and Universal Studios Florida. He also performed improvisationally with the ensemble at Sak Comedy Lab in Orlando. He has written, directed and performed in many corporate events all over the world for such companies as Walt Disney World, Ford Motor Company, Ernst & Young and Eckerd Drug, as well as having led many corporate training seminars in the application of improvisational techniques to the business world and to facilitate the creative development of students. He has also continued to do theater, performing in Central Florida with the Orlando Shakespeare Theater, Orlando Theater Project, Vine Theater and Mad Cow Theater in partnership with the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra, as well as theaters in Los Angeles and Massachusetts. On the big screen, he most recently appeared as Hostage (AKA The Guy Who Can't Put His Hands Down) in the Disney/20th Century People's Choice Award winning hit film "Free Guy," starring Ryan Reynolds (Deadpool) and Jodie Comer (Killing Eve), and directed by Shawn Levy (Stranger Things). He starred in the Academy Award and Emmy Award winning FSU student film "Slow Dancin' Down the Aisles of the Quick Check" (screened at the Cannes Film Festival and winner of numerous film festival prizes), the Coca Cola Refreshing Filmmaker Grand Prize winning film "Escape Back to the Movies" (shown on hundreds of film screens nationwide), the independent short film "The Meeting" (shown at the LA Independent Film Festival, Florida Film Festival, and on the SyFy Channel show "Exposure") and was featured in the films "Confessions of a Florist," "Alligator Alley," "Unconscious," "My Own Love Song," "The Year of Getting to Know Us," "A Grave Matter," "The Little Mermaid," and "Love Weddings, and Other Disasters." On the small screen, he was most recently seen on CBS's "FBI." He co-starred in Fox TV's "Bones," A & E's "The Glades," USA Network's "Burn Notice," AMC's "Halt and Catch Fire," and USA Network's "Graceland." He had a recurring role on the syndicated series "The Cape," and was featured in Episode Five of the award winning HBO miniseries "From the Earth to the Moon." He has had featured roles in the syndicated TV series "Sheena, Queen of the Jungle," Disney Channel's "The Jersey," USA Network's "Sins of the City," ABC's "Second Noah," Fox's "Fortune Hunter," NBC's "seaQuest," as well as various Nickelodeon productions. A partial listing of the TV commercials he's appeared include national and regional spots for PNC Bank, Slick 50, Campbell's Soup, K-Mart, Regions Bank, Middleton Pest Control, NAPA Auto Parts, the Florida Lottery, Florida's Natural Orange Juice, the Massachusetts Census, and Harvard Pilgrim. He is currently based in the Northeast US and is represented theatrically in NY and the Southeast by The Lisa Lax Agency, commercially in NY by Ingber Associates, and commercially and theatrically in New England by Model Club,