Mark McGowan is a director and actor, known for uk18 (2017), Austerity Is a Scam (2016) and Daily Politics (2003).
Mark McGrath was born on March 15, 1968 in Hartford, Connecticut, USA. He is an actor and composer, known for Scooby-Doo (2002), Wild Things (1998) and The Sweetest Thing (2002). He has been married to Carin Kingsland McGrath since September 24, 2012. They have two children.
Mark McIntire is an actor and assistant director, known for Web of Life (2022), Exit 91 Summerland (2011) and The Pirate (1978).
Mark McIntyre is an actor and director, known for Bar Wars (2015), Frat Pack (2018) and Queer as Folk (1999).
Mark McKenna is an actor, known for Sing Street (2016), Overlord (2018) and Wayne (2019).
Mark McKerracher was born on February 21, 1956 in Pasadena, California, USA. He is an actor, known for Goodbye Christopher Robin (2017), The Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall (2011) and La tigre e la neve (2005).
Mark was born to Canadian diplomat Russell and architectural writer Chloe McKinney. Mark and his siblings spent much time traveling with their diplomat dad, and Mark attended schools in many cities around the world, including Trinidad, Paris, and Washington, D.C. His younger brother Nick is also a comedian; he appeared on the short-lived Comedy Central sketch-comedy show The Vacant Lot. Mark met Bruce McCulloch at the Loose Moose Theater Company, and the two joined two other comedians to form the comedy troupe 'The Audience,' which performed at Theatresports. Later, Mark and Bruce moved to Toronto and met Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald. They combined to form The Kids in the Hall. Later he starred in the TV cut sensation The Kids in the Hall (1988); after it was canceled in 1994, Mark joined the cast of Saturday Night Live (1975) from 1995 to 1997. He had roles in various movies including A Night at the Roxbury (1998), The Out-of-Towners (1999), The Ladies Man (2000), and Dog Park (1998), and Superstar (1999) which were both directed by Kids In The Hall co-star and friend Bruce McCulloch.
Born on a Marine Corps base in North Carolina, Mark McKinnon was always an active child. A multi-sport athlete - including football, basketball, and cross country running - Mark still found the time to pursue the arts. Inspired by landing the lead role in his high school play, he turned down several football scholarships to attend Howard University in Washington, DC where he graduated with a BFA in Theatre Arts. After moving to New York, he continued his training with several prestigious acting coaches such as Rob McCaskill and Ted Sluberski. Perhaps best known for his leading role as Derik Dubois in BET's The Waiting Room some of his other credits include recurring roles in Blue Bloods (CBS) and FBI (CBS), as well as appearances on Gotham (FOX) and The Blacklist (NBC). Alongside various A-List names, Mark is an alumni of the 2020 ABC Diversity Showcase in New York.
Mark is a Scottish actor originally from Edinburgh where he was born on September 23rd 1980. He graduated from The Edinburgh college in 2010. He made his feature film debut playing the lead in comedy caper 'Electric Man'. He has since gone on to appear in several feature films and award winning short films as well as appearing on the stage in London and Edinburgh festivals.
Mark McLaughlin's career was nearly cut short... It happened after he directed a dangerous stunt shot. In the one-take scene, a 12-year-old boy rode his bicycle at high speed onto a ramp and into the air, jumping over five children laying on the ground just a couple of feet beneath him. He cleared them all... by inches. When the kid's mother saw the "dailies," she went nuts and immediately confiscated all of the production equipment, which consisted of a super 8-movie camera and, well, that's it. There was nothing Mark could do. After all he was only twelve himself, it was his friend's camera and -oh yeah- his friend's little brothers and sisters were under the ramp. Even against such odds, Mark continued to make films and videos. Recently he has been writing and producing original programming for the Documentary Channel, was Unit Production Manager on an action movie, created a retrospective on Hollywood Musicals for PBS and a wrote a special on the Student Academy Awards for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Before that, he produced a feature documentary about Superman for Warner Brothers as well as produced and shot Fox Movie Channel's tribute to Shirley Temple fans, "Shirleymania." He spent a couple of months living in a tent at the North Pole while producing "Surviving Mars" for the Discovery Channel, and he hung out with an 80-year-old ex-stripper at the Burlesque Hall of Fame while producing "Rewind America." His independent feature documentary, "Keepers of the Frame," has been shown at dozens of major film festivals and on AMC (American Movie Classics). Before that, Mark was responsible for the television advertising of Water World, a large theme park in Colorado. He directed several award-winning commercials for the park. As a freelance film sound technician, Mark has worked on commercials, television and feature films and earned a national Emmy nomination. Mark has traveled the world working on programs such as "Nova," "Scientific American Frontiers" and many more.