Peter Kybart was born on 7 December 1939 in Berlin, Germany. He is an actor, known for Inside Man (2006), The Good Shepherd (2006) and Miracle at St. Anna (2008).
Peter L. Allen is a scholar, author, business executive, professor, and collector, who as a college student spent a summer as the personal aide and driver to controversial power broker Roy Cohn. He holds degrees from Haverford College, the Université de Poitiers, the University of Chicago (Ph.D.), and Wharton School (M.B.A.) and is the author of The Art of Love (1992), The Wages of Sin: Sex and Disease, Past and Present (2000), and the co-author of At Home around the World: The Short-Term Rentals Handbook for Guests, Hosts, Neighbors, and Governments (2018). His eclectic career has included teaching at Yale-National University of Singapore College, Nanyang Business School, the University of Southern California, Princeton University, and the University of Chicago; working at McKinsey & Company as a consultant and member of the strategy practice; serving as the founder and first director of Google University, the company's first central learning and development program, and first Head of People, then Vice President of External Affairs, at Agoda, the 4500-person Asian travel subsidiary of Priceline.
Peter L. Larson is known for Jurassic Fight Club (2008), Dinosaur 13 (2014) and Dinosaurs (2018).
Peter LaCroix was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He is an actor, known for Disturbing Behavior (1998), Stargate SG-1 (1997) and Riding the Bullet (2004).
Peter was born in Sofia,Bulgaria. He is an actor and he is playing in some of the most famous theaters in Sofia. He was also a producer of a TV show. He is very much in to extreme sports such as kite surfing, free ride snowboarding, diving, motocross and sport bikes. He also speaks English, French, and German
Peter Laird is an American comics artist and writer from North Adams, Massachusetts. His main claim to fame is co-creating the hit series "Teenage Mutants Ninja Turtles" with his then-partner Kevin Eastman. Next to nothing is known about Laird's family background and his early life. Unlike Kevin Eastman, he has rarely spoken about his background in interviews. He was born in 1954, and he was in his early 30s by the time he became a professional comics creator. In the early 1980s, Laird worked as an illustrator for a newspaper located in Dover, New Hampshire. His rates at the time were 10 dollars for each new illustration. To supplement his meager income, Eastman also created illustrations for fanzines. In 1983 or 1984, Laird met aspiring comics artist Kevin Eastman who was searching for a publisher for his work. Laird was also interested in becoming a comics artist, and the two men decided to collaborate on creating their next works. In 1984, Eastman and Laird had a brainstorming session in an effort to find ideas for their own comic book series. They decided to parody elements from four popular comics series of the early 1980s: Marvel Comics' "Daredevil" (about a super-powered mutate with ninja training) and "New Mutants" (about a team of teenage mutants), Dave Sim's "Cerebus the Aardvark" (about an anthropomorphic aardvark who has sword- and-sorcery style adventures), and Frank Miller's Ronin (about a long-dead Japanese ronin who is reincarnated in a dystopian version of New York City). They combined elements from all four series into the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" (TMNT for short). Eastman and Laird decided to self-publish the first issue of TMNT, founding the publishing company Mirage Studios to do so. The company was funded through a loan from Eastman's uncle Quentin. They chose the name "mirage", because their company was more an illusion than a reality. The company mostly consisted of its creative duo, and lacked actual offices. The first issue of TMNT was published in May, 1984. It was a black-and-white publication, only 40 pages long, The duo had the idea to advertise their product by sending a four-page press kit to 180 television and radio stations, to the Associated Press and to the United Press International. The result was that the comic book received much publicity, unusually so for a product by a fledgling publisher. The initial print run for the first issue was 3,275 copies, and they were quickly sold out. Due to high demand from market, three additional printings were published the Summer of 1984 and September, 1985. Eastman and Laird had a sales success in their hands. There were advance orders of 15,000 copies for the second issue. Eastman and Laird earned a profit of 2,000 dollars each. They decided to quit their day jobs and to become full-time comic book creators. Eastman and Laird made deals with other companies, granting them the right to create TMNT tie-ins and merchandise. Within a few years, there was a high demand for more TMNT stories and material. Laird has stated in interviews that he did not expect either the TMNT's rapid success, nor the pressures involved in trying to run both a company and a media franchise. For a while, Laird struggled with artist's block. He also realized that he no longer enjoyed drawing. One solution for Laird's problems at the time was to hire more creative staff to help with the workload. Among the early additions to Mirage's staff were letterer Steve Lavigne, inker Ryan Brown, penciler Jim Lawson, and cover artist Michael Dooney. The company gained its first real offices in Florence, Massachusetts, in order to properly house the new staff. The Mirage creative team produced most of their work in-house, instead of relying on freelancers. Further additions to Mirage's staff in the late 1980s included writer and artist Eric Talbot, writer Stephen Murphy, and inker Dan Berger. Murphy would eventually be promoted to managing editor of Mirage, shouldering much of the workload. By 1990, Eastman had grown tired of working exclusively on TMNT and wanted to expand to new projects. Laird refused to either help him or to finance these projects. Eastman founded his own company, Tundra Publishing, while Laird remained at the head of Mirage. From this point on, Laird was de facto Mirage's only publisher, while Eastman progressively distanced himself from the company. In 1992, Laird founded the nonprofit corporation Xeric Foundation, headquartered in Northampton, Massachusetts. The corporation's main goal is to grant funds to comic book creators who want to self-publish new projects. Laird felt that he owed his success as a self-publishing writer and artist to the loan he had received from Quentin Eastman. He felt that other aspiring creators could have a chance at success, if they have sufficient funds. Over the following decades the corporation has helped fund projects by many writers and artists. In 2000, Laird partially bought out Eastman's ownership rights on Mirage and the TMNT franchise. According to the terms of the deal, Eastman was left with a small continuing income participation. In 2008, Laird purchased the remaining rights from Eastman, and briefly became the sole owner of the TMNT franchise. In 2009, Laird sold the rights to the TMNT franchise to media corporation Viacom. Mirage became a subsidiary of Viacom. The rights were mainly handled by Viacom's subsidiary Nickelodeon, which was interested in financing new adaptations of the franchise. By the terms of the deal, Laird maintained the rights to annually create and publish up to eighteen black-and-white comics based on the TMNT franchise. By 2021, Laird was 67-years-old. He infrequently writes or draws new comics projects, and is otherwise semi-retired.
Peter Lalor is known for Death of a Gentleman (2015), The Test: A New Era for Australia's Team (2020) and Deadly Women (2005).
Peter Lambert Smith is known for Saturday Night Special (1994) and Presenting Susan Anton (1979).
Peter Land is an actor, known for The Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall (2011), Ruthless! The Musical (2019) and Dear World - A Musical Fable (2013).
Peter Landesman began his filmmaking and TV career after starting as an award-winning painter and novelist, and investigative journalist and war correspondent for the New York Time Magazine, Atlantic Monthly, New Yorker and others. As a journalist, Landesman covered the conflicts in Rwanda, Kosovo and Afghanistan/Pakistan after 9/11; and broke ground-breaking investigations into weapons trafficking; sex trafficking and slavery; drug and refugee trafficking; art and antiquities forgery, trafficking and con-artistry; and the anatomy of the lethal violence of street gangs in Los Angeles. His journalism was twice awarded Overseas Press Club awards (the magazine world's Pulitzer) for best International and Human Rights reporting. He has written and directed the films, Parkland, about the immediate aftermath in Dallas of the JFK assassination; and Concussion, with Will Smith, about the whistle-blower who discovered the deadly disease caused by playing football. His next films will be The Last Battle, about the last - and perhaps the most remarkable - battle fought in Europe in WWII, in the chaotic and terrifying days following Hitler's suicide; and The Mission, about the rescue of three American hostages kidnapped by the FARC in the Colombian Amazon. He has also written the films Kill the Messenger, starring Jeremy Renner; and The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, starring Oprah Winfrey. He is the creator and director of the upcoming television series, The Department, for AMC.