Benjamin Bratcher is known for One Piece: Wan pîsu (1999), Concrete Revolutio: Chôjin gensô (2015) and Sengoku musou (2014).
The middle of five children, Bratt hails from a close-knit family. His mother, an indigenous Quechua Peruvian from Lima, moved to the U.S. at age 14. He grew up in San Francisco. He is known for his roles in the films Traffic (2000), Miss Congeniality (2000), and Despicable Me 2 (2013). He is married to actress Talisa Soto.
Benjamin William Breault is an American television and film actor from Boston Massachusetts. He is best known for his roles in The Society (2019), Selah and The spades (2019), and Dexter New Blood (2021). Benjamin recently co-produced and starred in his own short film called, Playing With fire (2021). Benjamin is based in Los Angeles, CA.
Benjamin Brewer is a director and writer, known for Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022), Skrillex & Diplo Feat. Justin Bieber: Where Are Ü Now (2015) and Beneath Contempt (2011).
Benjamin Brody is known for Hustle (2022), The Unknown Trilogy (2007) and Christmas with You (2022).
Benjamin Brouant is known for Cosmic Love France (2023).
Benjamin Brown has performed stand up comedy internationally and almost everywhere in between New York City and Los Angeles. Benjamin has also worked extensively on stage, television, and film for over twenty years. He has produced and starred in the award-winning television show,"Omba Mokomba" for the Disney Channel in the late 1990s and currently produces and stars in the Fox television series, "Safari Tracks" currently syndicated around the world. He is an Artistic Director of Yearning To Learn, Inc. which produces educational residencies, plays, and creative learning workshops. He has developed Arts in Education programming for various organizations including: People's Light And Theatre Company, United States Army, Kindercare, Decatur United Methodist Church Atlanta, and many more. Yearning to Learn, Inc. has recently produced two exciting touring educational shows under his direction. "Magical World Folktales "and "Tafari's Folktales From Africa!" "Magical World Folktales" promotes the exciting and rewarding joys of reading and creative expression. "Tafari's Folktales From Africa!" is a storytelling adventure that builds listening skills, verbal expression, and interpretive skills.
Benjamin Bryant is an accomplished film, television, radio, and news/communications professional with more than 70 credits as writer, director, actor, producer, and himself. Co-host of the award-winning travel docuseries Journeys Beyond (2020) and investigative podcast The Brink with Benjamin Bryant's Intersections (2019), Bryant is also an accomplished voice actor, portraying troubled hotelier "Gregory Marshall" on the audio serial Forever and a Day (2020) since the show's first season, as well as a besotted Prince Nolan Nutcracker in the JLJ Media holiday special "The Sugar Plum Fairy and the Nutcracker Prince," and its follow-on series, "The Grown Up Adventures of the Tooth Fairy." In 2020, Bryant wrote and directed his first feature film, the psychological drama Station to Station (2021), after his announced first film (the sports comedy Aidy Kane) suspended filming after two weeks due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Previously, Bryant served as Senior Producer and Co-Executive Producer of the Daytime Emmy-winning (6x nominated) series Anacostia (2009). Though Bryant's first experience on a feature film set was in the mid-1990s (as a background player in Ed Zwick's Courage Under Fire (1996)) he spent the first half of his career as an accomplished communications professional, including stints working in global public relations, crisis communications, and as in senior roles on high-profile government commissions, working groups, and task forces for the Pentagon and Barack Obama administration (including the Fort Hood Shooting Task Force and "Don't Ask, Don't Tell Working Group" that recommended and guided repeal of the controversial military policy). During that time he frequently appeared in the news as a spokesperson, subject matter expert, or guest contributor and served as a speech- and ghostwriter for senior corporate and government figures. The vast majority of his work in film, television, and digital media has come in since 2016, when Bryant first sought to balance the demands of his government and corporate work with various artistic endeavors. Bryant's additional work includes work as writer, director, producer, and announcer of live and virtual benefits and cultural celebrations, featuring high-profile celebrities and politicians and highlighting Bryant's African- and/or Asian- American heritage, including DNC AAPI Caucus Heritage Month Celebration (2021). Bryant lives in the Washington, DC metro area, working most frequently in Las Vegas, New York, Los Angeles, and multiple cities throughout the world.
A multi-produced and award-winning screenwriter known for mixed narratives, political-intrigue, and broken relationships in drama, comedy, action-thriller, and Transcendentalism, Benjamin Budd also brings extensive backgrounds in conflict zones, crime, academia, geopolitics, Fine Art, and more. Concurrent with over 20-years in film and TV, Ben pursued supporting interests in the international sphere. Building on an undergrad in the Arts and an early background in the collaborative environments of advertising, Ben pursued passions in film, talent, comedy, and writing, placing in such contests as the Nicholl and the Page International. When the opportunity arose, he traveled to Britain to earn an MA in a subset of International Relations concerning irregular conflict and crime in post-conflict zones, and soon began writing features for a US film studio. In 2013, Ben accepted a job teaching Internally Displaced Children at a local grade-school in Kurdish Northern Iraq, forgotten at the airport and finding his way across the landscape to the office of his new employer. Over two-years with no security or parachute he lived locally in Erbil, seeing Mosul fall just 40-miles west, and the nearby Ministry of Justice destroyed in a plot right out of 2007's "The Kingdom." He has stood by the mass graves of al-Anfal in Halabja on the Iranian border, and traveled on the ground throughout the region; Kirkuk, Diyarbakir, Sulimainyah, etc., and on one accidental detour, by bus through the Mosul suburbs. On April 17, 2015 Ben was sipping a beer in Ainkawa when they hit the consulate across the street. An IED is never like the movies, but rather more an instant in time so precise it doesn't register, except the furniture finds itself on the other side of the room. Ben lived while sadly others did not. While continuing to write film, he went on to perform ad hoc country risk analysis and consult on media and extremism, particularly around the constitutive nature on epistemic identity, being published, and even delivering a paper in London on the subject. He also went on to pursue high-risk security credentials in South Africa, including volunteer nightshifts in a mobile ambulance through the Cape Town townships where body-armor was compulsory. He has taught Hostile Environment Awareness Training to deploying humanitarians, including a well-known A-list actor, and provides remote production security to media crews, such as in the Kenosha, WI unrest. While committed to equitable representation in his writing, to date Ben has over 1200-pages of produced screen with names.
Benjamin Bull is known for Familiye (2017).