Bert is an actor from Toronto, Canada who has appeared in numerous Canadian & US national commercials. Bert has also been featured in recurring supporting or lead roles in TV Shows such as St-Nickel (2016), We Three Queens (2023), Holidazed (2023) as well in supporting roles in feature films such as My Husband's Worst Mistake (2023), The Most Colorful Time Of The Year (2022) and Love At Sky Gardens (2021). Bertrand (Bert) Cardozo was born on January 7, 1983 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. The son of two Telecom entrepreneurs, Martine (Deas) and Patrick Cardozo, Bert is the oldest of three siblings. Very early, Bert demonstrated exceptional abilities to easily assimilate concepts on top of having the most surprising memory. Intrigued, Bert's grand-mother, Jacqueline Turian, who was a teacher and writer, decided to use Bert's skills as part of a personal study showing that kids can learn at any stage of their lives. Using her own teaching method, Jacqueline was able to teach Bert the alphabet as well as how to put words together by the age of 18 months. When he was 12, over the summer vacation, Bert figured out that he could make his own movies using his parent's camcorder. He wrote and directed a short film that was shot in sequence to avoid post editing. He cast his siblings and cousins as actors and decided to not act in it himself to ensure that his vision materialized. At the age of 14, Bert's parents took the decision to send him to boarding school in Boca Raton, Florida to continue high school from the 10th grade on. It is there, at Saint-Andrew's School, that Bert discovered his passion for acting when he took Stagecraft as his required arts elective. The course was taught by Ms. Teresa Vignau who encouraged Bert to be a stage manager for 6 plays over the course of 3 semesters. As much as Bert wanted to audition for these plays and get to be on stage instead of off, he had to make some difficult choices and fulfill his other obligations as a tri-athlete. With his newly sparked passion, on a whim, Bert was eager to pursue acting in college. However, like any concerned parent, his father had other ambitions and strongly believed that the entertainment industry was filled with too much uncertainty. Ideally, that Bert would have a degree to fall back on. Bert reluctantly applied and got accepted to the Computer Science program at the University of Hartford in Connecticut. In the meantime, back home, his family was coping with growing safety concerns and his parents unwillingly decided to sell their business and move the entire family to Toronto, Canada. Bert was then pulled from the University of Hartford after his freshman year and arrived in Toronto in 2001. After spending a year studying Computer Science, Bert did not want to pursue that as a career. Still needing something to fall back on, Bert went to York University to study Economics. After four years of studies and a sabbatical year, determined to achieve his personal goals, Bert dropped out of school in 2006 and got accepted at the Toronto Film School where he graduated in 2008. Bert has been acting professionally since 2012 when he signed with Colin McMurray. He has been represented by Stephanie Clement of Artists Management Inc. as his agent and manager since 2016.
Bert Cayanan is known for Dune Warriors (1991), Turing Gesmundo, Kapitan Langgam (1992) and Gising na... ang higanteng natutulog (1995).
Bert Convy was born on July 23, 1933 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. He was an actor and producer, known for The Cannonball Run (1981), Weekend Warriors (1986) and The Snoop Sisters (1972). He was married to Catherine Hall and Anne Anderson. He died on July 15, 1991 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
Born in Orange, New Jersey, Conway was the son of vaudevillians -- his father was an acrobat and juggler, his mother, a singer and pianist. Conway studied at the Neighborhood Playhouse School in New York. In 1937, he joined the Group Theater as an assistant stage manager and had a walk-on part as a boxing arena employee in Harold Clurman's original 1937 staging of Clifford Odets' "Golden Boy." Within a year, Conway was playing a lead, as a reform school youth in "Dance Night," staged by Lee Strasberg. After serving in the Army during World War II, Conway headed for Hollywood, where he played minor parts in William Wyler's The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) and Elia Kazan's interracial drama Pinky (1949), and had small roles in other films. Conway began directing in 1947 at the Actors Lab in Hollywood, and he directed the first interracial production of "Golden Boy" for the Negro Art Theater in Los Angeles. But in 1950, caught up in the Hollywood blacklist era and finding film job offers drying up, Conway returned to New York. After working as an understudy in Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman," during which he got to play Biff Loman "for one glorious week," Conway went on to direct "Hedda Gabler" and "La Ronde" at the Actors Lab. He subsequently directed an off-Broadway revival of "Deep Are the Roots" and made appearances with Joseph Papp's New York Shakespeare Festival. In addition to road company productions of "The Caine Mutiny Court Martial" and "On a Clear Day", he had small roles in the movies The Three Musketeers (1948), Little Big Man (1970), and The Arrangement (1969) and on TV's St. Elsewhere (1982). Conway also worked in local theater productions. With Los Angeles' Group Repertory, he had roles in Miller's "A Memory of Two Mondays" and in Eugene O'Neill's "Ah, Wilderness!" Conway was preceded in death by his wife of 21 years, Aletta, and his brother. He is survived by a son, Robin of Mission Hills, and two grandchildren.
Bert Coot is known for Battle of Dunkirk: From Disaster to Triumph (2018).
Bert Dillard was born on March 25, 1909 in Equiela, Texas, USA. He is known for Rainbow Valley (1935). He was married to Rose M. He died on June 19, 1960 in Ruidoso Downs, New Mexico, USA.
Bert Effing is known for Bob Ross: Happy Accidents, Betrayal & Greed (2021).
Bert Franzke was born on March 7, 1946 in Halle, Germany. He is an actor, known for Die Geschichte Mitteldeutschlands (1999), Tatort (1970) and Tiere machen Leute (1988).
During the '50s and '60s it seemed like every time you turned around, there was Bert Freed as a detective, gangster, sheriff or greedy small-town businessman, and sci-fi fans will remember him as the police chief taken over by the Martians in the classic Invaders from Mars (1953). He played a lot of tough cops--sometimes crooked ones, sometimes racist ones, sometimes violent ones, sometimes a combination of all three--and a lot of tough soldiers, but he could also play a jovial family patriarch when called upon. Born and raised in New York, Freed began acting while attending Penn State University, and made his Broadway debut in 1942. His film debut occurred, oddly enough, in a musical--Carnegie Hall (1947)--and he went on to play everything from a gangster in a Ma and Pa Kettle movie (Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town (1950)) to a French army sergeant--a first-rate job, too--in the classic Paths of Glory (1957). It seems as if he appeared in just about every cop and detective series on TV at one time or another. He retired from acting in 1981, and died of a heart attack in Canada in 1994 while on a fishing trip with his son.
Bert Haelvoet (15 July 1978) is a Belgian actor, whose work includes De helaasheid der dingen (2009), Wat Als? (2011) and Spitsbroers (2015). He studied Drama at the famous Studio Herman Teirlink in Antwerp (Belgium). Bert is probably best known for his comedic skills but he's just as well-versed in drama and theater, touring nationally and internationally with numerous well-known theater collectives. His skills include archery and soccer and he speaks fluent Dutch (mother tongue), French and English. Bert resides partly in Antwerp, partly in Paris.