Having only been pursuing on camera roles for a few years, Conrad Bluth is a relative newcomer to the entertainment business. In this short amount of time, Conrad has established himself as a very strong actor, booking pivotal roles in big projects and gathering many industry fans along the way. He guested on CBS' Criminal Minds and Nickelodeon's Bucket and Skinner's Epic Adventure, and starred in the Hallmark television movie A Christmas Wedding Tale as Jennie Garth's son. Conrad will next join the cast of Emmy-Nominated Creator Michael Caruso's Winterthorne and recently completed principal photography on the film Bullies. He can be seen in the Universal Studios' Stephen King film Mercy opposite Chandler Riggs that also stars Dylan McDermott and Frances O'Connor and in another film titled Mercy (yes, same name...) with The Hunger Games' Amandla Stenberg, Mission Impossible's/Two Guns' Paula Patton, and Terminator's Robert Patrick, which is directed, produced, written by, and stars Robin Thicke, as well as a lead role in the film Camp. Conrad is a highly competitive basketball player, a major History buff, and a self-proclaimed expert on Greek Mythology.
Conrad Brandt is an actor, known for Nitram (2021).
Conrad Brooks was born as Conrad Biedrzycki on January 3, 1931 in Baltimore, Maryland. He was the son of Polish immigrants, with a baker father, and had seven brothers and sisters. At seventeen, along with his brothers Henry and Ted, he went to Hollywood, California. Brooks first encountered legendary Grade-Z filmmaker Ed Wood in a donut shop. Conrad first collaborated with Wood on the fifteen minute short movie "Range Revenge." Brooks had three roles in Wood's "Glen or Glenda." He achieved his greatest enduring cult popularity as Patrolman Jamie in "Plan 9 from Outer Space." Conrad briefly popped up in the uproariously awful cheapie clunker "The Beast of Yucca Flats." Brooks took a hiatus from acting in the 1960s and 1970s. He came back with a vengeance in the 1980s and went on to work profusely in a slew of enjoyably tacky low-budget independent fright features. Conrad acted in three amusingly crude comedies for director Mark Pirro: "A Polish Vampire in Burbank," "Deathrow Gameshow," and "Curse of the Queerwolf." Brooks has a small role as a bartender in Tim Burton's wonderful "Ed Wood." Conrad gave a really funny and engaging performance as flaky, good-natured projectionist Oscar in Fred Olen Ray's delightful "Bikini Drive-In." Brooks appeared in a bunch of pictures for director Donald G. Jackson; he's especially memorable as the amiable Swamp Farmer in "Rollergator," "Toad Warrior," and "Max Hell Comes to Frogtown." Conrad also wrote, produced, and directed a few films that include "Gypsy Vampire" and all three "Jan-Gel" movies. Brooks was interviewed in a handful of documentaries about Ed Wood. Moreover, Conrad was also a regular guest at horror movie conventions held all over the country and lived in northeast West Virginia. Brooks died at age 86 on December 6, 2017.
Conrad Carpenter is an American actor from Sissonville, WV. He has worked on the feature film "Logan Lucky" as well as several television series, such as "MacGyver" and "Being Mary Jane". He primarily works out of Atlanta, but occasionally travels north for commercials and/or independent film work. Major influences, pushing him into acting, have been Kevin Spacey, Leonardo DiCaprio and Al Pacino.
Conrad Chow is an actor, known for Silver Dragon Ninja (1986).
Conrad Coates is an actor, known for Tron (2010), Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief (2010) and X-Men: Apocalypse (2016).
Conrad Coleby was born on September 20, 1979 in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. He is an actor, known for The Wolverine (2013), All Saints (1998) and Headland (2005).
Conrad Cotterman is known for Science Team (2014), CRIT! Cyber Party Massacre and Assassinaut (2019).
Conrad Crane is known for Medal of Honor (2018), American Experience (1987) and Utimate World War II Weapons (2013).
I am Conrad M. Craven, a writer, director and cinematographer from Houston Texas. My journey in film began in 2008 when I started shooting music videos for local artists. Later I received a B.S. in Digital media from The University of Houston and began creating content as the Creative Director of Phusion Platforms, an academic co-op program designed to help media students gain practical experience working in film and television. At this point of my career I was working full-time and making independent movies on the side. Most of my initial work in film was as an editor and cinematographer, but later I began writing, directing and producing. Writing screenplays became a cathartic practice that allowed me to explore topics I had strong opinions about in novel ways. It was the perfect marriage between my insatiable need to create and my curiosity about the human mind. My goal is to one day have my name mentioned in the same sentence as one of my many film idols and inspirations: Tarantino, Scorsese, Spielberg, Fincher, Kubrick, Cameron, Coogler, Levinson, Lee and Perry just to name a few.