James F. Leo is an actor, known for Maysville (2021), Woodstock or Bust (2018) and A Zombie Christmas (2017).
James F. Murray Jr. started his love for film making, by being an extra on the re-make of King Kong (1976). Co-wrote and produced Mad Ron's Prevues from Hell (1987), then went on to co-write, co-produce and co-direct the sequel, Celluloid Bloodbath: More Prevues from Hell (2012). Dozens of films followed after that, acting in some, but in most, his niche is Set Photography, with films such as: The Fay (2013), Potent Media's Sugar Skull Girls (2015), The Grievance Group (2015), Where Is My Golden Arm? (2015), Countdown (2014), One Night At Dante's (2014), Death Follows (2013), Take 2: The Audition (2015), Jenna Remembers (2015), The Payback (2015), Brains (2015), The Invitation (2015), Cheat-hos: A Political Comedy (2015), The Arc (2015), Star Wars: Precious Cargo (2015), Herrings (2015) By The Dashboard Light (2016), Brains (2015), Caught On Tape (2015), Silent Service (2016), Breaking Balls (2016), Hurt: The Elegant Deception (2016), Beast: The Chronicles Of Parker (2016), SPiN: Zombie Girl (2016 music video), among others. The films Brains & Beast: The Chronicles Of Parker, used photos taken by James, for their respective advertising posters. Wrote the voice-over narration copy, for the trailer for Slaybells (2014). Supplied posters and still photos for various books on Hollywood actors/films and film trailers for some home video releases, on laserdisc and DVD. Was a Judge for the 2014 Zed Fest Film Festival in Hollywood, Ca.
James Fadiman is a producer, known for Groove (2000), Stealing America: Vote by Vote (2008) and RECLAIMING Their VOICE: The Native American Vote in New Mexico & Beyond (2009).
James Fairfax was born on August 10, 1897 in Scarborough, Yorkshire, England. He was an actor, known for Against All Flags (1952), Fortunes of Captain Blood (1950) and Last Train from Bombay (1952). He was married to Jessie C. Adams. He died on May 8, 1961 in Papeete, Tahiti.
James Fajardo is an actor, known for Fan Girl (2020).
James Falkland was born James Brown in Scotland and began acting at the age of eleven. While serving in the R.A.F., he met and married his wife Debonnaire while both were serving as instructors in Berlin. Upon completing service, he returned to the U.K., where he later joined the Shakespeare Company at Stratford. In the 1960's the family moved to Malta, where he joined the Malta Amateur Dramatic Society as actor and director. In 1970 they moved to Kenya, where the couple became regular repertory players the Donovan Maule Theatre in Nairobi, which was at the time the only full-time rep company in Africa. He took over management of the theatre in 1979, but due to the combination of limited audiences and rising costs, he gave up his lease on the theatre in 1983, at which time he, Debbonaire, long-time Maul regular Kenneth Mason (the banker in Out of Africa), and former UK children's show host James Ward, established the appropriately named-Phoenix players, with its intimate basement theater on Parliament Road near the former site of the Donovan Maule Theatre. Falkland maintained a year-round repertory schedule and produced an annual musical, complete with a pocket orchestra, maintaining an impressive level of quality. Working with the American international school, he also produced and directed a series of truly stunning musicals, including Guys and Dolls and Fiddler on the Roof; the latter involving spectacular revolving sets that set a new standard for theatre in East Africa. In the late 1980's, with the goal of bringing theatre to remote locations for the first time, he put together a small company that held performances at various locations around Kenya.
James H. Fallon, Ph.D. is Professor of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at the University of California, Irvine. He holds a Sloan Fellowship, Senior Fulbright Fellowship (Africa) and NIH Research Career Award. He was Chair of the UCI Faculty and Academic Senate and Chair of the UCI College of Medicine and Medical Center Faculty. He sits on numerous corporate boards and national think tanks for science, biotechnology, the arts, and the military. He is a Subject Matter Expert to the Pentagon in the field of cognition and war, Vice Chair of the American Land forces Institute, and a founding member of the Vatican Arts and Technology Council. His research program is focused on four areas, including adult stem cells, chemical neuroanatomy and circuitry, higher brain functions, and brain imaging, including imaging genetics studies of depression, schizophrenia, addiction, language disorders, personality, intelligence, male-female differences in cognition, AI, consciousness and anesthesia, human cortical development, sleep, emotional memory, and modeling of neural circuits, and law, culture, psychopathy, murder, dictatorships, and the brain. Fallon's lab was the first to find how to mobilize adult stem cells to reverse the deficits in models of chronic stroke and Parkinson's disease, which was recently heralded as one of the top seven breakthrough findings of the decade. Fallon and his colleagues also conduct research on the neural circuitry and genetics of creativity, artistic talent, extraordinary abilities, paleobiology, sleep virtual reality in the brain, and levels of consciousness. At present, his lab group is reconstructing the brains, genomes, art and culture in paleolithic and Neanderthal hominids. In addition to authoring over 300 papers and books, he has written two personal books, "Virga Tears: The true story of a soldier's sojourn back to Vietnam" and "The Psychopath Inside: A neuroscientist's journey into the dark side of the brain" which was an Amazon best seller in the psychology field. Most recently in the past eight years, he has appeared in over three hundred and ninety national and international TV and radio specials on war, dictatorships, psychopathic behavior, murder, violence, and terrorism.
James Fallows was born on August 2, 1949 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. He is a writer and producer, known for Our Towns (2021), No End in Sight (2007) and The Robert MacNeil Report (1975).
James Faracci is an actor and director, known for the Carlo movie. James Faracci took his script to Rafael Primorac. Rafael produced films for Jean Claude Van Dame, Wesley Snipes, and Steven Segal. He liked my script, Carlo and made arrangements for Faracci to shoot his film at Fox Studio in Baja California. (Where they shot The Titanic.) They filmed Carlo in 15 Days working 16 hours per day.
James Farentino was an American actor, with many appearances in film and television. He is better known for playing fisherman and apostle Simon Peter in the miniseries "Jesus of Nazareth" (1977), and revenge-seeking psychiatrist Dr. Nick Toscanni in the soap opera "Dynasty". He played the role of Toscanni from 1981 to 1982. Farentino was born in Brooklyn, New York City. He studied drama and acting in a Catholic school. He was frequently cast in guest-star roles in television through the 1950s and 1960s. His first recurring role was that of lawyer Neil Darrell in the legal drama "The Bold Ones: The Lawyers" (1968-1972). He appeared in 19 of the series' 29 episodes. Farentino found critical acclaim in his role as Simon Peter in "Jesus of Nazareth" (1977. He was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or Movie, but the award was instead won by rival actor Howard Da Silva (1909-1986). Farentino next found a notable recurring role in the soap opera "Dynasty" as psychiatrist Dr. Nick Toscanni. Originally introduced as an old friend of protagonist Blake Carrington (played John Forsythe), Carrington was eventually revealed as a secret enemy of Carrington who held a grudge against him. Toscanni's vengeful plots were among the main subplots of the series' second season, but he was then written out. In the 1990s, Farentino continued working an an actor, but he gained more notoriety for his personal life. In 1991 he was arrested for cocaine possession, and in 1993 he was charged with stalking his former girlfriend Tina Sinatra. Later he had a troubled marriage with his fourth wife Stella Farentino. In the 2000s, Farentino entered retirement from acting, due to health problems. In 2010, Farentino was arrested on suspicion of misdemeanor battery, because he tried to physically remove a man from his house. Farentino was briefly held by the Los Angeles Police Department. He was released after posting a 20,000 dollars bond. In January 2012, Farentino died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. His death was caused from complications due to a right hip fracture. He was 73-years-old at the time of death, dying a full month before his 74th birthday.