Vaughn has recently become much more involved in acting, after a small appearance in God's Not Dead: A Light in Darkness. Watching very experienced actors such as Tatum O' Neal, Ted McGinley and John Corbett, and getting a chance to learn from them, has inspired him to more work. Starting a couple of years ago, after watching his daughter Morgan acting, but unable to find roles for her age, he began to see if getting into the field would help him find roles for his daughter. Since then, Vaughn has appeared in several student films, along with upcoming appearances in Preacher Six and Life's Masquerade. He has done some stage work, appearing in local productions of Hamlet and It's a Wonderful Life. He has also done commercial work and voice overs for independent productions. He is married, very happily so, to Linda, and has one daughter, Morgan. He calls both Little Rock, AR and Vancouver, BC his home towns, after spending 12 years in British Columbia during his teen and early adult years.
Vaughn Green is an actor, known for 50 Shades of Girls (2013), The Lone Road (2016) and As Evil Does (2018).
Vaughn Harrison Oberhuber is an actor, known for A Wrestling Christmas Miracle (2020).
Vaughn Johseph is an actor and producer, known for Venom: Let There Be Carnage (2021), Justice League (2017) and The Art of Racing in the Rain (2019).
Vaughn Lucas is an actor, known for The Giver (2014), The Last Days of American Crime (2020) and Desert Rose (2022).
Vaughn Meccod is an actor, known for Paulie Go! (2022).
Vaughn Wilton Monroe was born October 7, 1911 in Akron, Ohio, and his family moved to Wisconsin shortly thereafter. Monroe showed an early talent for the trumpet and focused most of his early efforts on that. Monroe wanted to be an opera singer, but the Depression made pursuing such a career impractical. Instead, he sang as a vocalist with several bands, among them Austin Wylie (who later worked for Artie Shaw), Larry Funk (for which he made his recording debut), and Jack Marshard. It was Marshard who realized Monroe's talent, brought him out from the brass section, and turned him into a conductor. At the urging of Marshard and many others, Monroe started his own orchestra in 1940. RCA Victor immediately signed him to a contract. From 1940 until 1954, he had over 70 chart hits. One of these is the one he's best known for today: "Let it Snow! Let it Snow! Let it Snow!", the 1946 version of which is heard at the end of the first two Bruce Willis "Die Hard" films. The tall, handsome Monroe, whose signature tune was "Racing With the Moon", was very popular in the 1940s and early 1950s. His band was heard every Sunday on the radio in America (under contract to Camel cigarettes) and played to full ballrooms everywhere they went. Some of the musicians who regularly toured with Monroe included guitarist 'Bucky Pizzarelli', saxophonist Adny Bagni, Bobby Nichols, singer Mary Jo Grogan, Trumpeter Bobby Nichols, trombonist Ray Conniff, and well-known jazz pianist Arnold Ross. The big band business started losing steam in the early 1950s, and Monroe gave up his band in 1953. For the next 20 years, he worked as a single and on the nightclub circuit, while maintaining his contract with RCA Victor as their spokesman. Monroe died May 21, 1973, shortly after undergoing stomach surgery.
Vaughn Page is an actor, known for Amsterdam (2022), Bust Down (2022) and Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty (2022).
Vaughn Stein is known for Terminal (2018), Yussef Is Complicated (2015) and Never Let Me Go (2010).
Reedy, balding, often bespectacled American character actor with pencil-thin moustache, once described as the man with TV's 'most deceptive face'. He looked like - and was - a certified public accountant, graduate from Northeastern University. A struggling actor in his youth, he worked in stock, tent shows and on radio. After army service in World War II, he became a prolific performer in early anthology series on television (eg. Kraft Television Theatre (1947) and Robert Montgomery Presents (1950)), though he continued to alternate these with appearances on the New York stage. He was also glimpsed in movies, invariably in small supporting roles, most notably as Deacon Davis in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958), and as George Lowery, boss to doomed Janet Leigh in Psycho (1960). Vaughn reserved his best for the small screen, where he showed his versatility in genial or waspish roles, often as doctors, judges and bankers. He was capable of portraying benevolence as easily as taking on the mantle of greedy or corrupt attorneys, or second-string grifters (his repertoire even included vicious real-life gangster, George 'Pa' Barker, in an episode of The Untouchables (1959)). Among his numerous TV credits, his five journeys into The Twilight Zone (1959) stand out in particular. Severe spinal deterioration brought about Vaughn's retirement from acting in 1976. His wife of many years, Ruth Moss, a fellow graduate of the Leland Powers School, was a noted Boston radio personality and Broadway actress.