Walker Mintz is known for Nessie & Me (2016), A Doggone Christmas (2016) and American Horror Story (2011).
Walker Satterwhite is a Texas-born and raised actor and comedian living in Los Angeles, California. Walker is the co-host of Junk Drawer Magic on DreamWorksTV which boasts over 8 million subscribers and was recognized for his role with the 2017 Young Artist Award for best teen actor in a web series. He is the co-star of Junk Drawer Magical Adventures, a half-hour comedy series on Universal Kids. Walker has also appeared in various comedy sketches on DreamWorksTV and won the 2017 Young Entertainer Award for his performance as DJ Huffnagel in "Rap Battles No One Asked For." He appeared as Sam in Day 5 season one and season 2. Day 5 is the first dramatic series by Austin based Rooster Teeth Productions and winner of the 2016 Streamy Award in the category of Best Action Sci-Fi. Walker is a comedian who is a graduate of the Second City improvisation program and has also studied at Upright Citizen's Brigade, Groundlings, and L.A. Connection Theatre where he performs in weekly improv shows. He also studies stand-up comedy and improv with Comedy Playground and has performed live at the famed Hollywood Improv numerous times. Walker is a member of the Television Academy, volunteers at Big Sunday in Los Angeles as well as Blue Santa and Lunches of Love in Texas. His hobbies include playing the guitar, hip hop dance, boxing, CrossFit, watching 80's movies, magic, and the Rubik's Cube. He loves music of all kinds and enjoys listening to 40s Big Band, Frank Sinatra, Elvis, AC/DC, and Journey. His favorite quote is from Ferris Bueller's Day Off, "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while you could miss it."
Born into a military family, Walker has lived all over from sunny California to the mountains of Colorado. Walker learned to love acting in elementary school drama class and through his wonderful experience in a middle school play. After a trip to California, he decided to pursue a career in acting and started working on his craft right then and there. Walker has always done everything he can to make people laugh and developed quite the imagination - going so far as to surprise everyone on a class trip by suddenly emerging in a full Spider-Man costume! A huge fan of superhero movies, his favorites include Deadpool and Avengers: Endgame. When he isn't performing, Walker takes great joy in some of the more extreme sports such as snowboarding, skateboarding, and parkour!
Walker Whited is an editor and director, known for By Night's End (2020), Codes Abided (2017) and The Curse of La Patasola (2022).
Walker Wichmann is an actor, known for Elf Pets: Santa's St. Bernards Save Christmas (2018).
Walkisha Lee is an actress and producer, known for 9 Stacks (2021).
In 1902, 16-year-old Wallace Beery joined the Ringling Brothers Circus as an assistant to the elephant trainer. He left two years later after a leopard clawed his arm. Beery next went to New York, where he found work in musical variety shows. He became a leading man in musicals and appeared on Broadway and in traveling stock companies. In 1913 he headed for Hollywood, where he would get his start as the hulking Swedish maid in the Sweedie comedy series for Essanay. In 1915 he would work with young ingénue Gloria Swanson in Sweedie Goes to College (1915). A year later they would marry and be wildly unhappy together. The marriage dissolved when Beery could not control his drinking and Gloria got tired of his abuse. Beery finished with the Sweedie series and worked as the heavy in a number of films. Starting with Patria (1917), he would play the beastly Hun in a number of films. In the 1920s he would be seen in a number of adventures, including The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921), Robin Hood (1922), The Sea Hawk (1924) and The Pony Express (1925). He would also play the part of Poole in So Big (1924), which was based on the best-selling book of the same name by Edna Ferber. Paramount began to move Beery back into comedies with Behind the Front (1926). When sound came, Beery was one of the victims of the wholesale studio purge. He had a voice that would record well, but his speech was slow and his tone was a deep, folksy, down home-type. While not the handsome hero image, MGM executive Irving Thalberg saw something in Beery and hired him for the studio. Thalberg cast Beery in The Big House (1930), which was a big hit and got Beery an Academy Award nomination. However, Beery would become almost a household word with the release of the sentimental Min and Bill (1930), which would be one of 1930's top money makers. The next year Beery would win the Oscar for Best Actor in The Champ (1931). He would be forever remembered as Long John Silver in Treasure Island (1934) (who says never work with kids?). Beery became one of the top ten stars in Hollywood, as he was cast as the tough, dim-witted, easy-going type (which, in real life, he was anything but). In Flesh (1932) he would be the dim-witted wrestler who did not figure that his wife was unfaithful. In Dinner at Eight (1933) he played a businessman trying to get into society while having trouble with his wife, Jean Harlow. After Marie Dressler died in 1934, he would not find another partner in the same vein as his early talkies until he teamed with Marjorie Main in the 1940s. He would appear opposite her in such films as Wyoming (1940) and Barnacle Bill (1941). By that time his career was slowing as he was getting up in age. He continued to work, appearing in only one or two pictures a year, until he died from a heart attack in 1949.
Wallace Bridges is an actor, known for No Sudden Move (2021), Flipped (2010) and Trust (2010).
Wallace Brothers is known for David and Goliath (2016) and Alien Expedition (2018).
Wallace Chapman is an actor, known for Housebound (2014), The Jaquie Brown Diaries (2008) and The Project (2017).