Wayne J. Miller made his professional stage debut as Will Parker in Oklahoma!. He followed that with more than 20 years of leading roles in live dramatic theater and musical comedy. Among his favorite roles are Georges in La Cage Aux Folles, Mack Sennett in Mack and Mabel, Julian Marsh in 42nd Street, Warbucks in Annie, Nicely-Nicely Johnson in Guys and Dolls and Pseudolus in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. His most recent appearance was as ex-US President William Jefferson in the Castillo Theatre production of VOTES on New York's iconic 42nd Street. He appeared in principal roles on the CBS-TV classic daytime drama, The Guiding Light, and has recently been seen on The Good Wife, The Outs, Madame Secretary, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Mozart in the Jungle, A Crime to remember and others. As a director, he helmed the New York premiere of Steven Deitz's Yankee Tavern, an acclaimed production of To Kill a Mockingbird and an award winning revival of The Andersonville Trial. He continues to perform, direct and design in the New York City area.
Wayne Jackson is known for Behind the Attraction (2021) and Dead Men Tell No Tales: The History of the Attraction (2004).
Wayne Jobson is a producer and actor, known for Reach Me (2014), Prelude to a Kiss (1992) and Stepping Razor: Red X (1992).
Wayne Johnson was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He has produced several Feature Films and Television Shows. Wayne started his entertainment career in 1999 as a screenwriter. Mr. Johnson is an optioned screenwriter who has written on assignment for Producers, Studios, and Actors. Mr. Johnson wrote an original DC Comics and Warner Brothers Picture's Green Lantern script for Sunrise Entertainment. Mr. Wayne Johnson started Lafayette Pictures Production Company. He has established an Extremely Knowledgeable and Well Respected Team of individuals within the Entertainment Industry to assist with making Lafayette Pictures one of the Top Entertainment Production Companies in Hollywood. Mr. Johnson is the Producer of the independent film, 'Unraveling the Urban Pedigree' and the award winning docudrama 'Chasing Greatness' for Making Others Believe Entertainment. Mr. Johnson has produced independent films and has been a producer on major productions, focusing his talent and skills within the Development of film and television production. Throughout the years of writing screenplays and Pitching, Developing, and Producing films, Mr. Johnson has gained relationships with many studios, networks, and talent agencies.
Wayne Jones is known for Welcome to Wrexham (2022).
Wayne Jones is known for Stay Human (2018).
Wayne Juice Mackins is known for Grey's Anatomy (2005), Shook (2019) and Blue Bloods (2010).
Wayne King Sr. was born in 1942. He is known for Minority Report (2002), Colors (1988) and Ruthless People (1986). He died in 2001.
Actor Wayne Knight achieved television immortality assaying the role of the frenetic mailman "Newman", nemesis of the eponymous lead character in the classic TV series Seinfeld (1989). He also appeared in Jurassic Park (1993) as "Dennis Nedry" and in one of the most notorious scenes in American cinema as one of the detectives interrogating Sharon Stone during her leg crossing in Basic Instinct (1992). Wayne Eliot Knight was born to Grace (Monti) and William Edward Knight. He is of Italian and English descent. Knight was raised and lived in Cartersville until attending the University of Georgia in 1972. Despite being an honor student, Knight left school to join the Barter Theatre company in Abingdon, Virginia, before graduating. (He finally secured a BFA degree in 2008.) Following an internship of two years, Wayne was hired for the professional company and earned his Equity card. Now a professional actor, Knight moved back to New York, where he made his Broadway debut, at 23, in the long-running comedy "Gemini" in 1979. Through the years, he has established himself as a leading character actor in television as a regular or recurring character in seven series, in film (ranging from Dirty Dancing (1987) to JFK (1991)), on the stage, and as a voice artist in animation. In TV Land's original sitcom The Exes (2011), Knight plays homebody "Haskell Lutz", who lives in an apartment with "Phil" (Donald Faison) and "Stuart" (David Alan Basche), right across the hall from his divorce attorney, "Holly" (Kristen Johnston).
Wayne Kramer is a songwriter, producer and composer whose reputation writing music for television and film risks supplanting his legend as one of music's stellar guitarists. Rolling Stone Magazine recognizes him as one of the top 100 guitarists of all time and highlights from recent composing and playing can be heard in the upcoming Will Ferrell comedy "Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby" for Sony Pictures. His signature song "Edge of the Switchblade" runs at the end title credits for the film. On television, Wayne's 2003 title theme for Fox Sports Network's extreme sports program 5-4-3-2-1 was a bona fide hit and he now has three others running there - Spotlight, In My Own Words and Under the Lights. He has been building a catalog of cues for their network library throughout 2005 and 2006. Wayne's songs have been featured in a wide array of shows, including MTV's Jackass series, Judging Amy for 20th Century Fox TV and Chris Carter's Fox series Millenium. Additionally, his songs are regularly heard in NFL, NBA and MLB Playoff events, as well as BMX extreme videos and many Food Network productions. Wayne's songs can be heard in various feature films including Cameron Crowe's Almost Famous, the Ramones' Rock 'n' Roll High School, October Films' action film Detour, Mary Harron's I Shot Andy Warhol and Pump Up the Volume starring Christian Slater. His current film scoring work includes composing a jazz score for the full-length feature documentaries "The Narcotics Farm" and "Votergate." Wayne founded the MC5, widely recognized as the prototype for punk rock and heavy metal. In 1969, they released the ridiculously controversial album Kick Out The Jams on Elektra Records, which included the hit of the same name. After leaving Elektra, they released two albums on Atlantic Records, Back In The USA, produced by Bruce Springsteen's manager Jon Landau, and the critically hailed High Time. Between world tours, Wayne wrote scores for the Caroline Films feature Gold and The Living Theatre's film production of Paradise Now. Wayne spent the'80s in New York City, where he teamed up with the infamous Johnny Thunders for a short-lived, but headline grabbing, punk rock supergroup Gang War. Soon after, Wayne co-wrote the acclaimed R&B musical The Last Words of Dutch Schultz with Mick Farren, then he co-founded the revolutionary acid funk outfit Was (Not Was) with David and Don Was. Wayne moved to Los Angeles in 1994, signed with Epitaph Records and recorded four records in as many years: The Hard Stuff (1995), followed by Dangerous Madness (1996), Citizen Wayne (1997) and a live album LLMF (1998). He also produced and co-wrote the album Full Circle with John Sinclair and His Blues Scholars and produced a retrospective collection for Rhino Records entitled The Big Bang: Best of the MC5 as well as the punk compilation Wayne Kramer Presents: Beyond Cyberpunk for MusicBlitz. Wayne launched MuscleTone Records in 2001. Its flagship release for 2002 was his own album Adult World. In 2003, he music-directed a performance for the DVD entitled Sonic Revolution: A Celebration of the MC5. A 30-minute documentary of that reunion performance was produced by MuscleTone Records in partnership with Levi's Vintage Clothing and was broadcast on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom in 2004. The hour-long edit of the concert is now a broadcast staple for Trio Networks in the USA. Wayne runs the label, tours the world as a musician, speaker and activist. He regularly writes with, and produces, upstart rock `n' roll bands.