Stephen Full was born on November 13, 1969 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He is an actor, known for Cold Case (2003), Castle (2009) and Dog with a Blog (2012). He has been married to Annie Wersching since September 6, 2009. They have three children.
Known for: Better Call SauL, Season 4, Episode 410 "Winner" as Kenneth Kazanjian; The Not So Good Samaritan (2018) as Elder George; Heaven Sent (2016 Lifetime TV Movie) as George the mailman; Fight to Survive - The Journal (2014) for the Outdoor Channel as real-life Pastor Mike Turner. Born in Novato, California in May 1963 to William and Gretchen Austin, Steve was raised in Petaluma California where he graduated from Casa Grande High School in 1981. He served in the United States Air Force working first as a Security Forces and then as a Training Systems Specialist from August 1981 to May 2003 retiring as a Master Sergeant (E-7). Steve then worked for a defense contractor at Headquarters North American Aerospace Defense Command-United States Northern Command from 2003-2010 before transitioning to a government civilian job from 2010-2013. In 2013, Steve walked away from the "day job life" and after studying acting for film with Paul Neal Rohrer for 8 years, he was offered the opportunity to franchise his own acting coach business, as a full partner with acting coach and mentor Paul Neal Rohrer. Steve has more than 200 commercial and industrial projects to his credit as well as hundreds of voiceovers. He was the arena announcer for the United States Air Force Academy's Men's and Women's basketball games from 2001-1013. Steve a full-time on-camera acting coach, actor and voice talent in Colorado Springs, CO. He is married to Dana Austin (October 1983) and they have two adult children, Mark and Laura.
Stephen Fung is a international filmmaker who made his acting debut in Forbidden Nights(1990.) Since then he has starred in more than 40 films in Asia. In 2004, Stephen wrote/directed/starred in his feature film directorial debut "Enter the Phoenix" for JackieChan's newly formed company JCE Movies; it became an instant hit. His second directing/starring feature "House of Fury" marks Stephen's first collaboration with legendary action director Yuen Wo Ping (Matrix, Kill Bill) proves also to be a success. "House of Fury" was the opening film for the Hong Kong International Film Festival 2005, official selection for the 18TH Tokyo International Film Festival, and at home, the highest grossing Hong Kong film for the first half of 2005. Besides continuing with his acting career, Stephen directed "JUMP" written and produced by Stephen Chow for Sony Columbia Pictures Asia in 2009. In 2012 Stephen directed the first two installment "Tai Chi Zero" and "Tai Chi Hero" in the "Taichi Trilogy." The two films have won numerous awards and was the official selection for The Venice Film Festival, Toronto Film Festival, Busan Film Festival among others. In 2016 Stephen directed "The Adventurers" with an international cast starring Jean Reno, Andy Lau, Shu Qi. The film opened No. 4 internationally with a 30 Million USD weekend box office. Stephen is an Executive Producer, Director and Fight Director for the AMC's hit Martial Arts Drama "Into The Badlands." In 2019, Stephen directed and executive produced the first two episodes for Netflix's Wu Assassins.
Stephen Furst was born on May 8, 1954 in Norfolk, Virginia, USA. He was an actor and director, known for National Lampoon's Animal House (1978), Babylon 5 (1993) and The Dream Team (1989). He was married to Lorraine Furst. He died on June 16, 2017 in Moorpark, California, USA.
Stephen G. Brown is an actor, known for ReGenesis (2004), A Dark Matter (2013) and Queer as Folk (1999).
Stephen Gaghan was born on May 6, 1965 in Louisville, Kentucky, USA. He is known for Syriana (2005), Traffic (2000) and Dolittle (2020). He has been married to Minnie Mortimer since May 19, 2007.
Stephen Garnett is a creator in both music and film in all aspects, including producing, directing music videos as well as writing and performing as an artist. He's known for developing talent and creative collaborations with the top branding companies in the world and working with artists of all walks of life.
Stephen Geoffreys made a strong and distinct impression with his winning blend of wild energy and manic intensity that he brought to a handful of hugely enjoyable comedies and horror films made throughout the 1980s. He was born Stephen Geoffrey Miller on November 22, 1964, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Geoffreys first began acting at a performing arts high school in Cincinnati and attended acting classes at New York University. Geoffreys gave an excellent and inspired performance as obnoxious horror movie geek "Evil" Ed Thompson in the terrific Fright Night (1985). Stephen displayed a real flair for comedy with his amusing turns as the antsy Williams in Heaven Help Us (1985) and the nerdy Wendell in Fraternity Vacation (1985). Other memorable roles include persecuted wimp Hoax in 976-EVIL (1988), hardened inmate Roach in the dreary haunted prison dud The Chair (1988), and slimy drug dealer Cookie in Moon 44 (1990). Geoffreys did guest appearances on the TV anthology shows Amazing Stories (1985) and The Twilight Zone (1985). Stephen has also had a very respectable stage career: he's acted in the Off-Broadway productions "The Human Comedy" (Geoffreys was nominated for a Broadway Tony Award for Best Actor for the subsequent Broadway production of this play), "Maggie/Magalita," and "Songs on the Shipwrecked Sofa." In a startling and unexpected career move, Geoffreys wound up acting in numerous gay hardcore porno pictures under the pseudonyms Sam Ritter and Stephan Bordeaux. Outside of acting, Geoffreys writes short stories and is an avid bodybuilder. After a regrettably lengthy absence from the big screen, Stephen Geoffreys made a welcome comeback with a co-starring role in the indie fright feature Sick Girl (2007).
The young and naive Stephen George was first introduced to the entertainment industry when he was unexpectedly contacted by an unfamiliar out-of-stater, who invited Stephen to meet him in his hotel room because he liked the way Stephen looked. It turned out that a commercial was being produced for a Chicago public park and trail system for bicyclists and runners, and the commercial called for people of various ethnicities to be featured in it. Ultimately, Stephen was not cast in the commercial, possibly in part due to his clumsily worded joke about how silly it is for someone to run around if they are not being chased.