Danny Lawrence is known for Blood & Treasure (2019), Blue Murder (2003) and Coronation Street (1960).
Danny Le Boyer was born in Bien Hao, South Vietnam. His father Jean Boyer was a Colonel and Commander of the 518th fighter Squadron for the Peoples Republic of Vietnam. Due to the fall of Saigon, his mother Ba Nguyen fled the country with Danny and his younger sister Christy Boyer. They left on a Military C-130 transport aircraft, and had survived over 3000 mortar rounds fired at the airbase the previous night. His Father Jean Boyer stayed behind to lead his men, only to be taken prisoner after the fall of Saigon, and became a P.O.W. for the next 13 years. Relocating to the United States Danny grew up in the Santa Clara Valley in California. Danny started his martial arts training at the age of 8 first with Karate, Tae Kwon Do, and later Jui jit su. His success led him to a Silver Medal in the California State Tae Kwon Do Championship at the age of 18, and he was the Kenpo Karate Grand National Champion. Danny has also competed in various Full Force Open Mixed Martial Arts competitions winning 1st place in his division. Dannys aunt Wynne Wicker worked on Apocalypse Now with director Francis Ford Coppola as his Vietnamese Technical Advisor. Apocalypse now won 2 Oscars along with 14 other wins and 32 nominations. Wynne Wicker also worked on Platoon with director Oliver Stone as his Vietnamese Technical Advisor. Platoon later went on to win 4 Oscars along with 18 other wins and another 9 nominations. Inspired by his aunts work Danny Le Boyer pursued a career in Film. Danny got his big break in Hollywood in 2000 when he received a callfrom Stephen McEveety, one of Mel Gibsons producing partners at ICON Productions, to come work on the film We Were Soldiers, directed by Randall Wallace. Danny worked on the project as the background casting director and Vietnamese Technical Advisor. We Were Soldiers later won the ASCAP Award for Top Box Office Films and 5 other nominations. Danny went on to work in Hollywood as a stuntman, stunt double, actor, and more recently as a stunt coordinator. Danny has worked on major blockbuster hits such as The Last Samurai with director Edward Zwick, and actors Tom Cruise and Ken Watanabe. Inception with director Christopher Nolan, and actors Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gorden-Levitt, Ellen Page, Tom Hardy, Cillian Murphy, and Ken Watanabe. Danny Le Boyer has worked as an actor alongside Johnny Depp Geoffrey Rush, Penelope Cruz, and Ian McShane on the much anticipated sequel in the Pirates of the Caribbean Franchise, On Stranger Tides, directed this time by Rob Marshall and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer. In 2007 Danny was nominated by the Screen Actors Guild Awards for Outstanding Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a motion picture on the film Pirates of the Caribbean, At Worlds End. In 2010 Danny was nominated and won the Screen Actors Guild Awards for Outstanding Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a motion picture for the film Inception.
Danny LeGare was born on April 25, 1979 in Rockville, Connecticut, USA. He is a producer and director, known for Grandpa's Psycho (2015), Marco Polo Boys (2011) and Finders Keepers (2018).
Danny Ledsinger is known for Android Cop (2014), Living with Martha (2015) and Makin It LA the Movie (2014).
Born & raised in Los Angeles to Korean immigrants, Danny Lee is an award-winning director, writer, and producer, known for sharp storytelling, an inventive style, and work that explores culture and humanity. Lee is known for 30 for 30: Friedman's Shoes, The Story of Air Max, and Road to Brooklyn. In 2004, Lee made his debut with the critically acclaimed Rock Fresh, a candid documentary about graffiti artists making the leap to commercial art. Variety singled it out as one of the films to watch at AFI Fest, while making its world premiere on Showtime. Currently, Lee is working on 26.2, a feature drama he wrote and is directing about the San Quentin Marathon; directing and producing a feature doc on tennis icon Stan Smith with the SpringHill Company. Previously in scripted, Lee directed the Lionsgate feature comedy Public Disturbance with Mike Tyson; and created, wrote and directed The Clinic for Hulu. In branded doc, Lee just directed The Story of Dunk for Nike. Previously in doc, Lee directed and executive produced Defining Moments on Hulu; After the Raves on Netflix; and The Cook Up with Ghetto Gastro on Spotify. Lee also executive produced the critically acclaimed primetime PBS docuseries Breaking Big. Lee has also directed and produced commercial campaigns for Nike, Nissan, Head & Shoulders, Red Bull, adidas, Intel, Gatorade, McDonald's, and American Express, Jaguar and more. For Nissan and ESPN, his branded series With Dad won the Best Branded Series at the Cynopsis Awards. For Red Bull, his documentary Skate or Die on high-risk Native American skater kids on the reservation is now part of the Smithsonian Institute. Lee was featured in Paper Magazine's 10th Annual Beautiful People issue, highlighting him as a filmmaker to watch. Lee and his work have also been featured in the New York Times, Variety, Hollywood Reporter, Deadline, HuffPost, Salon, GQ, and LA Weekly. Lee was also the winner of the Korean Film Council Filmmakers Lab for his feature film script Winter War. Lee is a member of the Director's Guild of America.
Danny Lee is known for Babysitter (2019).
Danny Lee Sau-Yin, was born in 1952 in Shanghai. Lee did not do so well in school and sometimes dropped out to help support his family by working. While growing up, he held policemen in high regard and so, upon graduating high school, he tried entering the police academy, but could not complete the courses. He entered the TVB acting school in 1970, and got his first big film role in the 1972 film Water Margin. The following year, Lee made his starring debut with River of Fury. He then went on to star in Shaw Brothers' 1975 Hong Kong Tokusatsu-style superhero movie and camp classic The Super Inframan playing the Chinese superhero himself. After superstar Bruce Lee's death in the same year, almost every star in Hong Kong was pushed in to fill "The Dragon's" shoes, and Lee was no exception, even going as far as to actually portray the legend himself in Bruce Lee and I. By the late 1970s, Lee had begun to tire of Kung Fu movies and thus tried his hand at different fare, such as 1977's The Mighty Peking Man (a King Kong ripoff now considered a camp classic). Still being offered roles in Kung Fu movies, in 1978 he decided to form his own production company. One of the earliest products from his company, 1981's The Executor (aka Heroic Cops) was largely nondescript, except for the fact that it was the first on-screen pairing with Lee and future superstar Chow Yun-Fat. In 1982, Lee directed his first movie, Funny Boys, and then followed it up in 1984 with the movie that would cement his image in the consciousness of Hong Kong, Law With Two Phases. The violent movie (for which Lee won both the Hong Kong Film Award and Taiwanese Golden Horse for his acting) featured Lee as a hot-headed but just policeman, a role that he reprises to this day. Law With Two Phases also inspired other directors. Some of the elements used in the shootouts were used by John Woo in his breakthrough 1986 film A Better Tomorrow, and Law's documentary-like look inspired Kirk Wong to continue with a similar style (which he was also developing at the time). Both directors subsequently asked Lee to work with them. Lee appeared with Chow Yun-Fat in Ringo Lam's 1987 gangster classic City on Fire (where he plays a rare role as a criminal), and then appeared in John Woo's benefit project for Chang Cheh, Just Heroes (1987, which Lee also co-directed). Lee's next project with Woo was, of course, his most famous, 1989's The Killer. Originally, the studio did not want Lee in the role of a cop once again, but both Woo and Chow Yun-Fat insisted on putting Lee in the film, since he was so much in the public's minds as being an upstanding police officer, which they thought was crucial for the role. The movie was an international cult hit, and Lee became forever associated with being a cop in Western minds. In 1987, Lee formed his second production company, Magnum Films, and had become a fairly powerful producer in Hong Kong. As fitting for a company named after Dirty Harry's favorite gun, many of Magnum's films are ultra-violent "Category III" (Hong Kong's equivalent of "NC-17," where no children are allowed to watch) films which have become classics in their own right. Movies like The Untold Story, Dr. Lamb and Twist scared local audiences and entranced foreigners with their over-the-top attitude. In the late 1980s, Lee was also one of the first producers to back Stephen Chow (and is sometimes credited for "discovering" him), who was at the time a small-time dramatic actor, but who would then go on to be Asia's biggest star after appearing in a series of "Mo Lei Tai" (nonsense) comedies. Lee even directed Chow in one of his first comedies, 1991's Legend of the Dragon, the first film in which Lee does not appear, while on the director and producer's chairs. He later produced, co-directed (with Herman Yau) and co-starred in The Untold Story, the controversial Category III thriller, which brought Anthony Chau-Sang Wong to stardom. The two actors later starred in Kirk Wong's action flick Organized Crime & Triad Bureau, which Lee produced. Though his on-screen output has slowed down in recent years, reduced to mostly cameo appearances in movies like Young and Dangerous V, Lee (and his company) are still pretty busy with behind-the-scenes work, and it seems a given that as long as there will be a Hong Kong movie industry, Danny Lee will be there --especially if a movie needs to have a cop in it.
Dan Clark began his career as an athlete, playing football for San Jose State, going on to play for the Los Angeles Rams and in the Professional European League. From 1989-1996, Clark starred as "Nitro" on seven seasons of the smash hit game show American Gladiators (1989) series, which aired in over 40 countries, with reruns on USA Network, TNT and Spike. It is currently (2007) airing on ESPN Classic. He is a Consulting Producer on NBC's revival of American Gladiators (2008). Dan then turned to acting, appearing in such motion pictures as Death Becomes Her (1992) with Meryl Streep, Bruce Willis and Goldie Hawn; and Equilibrium (2002), with Christian Bale. Dan has also guest-starred in TV series including Ellen (1994), Walker, Texas Ranger (1993), VIP (1998), Married with Children (1987), Who's the Boss? (1984), Saved by the Bell (1989) and The Brothers Garcia (2000). A man of many talents, Dan was the writer/director/producer of the independent film Looking for Bruce (1996). He has also written several screenplays for various studios, producers and production companies, including a bio-pic Battle of Harlem, about the first African-American police officer in the NYPD. Clark has appeared on a variety of talk shows including The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962), Good Morning America (1975), The CBS Morning News (1987), Today (1952), Live with Kelly and Mark (1988), Sally Jessy Raphael (1983) and The Montel Williams Show (1991). He has also graced the cover of TV Guide and numerous other magazines. Dan enjoys all sports, yoga, acting, writing and martial arts (he's a Black Belt in Tae Kwon Do) and is often called on to perform his own stunts. For the last five years (2007) he's also been a mentor in the Young Story Tellers program which is dedicated to increasing literacy among inner-city youths. Dan makes his home in the Hollywood Hills and can often be found walking his Labrador Retriever, Ella, at nearby Runyon Canyon Park.
Danny Lee Wynter was born in 1985 in London, England, UK. He is an actor, known for Censor (2021), Luther (2010) and Beat Girl (2013).
Danny Lerner was born in Israel, his industry career started with working in the distribution of films: he went on to manage a cinema chain and subsequently moved into production when he joined Nu World Productions in 1986. Since then, he has produced over 70 films, shot on location in South Africa, Namibia, Israel, Mexico, Bulgaria, Canada and United States. In 2003, he found a Tosca Pictures with a long time friend, Les Weldon with whom he's written and produced many movies. Both of them continue to work closely on many future projects. His directorial credits include "Traitor's Heart" (1999) with Bryan Genessse and "Shark Zone" (2003) with Dean Cochran, which was followed by "Raging Sharks" (2005), "Rin Tin Tin" (2006), "Shark in Venice" (2007) and "Direct Contact" (2008) with Dolph Lundgren.