Jackie D'Amico was born in 1937 in New York City, New York, USA.
Jackie Dallas is a Korean-American television and film actress. She was born in New York and completed medical school before deciding to pursue acting. She did residency training in general surgery at the Mount Sinai hospital in New York City and then pathology in Chicago before moving to California in 2014.
Jackie Davis is an actress, known for Timbertown (2019).
Jackie De Witt is known for Kiss Me Quick! (1964) and No Tears for the Damned (1968).
Jackie Deal is known for End the Silence (2019).
Born and raised on a dairy farm in Southern Illinois. She attended Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, where she studied Theater and Business. She moved to Los Angeles in 1992. She later moved to New York City to do an off-Broadway show in 2013, and now calls NYC her primary home. In addition to her acting, she owns and runs her own accounting firm with offices in Los Angeles and New York City. Her accounting firm opened in 1999, and handles entertainment and corporate financing and tax consulting.
Jackie Diep is a producer and actress, known for Dropa (2019), Aftermath (2022) and It's Time (2018).
Jackie Earle Haley is an American actor who started his career with The Bad News Bears. He had more adult roles in Little Children, the cult classic Zack Snyder film Watchmen, Alita: Battle Angel, and Freddy Krueger from a remake of A Nightmare on Elm Street. He has been married three times and has two children.
English was born in Toronto, Ontario and graduated from McGill University mechanical engineering. She worked for a year at Cap Gemini Ernst & Young in Montreal as a consultant before becoming a host/producer of TVOKids, TVOntario's after school programming. English also appeared in number of original TVO Kids series BOD TV, as Artbot in Artbot, Nifty Girl in Super Citizens, the mayor in The Reading Rangers, and was the in-house choreographer for music videos. Best known was her 40 episodes of the series Jackie's School of Dance which was nominated for two A.C.T. Awards. As an actress she works on screen and on stage. In 2011, English wrote and directed her first film, a short called NIMBY which won first prize at the Toronto Urban Film Festival where judge Atom Egoyan called it "extraordinary." In 2017/2018 English's first feature film Becoming Burlesque premiered at Whistler Film Festival, was the opening film at the Canadian Film Festival, and won Best Film at the Tryon Film Festival before its North American Theatrical release. English was declared a Canadian Director To Watch by Broadway World.