Landy Cannon was born on September 5, 1971 in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada. He is an actor, known for American Psycho (2000), Catwoman (2004) and The L Word (2004).
Landy Wen was born on July 16, 1979 in Jianshi, Hsinchu, Taiwan. She is an actress, known for Yong xin tiao (2010), Sai de ke · ba lai: Tai yang qi (2011) and Cop (1999).
Landyn Banx was born in Owatonna, Minnesota on June 26th. He grew up in Faribault, MN. He only acted in a few plays in elementary school buy that was enough to get him hooked. He attended Faribault Senior High. A seemingly shy person, Landyn never acted in plays during his high school years yet always yearned to be on stage. After years of wanting to become an actor Landyn went on his first audition for a film in October of 2006. The film was Tales of the Dead by Haunted Autumn Productions. He landed that first film role and has subsequently been busy ever since. He landed a role in Uppercut Cafe, his second film, because he was able to speak English with a German accent. Many more films followed. Besides films Landyn has also done some commercial work, Internet video work, music videos, infomercials, and the Internet series "The Show So Gay," where he plays the next door neighbor Landyn. He is a member of Equilibrium Media and Triwar Pictures as well, two Minnesota-based independent production companies. He also enjoys modeling for different photographers in MN. He continues to seek fun and exciting projects to take on and enjoys every minute of being able to live his childhood dream of being an actor.
Landyn Lu is an actor, known for Megalodon Rising (2021).
Lane Alexander is known for One of These Days (2020) and Our Friend (2019).
Lane Bradbury was born on June 17, 1938 in Buckhead, Georgia, USA. She is an actress and writer, known for From the Midst of Pain (2010), Then Came Bronson (1969) and Gunsmoke (1955). She was previously married to Lou Antonio.
Lane Bradford was born on August 29, 1922 in Yonkers, New York, USA. He was an actor, known for Zombies of the Stratosphere (1952), The Invisible Monster (1950) and The Toughest Gun in Tombstone (1958). He was married to Mary Schrock and Joan Irene Velin. He died on June 7, 1973 in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.
Lane Carlock was born on December 9, 1970 in Atlanta, Georgia, USA. She is an actress and producer, known for Rampage (2018), Dirty Grandpa (2016) and Scary Movie 5 (2013).
Lane Caudell was born on April 25, 1952 in Asheboro, North Carolina, USA. He is an actor and composer, known for Fire in the Sky (1993), Sasquatch: The Legend of Bigfoot (1976) and Buffalo Rider (1976).
American actor who had a brief flirtation with stardom before settling into character roles and bit parts. Born in rural South Dakota (according to government records, though some sources say Walsh County, North Dakota) as Robert C. Oakes, the son of a horse rancher, he moved with his family to Culbertson, Montana (not his birthplace as some sources have it), where he grew up. The family moved again and he graduated from high school in Helena. A brief attendance at Montana Wesleyan College was interrupted by the offer of a job driving a tour bus in Yellowstone National Park. Drifting down to Los Angeles in the early 1920s, he got work as an auto mechanic, but his ranch-honed cowboy skills got him bit parts in pictures at Paramount when director John Waters offered him work in a series of Westerns. Paramount recognized possibilities in the tall, rugged, handsome cowboy and put him (with a new name, Lane Chandler) into leading roles, first in Westerns, then in contemporary films opposite some of the biggest star actresses of the time, Clara Bow, Greta Garbo, Betty Bronson, and Esther Ralston. As silent films were phased out, Chandler found his stock slipping at Paramount, which had begun to overtly favor Gary Cooper in his place. He began appearing in lower-budgeted Westerns, first in leads, then as second leads to stars such as John Wayne and Jack Hoxie. During this period he free-lanced at Big 4, Syndicate Pictures and Kent (see Willis Kent) Pictures, all a far cry from his days under contract with Adolph Zukor. Despite the relatively poor production values, several of his early talkies (The Hurricane Horseman (1931) and The Cheyenne Cyclone (1931)) rise above similar fare in entertainment value. Unfortunately, Chandler was also forced to work on other lesser productions helmed by hack directors such as J.P. McGowan who cared more about quickly earning a paycheck than the product itself. His association with Kent ended in 1930s and Chandler drifted to another independent outfit called Empire Pictures which promised to produce 6 films, although only 2 were ultimately shot, the entertaining quickies The Lone Bandit (1935) and The Outlaw Tamer (1935). Now in his mid-30's Chandler found his career in irreversible decline and settled into supporting roles. A favorite of director Cecil B. DeMille, Chandler worked in many DeMille films, often in tiny bit parts, though he claimed these were his favorite parts. Eventually Chandler no longer commanded roles of any substance and he spent the remaining 35 years of his career in progressively smaller supporting parts, playing in hundreds of films, often uncredited. A stalwart of television Westerns of the 1950s, he was a familiar face to movie fans for nearly fifty years. An astute businessman with industrial and property holdings, he died in Los Angeles in 1971 at 73.