Nick is from the Pacific Northwest and while on a visit to Portland, OR he attended an open casting call where he met well-known screenwriter and director, Gus Van Sant. Mr. Van Sant urged Nick to move to Los Angeles to perfect his craft. Nick is now a versatile actor being able to realistically portray a young teen or a young adult. Most notably Nick has won awards and nominations for his short film, Videl. Nick is also an avid screen writer and music composer.
Nicholas Adegite is known for The Murder Tapes (2019).
Nicholas Agnew is an actor and producer, known for Seat 25 (2017), Kingsman: The Secret Service (2014) and Pan (2015).
Nicholas Agostini is known for Regression (2012), Perchance to Dream (2013) and PlayOff (2011).
Nicholas Alexander is an actor and composer, known for The Manor (2021), Good Girls (2018) and Adam (2019).
Nicholas Alexander was born in Waukegan, Illinois on May 21, 1988. When he was a baby his mother moved them to Naperville, Illinois to take advantage of Chicago suburb's impressive public education systems. Alexander, an only child, raised in a single-parent household thrived in athletics from a very young age. In 2006 he attended College of Dupage in Glen Ellyn, IL and, then transferred to the University of Arizona on a full athletic football scholarship. After taking a drama class his senior year in Tucson, Alexander decided to switch gears and pursue his primary passion in entertainment instead of pro-football. The day after receiving his degree in Sociology he packed his car and drove to Los Angeles, where he began studying theater and performance art to refine his craft in the pursuit of achieving his dream. Since then, Alexander can be found in countless hit TV series and feature films across the American and International markets. Alexander's work is prevalent in Hollywood; he divides his time between acting and producing features, and performing on the small screen. Alexander made his feature film debut in the internationally distributed Tempting Fate which made its Los Angeles debut at the 2015 Pan African Film Festival and premiered in Theaters in Nigeria and Ghana. Tempting Fate is the tip of the iceberg for Alexander, who also appeared on hit TV shows, The Last Ship, FX's You're The Worst, Netflix's Love, NBC's The Player and CBS's S.W.A.T. Alexander cruised down the 2015 festival circuit in the Lead role of the multi Award winning short film Jacob Stone, which he was nominated twice for Best Actor. Jacob Stone appeared at several notable film festivals in 2015, taking home the award for Best Short at the prestigious Catalina Film Festival as well as being nominated for another eight awards and taking home two more wins for Best Short and Best drama on the festival circuit. Nicholas was very involved in the creative process, casting and production end of Jacob Stone, enough to receive a special thanks credit for the film. This gave Nicholas the push he needed to dive into the world of production. For his first stint behind the camera, Alexander Produced the first installment of Dan Davies' trilogy series Mr. Thursday. From there Alexander moved onto the Horror genre where he Co-Produced Curse of Mesopotamia, with Director Lauand Omar. A film that was originally shot in Kurdistan and moved to Jordan after the invasion of ISIS in 2014. After enduring setbacks and major wholesale changes from the re-shoots and shift in location, Curse of Mesopotamia managed a successful release on Amazon and reached top 30 most viewed horror titles on Itunes. Outside of the film industry Alexander's passion is mentoring and aiding abused and neglected adolescents and young adults. He loves working with kids from underprivileged communities and single parent homes.
Nicholas Alexander Chavez was born on September 6, 1999 in Houston, Texas, USA. He is an actor, known for General Hospital (1963), Crushed (2022) and Ok! TV (2013).
Nicholas Allers is an actor and assistant director, known for Let the Music Be (1990), Die Seders van Lebanon (1987) and Die Jare Daarna .... (1986).
Nicholas Amer was born Thomas Harold Amer in Birkenhead, Merseyside, England in 1923. At the age of 18, he enlisted in the Royal Navy and served as a wireless officer for four years during World War II. He saw plenty of action, serving mainly on Motor Torpedo Boats, at first in North Africa. He was wounded in action during the Allied Invasion of Sicily in 1943. Following demobilisation in 1945 he became an actor, studying at the Webber-Douglas Academy Drama School from 1946 to 1948 and winning, in his final year, their Best Actor Award, presented to him by Sir Donald Wolfit. Thereafter he devoted himself to the plays of William Shakespeare and performed with The Old Vic Company, The Oxford Playhouse Company and others in 31 different countries, and winning the Best Foreign Actor Award in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Amer's big break came in 1953 when John Gielgud asked him to play 'Green' in his production of Richard II, starring Paul Scofield. After the London run he made his first overseas tour by going with Sir John and the Company to Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). His most recent tour overseas was to the USA with the Old Vic Company in 1996, playing Duncan in Macbeth. In between he played many of Shakespeare's juveniles, including Romeo, Laertes (three times), Ferdinand in The Tempest (twice) and finally, in 1958, Hamlet at the Wimbledon Theatre. Other West End appearances include The Wolf with Judi Dench and Leo McKern, Captain Brassbound's Conversion with Penelope Keith, and A Man for All Seasons with Charlton Heston. In 1960, with The Oxford Playhouse Company, he toured India, Pakistan and Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) playing Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night. Three years later, in 1963, he formed, along with fellow actors Harold Lang and Greville Hallam, their own company, Voyage Theatre. They produced the play Macbeth in Camera, which they wrote themselves to demonstrate the various techniques that actors use to bring Shakespeare's printed words to life. This they offered to the British Council who liked it so much that they sent them, eventually, on three long world tours. Nicholas Amer's TV career began in the early days of television with the first medical soap, Emergency-Ward 10 (1957). Among many appearances since then are Messalina's lover Mnester in I, Claudius (1976), The Aedile in The Tragedy of Coriolanus (1984) (part of the BBC's complete TV cycle) and Fortunes of War (1987) with Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thomson. In 2011 he appeared in an episode of Borgia (2011), filmed in Prague, playing the rich and evil Prospero Santacroce on his death bed trying desperately to persuade Cesare Borgia to grant him absolution, so that, free of his wicked life, he might enter Paradise. The following year he travelled to Thailand to play the role of returning veteran Jack Jennings in Heroes Return (2012), a TV short directed by John Hillcoat that was part of Camelot UK's campaign to provide Lottery funding to help World War II veterans take part in commemorative visits to mark the anniversary of events that led to the end of the war. His first film role was as a pot boy in The Mudlark (1950) (uncredited) with Irene Dunne and Alec Guinness. Other films include The Message (1976) with Anthony Quinn, The Prince and the Pauper (1976) with Rex Harrison, Nelson's Touch (1979), in which he played the great Admiral himself, Peter Greenaway's The Draughtsman's Contract (1982), The Whipping Boy (1994) for Disney studios, a remake of A Man for All Seasons (1988) with Charlton Heston and Vanessa Redgrave, Treasure Island (1990), in which he played Ben Gunn, also with Charlton Heston, The Awakening (2011) with Rebecca Hall, Terence Davies's The Deep Blue Sea (2011), as the grandfather in Segment "G is for Grandad" of ABCs of Death 2 (2014) and as Oggie in Tim Burton's Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (2016). Nicholas Amer has been a teacher at many of the London drama schools, including the Central School in Swiss Cottage, the Webber-Douglas School in South Kensington and also the Rose Bruford School and Drama Centre. In Australia, the Drama Academy N.I.D.A. in Sydney asked him to give classes to their students, and in Egypt too he was asked to do the same. While filming The Message (1976) in Libya, he was delighted when a fellow actor, appearing in a leading part in the Arabic version of the film, surprised him by reminding him that he been taught by Nicholas in Cairo.
Nicholas Andrew Louie is a (Voice) Actor. Known for working frequently with Sound Cadence Studios, NYAV Post, Rooster Teeth, How It Should Have Ended, The Countdown, Distribimage, and more. Since 2011, he's been in various professional productions which include Dubbing, Animations, Audio Dramas, Video Games, Narrations, Parodies, etc. Nowadays, he also puts focus into creating and fleshing out his own projects. He's still heavily active in voice over and hopes to continue to be for years to come.