Bruce Phillips was born on September 13, 1951 in Wellington, New Zealand. He is an actor and writer, known for The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003), The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002) and Without a Paddle (2004).
Bruce Prichard's most famous role was as Brother Love. The red-faced, preacher-like character debuted in the summer of 1988. He claimed he was in WWE to spread the word of love. He made himself appear as a friendly guy who's favorite catchphrase was "I love you!" In reality, Love was a slimy, greedy individual who was out to get money. With "Million Dollar Man" Ted DiBiase as the benefactor for his weekly show, Love would have no problem doing that. Brother Love had a weekly segment on WWE Wrestling Challenge called, "The Brother Love Show." He had a wrestler or manager as his guest every week, usually to talk about a current feud or an upcoming match. Sometimes, a guest wouldn't buy Brother Love's act, and would give him a beat-down. Brother Love fizzled out in 1991. He made a brief comeback in 1995, but soon disappeared again. He still makes occasional on-screen appearances. He competed in the Gimmick Battle Royal at Wrestlemania X-Seven, and also at Vengeance 2003 as part of the APA Invitational, but on both occasions, still could not pull off the victory. Whether you liked Brother Love, or hated him, one thing is for sure. He loves you!
Bruce Purcell has been an actor/performer since the age of 10 and has worked in stage, screen, and television. He is also a musician, as well as an acting coach. He lives in the Twin Cities after 30 years in Los Angeles, where he worked in a variety of capacities in the entertainment industry. As a producer/director, Bruce garnered an Emmy nomination for one of his documentaries and was part of the launch team for three cable networks. Enjoying fishing, archery, canoeing, and hunting in his spare time, Bruce carries a tremendous knowledge of the entertainment industry; buy him a cup of coffee and he'll be more than willing to tell you all about it.
Bruce R. Carter is an actor, known for Cargo (2017), Last Cab to Darwin (2015) and Picnic at Hanging Rock (2018).
Born and raised in Montreal, Ramsay's screen debut was opposite fellow Montrealer Elias Koteas in the film Malarek (1988). Ramsay and Koteas went on to appear in two other films together, Hit Me (1996), and Collateral Damage (2002). Ramsay's first lead in a major motion picture came when he was cast as Carlitos Paez in director Frank Marshall's film Alive (1993), the biographical survival drama based upon Piers Paul Read's 1974 book Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors, which detailed the story of the Uruguayan rugby team that crashed into the Andes mountains. In 2011 Ramsay made his directorial debut with Hamlet (2011). Ramsay also produced, wrote the adaptation, and starred as Hamlet. Hamlet (2011) premiered in competition at the Vancouver Film Festival in 2012. More recently, Ramsay appeared as the jaded house boy Carlucci opposite Michael Douglas and Matt Damon in Behind the Candelabra (2013), directed by Steven Soderbergh about the last ten years in the life of pianist Liberace. Behind the Candelabra marked the second time that Ramsay had worked with Soderbergh. In 1995 Ramsay appeared in The Professional Man, part of The Showtime film noir series, Fallen Angels, starring opposite Peter Coyote, and Brendan Fraser.
Bruce Reisman sold his first TV script at the age of 13. He has been a writer-producer and show-runner on such TV series as The Fall Guy, CHiPs, Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer, TJ Hooker, and Tour of Duty. He is co-founder of both FourTwoFive Films and Four Legged Pictures, which included completed independent movies "The House That Jack Built" and "Blood Effects". He has also written and directed 10 theatrical plays which were produced in both Los Angeles and New York. He recently completed his new play, "Blank", which will perform a "try-out" run in Los Angeles planned for 2013. Bruce was inducted into the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in 1991, receiving the prestigious Wrangler Award for his writing of "Requiem For a Hero", an episode of The Young Riders. His first novel, "Sexual Justice" will be published in 2013 s well, and will be available at Amazon.com in June 2013.
Bruce Reizen is an actor, known for The Oogieloves in the Big Balloon Adventure (2012), Dog Eat Dog (2016) and This Spying Life (2012).
Bruce Roach is known for One Day as a Lion (2023), Little Dixie (2023) and Ida Red (2021).
Bruce Robinson is an actor, known for Boss Moves (2021).
Such is the mythology that has sprung up around Bruce Robinson's first film, the openly autobiographical Withnail & I (1987), that it's often hard to separate fact from fiction. But the facts appear to be these: trained as an actor at London's Central School of Speech and Drama, he got off to a good early start when he was given a reasonably prominent part as Benvolio in Franco Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet (1968). But despite this and other parts for the likes of Ken Russell (The Music Lovers (1971)) and François Truffaut (the male lead in L'histoire d'Adèle H. (1975)), he found that acting mostly involved fruitless waiting for the phone to ring interspersed with the occasional TV commercial, while desperately trying to make ends meet. So he began writing screenplays in the mid-1970s, and was lucky enough to secure the patronage of producer David Puttnam who finally produced Robinson's script about Cambodia, The Killing Fields (1984) for which he was nominated for an Oscar. But cult success was to come a couple of years later when he wrote and directed Withnail & I (1987), a film about the squalid lives of two unemployed actors that was elevated to iconic status by students all over the world and which shot newcomer Richard E. Grant to stardom. Robinson's subsequent films, the advertising satire How to Get Ahead in Advertising (1989) and the serial-killer thriller Jennifer Eight (1992), while less memorable than his debut, both show that Robinson has more than enough intelligence and brio to make his future career worth following.