Steve Bradley is known for Below Deck (2013).
Steve Braga is known for West of Memphis (2012) and 48 Hours: Hard Evidence (2005).
Steve Braun was born on August 14, 1976 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He is an actor and producer, known for Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle (2004), The Trip (2002) and The Immortal (2000).
Steve Bridges was born on 22 May 1963 in Dallas, Texas, USA. He was an actor, known for NCIS (2003), JAG (1995) and The Adventures of Umbweki (2009). He died on 3 March 2012 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
Steve Brio is an actor and writer, known for The Coroner: I Speak for the Dead (2016), Class N Session (2017) and Behind the Orange Curtain (2012).
Steve Briscoe is an actor and producer, known for Stabbing Stupidity (2007), The Employee Agreement (2010) and Covet (2011).
Born Steven Michael Broad in London England, son of Elizabeth Jackson (Cleaner) and James Broad (Builder). Decided to go into acting in late 2015. Attended three acting schools to gain a wide academic acting experience and self submitted for LAMDA exams in 2017, passing with distinctions. Now a member of two repertory theatres, and a co-organiser of the Write Here Write Now festival. In 2018 was a finalist in the Write Here Write Now festival. Three feature films followed in quick succession in 2017; The Accidental Spy, Southsides Most Wanted (gritty south London drama), and then on the cusp of 2017/2018 Just 13. Just 13 will be featured at the Marche Du Film in Cannes 2018. Several featured roles in Informer; Slaughterhouse Rulez and Collateral. Appeared in 8 stage stage productions this year, with 3 more in rehearsals. Married in St Paul's Cathedral in 1980, with two sons and two grandchildren, he spends a lot of the time on his boat in London's Docklands when working and valuable down time at the family farm in Cambridge. A total motorcycle nut, he has toured all over the world on his motorcycle with the Alps being one of the favourite locations. Author of two books on the acquisition of data for financial markets, his third book is in pre-production and follows his antics on a motorcycle.
Film and stage actor Steve Brock was born in Los Gatos, California. He is the eldest of two sons of Donna Brock (Lecrivain), a teacher, and Les Brock, an electrical and computer engineer. He was involved in musical theater in high school and in college. Amongst the several productions he has acted in, Steve has shot his third film, "Echoes of Kerberos" (2020), in which he wrote, produced, and acted. It has earned several wins in festivals. His other productions are "Even Steve" (2015), based on an alternate universe view of his own life, and a short film that he wrote with Aga Kadlubowska about family alcoholism called "Making Amends" (2015). In 2018, he finished a successful run of his one-person show, "My Calico Soul". In 2019, he starred in and produced Apples to Affleck (2019) which also has several festival wins. He is also a singer/songwriter and has released two CDs "Cry By the Light of the Moon." (2014) and "Infinity" (2018). He has trained with Amy Lyndon (2018-). He also is a graduate of Second City (2014).
Steve Brockman is known for Steelers: The World's First Gay Rugby Club (2020).
Primarily known as a "B" movie bad guy of hundreds of films, husky actor Steve Brodie was born John Daugherty Stephens on November 25, 1919, in El Dorado, Kansas. Raised in Wichita, he dropped out of school and raced cars, boxed and worked on oil rigs to get by. He initially entertained a criminal law career but that interest quickly wore off after having to toil as a property boy. A passion for acting then was instigated and Brodie found early work in summer stock. Changing his stage name to "Steve Brodie", a move to New York did not pay off but a subsequent move to Los Angeles did. He broke into films after being spotted by an MGM talent scout in a Hollywood theatre production entitled "Money Girls". Loaned out for his first film, Universal's Ladies Courageous (1944), Brodie appeared in a few tough-guy bit parts in such MGM films as Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944), The Clock (1945) and Anchors Aweigh (1945) before he was dropped. It wasn't long before he was signed by RKO and it was with studio that his reputation as a heavy in westerns grew, with such roles as notorious outlaws Bob Dalton in Badman's Territory (1946) and Cole Younger in Return of the Bad Men (1948). In between those two pictures were strong roles in three film noir classics: Desperate (1947) (leading good guy), Crossfire (1947) and Out of the Past (1947) (both supporting baddies). A hard-living, hard-drinking actor, Brodie married "B" actress Lois Andrews in 1946 but the couple divorced four years later, not long after appearing together in the western programmer Rustlers (1949). He married Barbara Savitt--the widow of bandleader Jan Savitt--in September of 1950 and the union produced son Kevin Brodie two years later (Kevin later became a producer/director). Steve's second marriage lasted until 1966. Interest in Brodie eventually waned at the studio and his contract was not renewed. Freelancing elsewhere, he appeared as a lead in Rose of the Yukon (1949) and another classic film noir, Armored Car Robbery (1950), and also earned good parts in Home of the Brave (1949), The Steel Helmet (1951) and Lady in the Iron Mask (1952) (as the Musketeer Athos). Most of his post-RKO film work, however, would be in low-budgeters: I Cheated the Law (1949), The Great Plane Robbery (1950), Army Bound (1952), The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953), Donovan's Brain (1953) and Under Fire (1957). He also appeared as the hero's nemesis in several Tim Holt / Richard Martin westerns, including The Arizona Ranger (1948), Guns of Hate (1948) and Brothers in the Saddle (1949). In the late 1950s he had leads in the "C"-level films Spy in the Sky! (1958), Arson for Hire (1959) and Here Come the Jets (1959). A familiar presence on 1950s and 1960s TV, he worked on such crime series as Public Defender (1954), Hawaiian Eye (1959), Surfside 6 (1960), Perry Mason (1957), Burke's Law (1963) and such western series as The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (1955) (recurring part), The Lone Ranger (1949), Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok (1951), Laramie (1959), Sugarfoot (1957), Maverick (1957), Rawhide (1959), Gunsmoke (1955) and comedies including The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (1952), _"The Beverly Hillbillies" (1962)_ (qav). He also appeared in a touring production of "The Caine Mutiny Court Martial" starring Paul Douglas and Wendell Corey. The company ended abruptly when the liberal-minded Douglas, in a North Carolina interview, strongly criticized the conservative state and the resulting backlash forced the production's closure. Brodie's later years were marred by drinking arrests. In the 1970s he made sporadic appearances, including a lead in the campy low-budget horror film The Giant Spider Invasion (1975) opposite Barbara Hale and a part in Delta Pi (1984) [aka "Mugsy's Girls"], which was written, produced and directed by son Kevin and was also his last film. He also provided voice work in commercials and showed up at nostalgia conventions, including The Knoxville Western Film Fair in 1991, less than a year before his death. In 1973 Brodie married a third time, to Virginia Hefner, and they had a son Sean. Suffering from esophageal cancer and heart problems, Brodie died at age 72 on January 9, 1992, at a West Hills, California, hospital.