Dylan McNamara was born and raised in the Inland Empire, an urban and metropolitan area east of Los Angeles, California to parents of Irish and Mexican descent. He is an actor known for the Netflix original series First Kill (2022), Survival (2022), Ambition (2019), Motel 32 (2020), and L.A.'s Finest (2019).
Dylan McTee was born in Los Angeles, California, to Cathleen Carriere and Gregory McTee. His mother, a Los Angeles native, is of Mexican and French ancestry while his father, growing up in Alaska, is of Irish descent. At a very young age, and with the loving support of his parents and two brothers, Dylan obsessed over films and novels, and excelled in reading, writing, and performance in local theater. Feeling the need to participate in story even more, and particularly inspired by the acting of Daniel Day-Lewis, his life path was clear. Still a child, Dylan begged his parents to allow him to pursue acting professionally, but they insisted he complete his studies, including acquiring a college degree, first. He thus devoted the ensuing years to the study and practice of his craft and, immediately upon graduation from The University of Southern California's School of Dramatic Arts, leapt headlong into his career. One of his first auditions was for Sweet/Vicious (2016), a controversial series about sexual assault on college campuses. Dylan played a likable, charismatic character revealed only late in the season as a sociopathic rapist. Next, Dylan starred in the independent film Midnighters (2017), from the Ramsay Brothers. The Wind (2018), a western/horror film directed by Emma Tammi, is Dylan's second film. He plays Gideon Harper, a young settler in the late 1800s whose life falls apart soon after moving out west with his wife. You can now watch Dylan on The CW's Roswell, New Mexico (2019) as Wyatt Long, a troubled and depraved rancher, and also starring in the upcoming feature film Wrong Turn (2021). Outside of his acting profession, Dylan loves martial arts, writing poetry, and going camping with his rescue dog, Hal.
Dylan Miles-Davis is known for The Hunter's Prayer (2017) and Below (2014).
Dylan Miluso is a producer and actor, known for Silent Hope, Conviewsed (2019) and Love 2020 (2020).
Dylan Christopher Minnette was born December 29, 1996 in Evansville, Indiana, to Robyn and Craig Minnette. Scouted by an agent in Chicago, Dylan began work on commercial modeling and acting at the age of seven. He later relocated to Los Angeles, CA to continue his acting career. Dylan scored his first major television role at the age of 8, playing young Charlie Sheen in Two and a Half Men (2003). In 2005, he also appeared in an episode of the popular Nickelodeon show, Drake & Josh (2004). He is often recognized for his role Jack Shepard's son, David, on the ABC drama Lost (2004). Dylan also made recurring appearances as a young Michael Scofield on the FOX show, Prison Break (2005), as Clay Norman on TNT's Saving Grace (2007) and Reed on the TNT series Men of a Certain Age (2009). Other credits include Grey's Anatomy (2005), MADtv (1995), Ghost Whisperer (2005), Rules of Engagement (2007), The Mentalist (2008), Medium (2005), Supernatural (2005), Lie to Me (2009), R.L. Stine's The Haunting Hour (2010) and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (1999). Dylan also appeared in the music video for Avril Lavigne's song "Keep Holding On" in 2007. In 2011, Dylan Minnette appeared in his first major feature film role in the romantic horror Let Me In (2010) with Chloë Grace Moretz. Not long after, he scored the role as Rex Britten on the critically acclaimed 2012 NBC drama, Awake (2012). In 2014, Dylan scored guest starring roles on other network shows Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (2013) and Scandal: Bí mat tham do (2012). Meanwhile, he's also been busy cultivating his film career with roles in Warner Bros Pictures' Prisoners (2013), Paramount Pictures' Labor Day (2013), 20th Century Fox's Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day (2014) and Goosebumps (2015) starring with Jack Black. Minnette is the singer/rhythm guitarist in the band Wallows with Zack Mendenhall (bass), Cole Preston (drums) and Braeden Lemasters (singer/guitar). Wallows won a battle of the bands contest (2010) sponsored by 98.7 FM and played at Vans Warped Tour 2011. The band has since performed at many famous LA venues including The Roxy and Whisky a Go Go. Their song Bleeding Man was used in the promo for season 2 of R.L. Stine's The Haunting Hour (2010). In early 2014 the band changed their name from "The Feaver" to "The Narwhals" and in 2017 to "Wallows".
Dylan Mobley is an actor, known for Arukimedesu no taisen (2019), Saja (2019) and Geom-gaek (2020).
Dylan Mohan Gray is a globally-acclaimed Indian and Canadian filmmaker. His documentary feature film Fire in the Blood premiered in competition at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival and went on to enjoy the longest theatrical run of any non-fiction film in Indian cinema history (five weeks). An official selection at over 100 leading film festivals on six continents, honored with major awards and accolades worldwide, Fire in the Blood changed the global conversation around access to essential medicine and, in November 2018, was included by legendary Australian journalist and documentary filmmaker John Pilger among his selection of "26 landmark documentary films of the past seven decades". Dylan's film From Durban to Tomorrow (2019), shot in six countries on three continents, focuses on the future of global health and human rights, while his narrative feature script, The Last Day of Winter (co-written with Vikramaditya Motwane), was incubated at the Sundance Institute & Mumbai Mantra Screenwriting Lab.
Dylan Mooney is an actor and producer, known for Til Death Do Us Part (2017), Boy Bye (2016) and Modern Family (2009).
Dylan Moore, a Los Angles native, began to audition professionally In the 5th grade and over the course of a year was in several national commercials and in the film Tripfall (2000), but quit acting after that prioritize school. She attended Crossroads High School in Los Angeles and graduated from Juilliard with a BFA in acting in 2009. After college, she changed her given name Christiana Michelle Moore to Dylan Moore. Dylan is also a producer, whose films include I Am a Seagull (2017), It's Freezing Out There (2018), and The Decades of Mason Carroll (2017). Her theatrical experience include On Site Opera's 2017 spring season, The Seagull at the The Lake Lucille Chekhov Project with Brian Mertes and Melissa Keivman (associate producer), and immersive live art party Le Salon. Dylan has worked for the non-for-profit Artists Striving to End Poverty (ASTEP) since 2006 as the Program Director for Homestead, Florida, Johannesburg, South Africa and is the Executive Producer of the Artist as Citizen Conference, a six day conference for young leaders in the arts looking to synthesize artistic excellence, activism, and entrepreneurship. The Conference is hosted at The Juilliard School. Her parents are Bob and Tricia Moore. She has a younger brother Matthew. Her father is an attorney and she is married to Geoff Agnor, an educator.
Irish comedian Dylan Moran was born in Navan, County Meath in 1971. Leaving school without any qualifications at age 16, Moran quickly became attracted to stand-up comedy and debuted, in 1992, at a comedy club in Dublin, The Comedy Cellar. A year later, he won the Channel Four comedy newcomer's "So You Think You're Funny" award at the Edinburgh Festival, and began developing his comedy routines into a one-man show, "Gurgling for Money", for which he won the prestigious Perrier Comedy Award in 1996, and which he subsequently took to a nationwide tour of the UK. His exposure at the Edinburgh Festival also led to him getting programmed at international stand-up comedy festivals, worldwide. Subsequently, Moran took to writing and performing for British television. He has starred in the BBC sitcom, How Do You Want Me? (1998), and - more importantly - in 2000, he was commissioned by Channel Four for the sitcom, Black Books (2000). He wrote and starred in three 6-episode series of this comedy. Co-starring popular British stand-up comedian Bill Bailey, who was nominated for the Perrier Award the year Moran won, Black Books (2000) sees Moran play a character close to his stand-up comedy persona: an unsociable misanthrope, reminiscent of the John Cleese sitcom character, "Basil Fawlty", that shares a great love of wine with one of razor-sharp put-downs of all things human. Also, his character Bernard Black's often surreal views on everyday things and on human behavior is close to his stand-up persona's dealing with them. The same year the first series of "Black Books" aired, Moran took his one-man show, "Ready, Steady, Cough", on a UK tour, followed two years later by Dylan Moran: Monster (2004). This was followed by Monster II in 2004. In the late 1990's, Moran also moved from doing stand-up to working on a film acting CV. He played opposite Julia Roberts and Hugh Grant in Notting Hill (1999), co-starred with Michael Caine in The Actors (2003) and had parts in the Simon Pegg comedy, Shaun of the Dead (2004) and the Michael Winterbottom film, A Cock and Bull Story (2005). Moran's live stand-up comedy is unique in that it merges two strands of stand-up that seemed incompatible for a long time: sharp observational humor, and surreal and fantastical language-based absurdity. On the one hand, he has a clear influence from what could be called an American school of stand-up comedy that is heavily observational. On the other hand, Moran's comedy is characterized by a use of language similar to the stand-up comedy of Eddie Izzard and Ross Noble: surreal associative leaps between on the one side observations and on the other fantasies, verbally painting bizarre and absurd worlds, often through a use of stream-of-consciousness narration. His language is often highly poetic, resembling a James Joyce that has had one too many. Moran is very reluctant to give interviews on his personal life and even on his career, a fact parodied in a staged interview inter-cut with the recording of his live stand-up show, "Monster", on its DVD release.