Las Vegas, NV born and raised, Vic had quite a crazy unsettled childhood. Poor and sometimes homeless, his mother Nancy struggled to keep her 6 children safe and healthy. Vic was the only one of his siblings to escape the dark rabbit hole that is the underbelly of Sin City. The theatre, gave Vic a place to escape the drugs, crime and poverty that surrounded him on a daily basis and a place to express himself with support. Eventually giving Vic reason and purpose to stay in school and go to college. Southern Utah University and the Utah Shakespeare Festival in Cedar city Utah was a comfortable fit after high school. Vic solidified for himself that this was the right path and would always be in the performing arts not only for personal reasons, but also for the "Gift of Story" which can be a powerful tool to those that need to hear it. Vic fell in love with all aspects of the theatre. Directing came very easy and scenic design and construction allowed Vic to see the craft from all aspects. After a successful undergraduate career and several summers performing with Utah Shakespeare Festival, Vic headed to the MFA program at FSU Asolo Conservatory for Actor Training to sharpen his skill with some of the best acting teachers in the country. Being the desert rat that he is, after graduating with his Masters degree Vic headed back to the Southwest and eventually landed in Albuquerque. Being a little disheartened at first with the lack of work for actors at the time, Vic started making plans to move to Chicago because of the flourishing theatre community in the Windy City .Then he met a few folks that talked him into staying for the film opportunities that were about to explode. After 3 years of establishing himself as a respected and sought after talent in the small black box venues around town (which can be great training for film by the way) Vic finally did his first acting for a screenplay. Before the 48 Hour Film Festival, the Duke City Shootout was a great way for emerging filmmakers to produce shoot and show short films. Vic had the honor and pleasure to do a short film called The Family Sausage in 2003. Vic has been apart of dozens of short films helping young filmmakers tell their story. Since 2004 Vic has been in over 30 feature films and 25 TV shows. In 2007 Vic fulfilled a life long dream and became a founding member of the professional Mother Road Theatre Company where he acts, directs, designs, builds and produces some of the best theatre in the Southwest. Along with the passion for story, Vic also enjoys helping others heal themselves and so he went back to school in 2006 to become a massage therapist, which lead him on a spiritual journey that continues today. Vic prides himself on being an accomplished acting teacher and director. When an award winning casting director asks, "Why aren't you teaching actors?" You pay attention. And that's what Vic did. When not in production for Mother Road Theatre Company or on a film set, Vic does private coaching and has several classes through Sol Acting Academy. Vic is in the process of writing several screenplays and a new theatre piece that will see the production table in the next year along with the release of three feature films and a couple of TV shows. Hard as it may be for Vic to ask for help or lean on anyone, he is finally coming to the conclusion that any great person has a great support group. And they are his wife Julia, his agent Carissa Mitchell, and the awesome cast of characters of the Mother Road Theatre Company and a large handful of close friends.
Vic Carmen Sonne was born on April 23, 1994 in Copenhagen, Denmark. She is known for Holiday (2018), I blodet (2016) and Vinterbrødre (2017).
Vic Carmona is a costume designer, known for Moonbound24: The Webseries (2013) and California Dreaming (2019).
Vic graduated from Stanford University with a degree in mechanical engineering. After developing medical devices in the Chicago-area, he moved to Los Angeles and has since appeared on numerous on-screen and onstage productions, including "24," "Grey's Anatomy," "Heathers," "Golden Child," and "Ready Player One." He voices Kenshi Takahashi, Goro and other characters in "Mortal Kombat X" and voices Chiu in Netflix's Mexican-inspired anime series "Seis Manos" A gymnast and martial artist, Vic has been the Chicago Bulls mascot, an "American Gladiators" contender, and an LA Clippers crowd-entertainer and slam-dunker. Vic's father passed away when he was four; his mother, who raised three children on her own, is his hero. Growing up short, smart and bullied, Vic developed a deep sense of empathy and a desire to prove himself, and is still grateful to Stan Lee and Spider-Man for demonstrating that a scrawny nerd could be something special.
Vic Chou was born on June 9, 1981 in Yilan, Taiwan. He is an actor, known for Liu xing hua yuan (2001), Hui jia (2012) and The Flame's Daughter (2018). He has been married to Reen Yu since November 10, 2015. They have one child.
At fourteen he worked as an usher at the NYC Paramount Theatre. His father was an electrician who played guitar and his mother taught piano. Damone attended PS 163 and sang in St. Finbar's choir and later attended the Alexander Hamilton Vocational High School and then Lafayette High School in Brooklyn. He left school at sixteen to support his family, but returned to graduate from Lafayette in 1997. Damone won first prize in an Arthur Godfrey talent scouts contest in 1945. His first night club appearance at the LA Martinique Club was set up by comedian Milton Berle. He was drafted and served in the army from 1951 to 1953. After he was discharged from the army he married actress Pier Angeli, whom he later divorced. Damone was later married to Becky Ann Jones from 1974 to 1982 and Diahann Carroll from 1987 to 1996. He married Rena Rowan, fashion designer and co-founder of Jones New York, in 1998. In 1999, he received a certificate of advanced study from Philadelphia University.
Vic Davis is an actor, known for Shogun Assassin (1980).
Vic Diaz reigns supreme as the jolly evil fat man of Filipino exploitation cinema. With his broad, mirthful grin, beady dark brown eyes, trim black goatee and mustache, swarthy complexion, thinning hair, protuberant sagging belly, and smooth, oily baritone voice, Diaz was a steady, scuzzy, often sinister and always charismatic presence in an alarmingly large volume of horror films and delectably down'n'dirty 1970s drive-in features alike. He has been often described as the Filipino equivalent to Peter Lorre. Born in Manila in 1932, Diaz initially planned on being a lawyer (his father was Chief Justice of the Court of Appeal). After four years of practicing law Diaz became dissatisfied and decided to pursue an acting career instead. He started performing in amateur theater in 1949. In the late 1950s he began his extremely lengthy and prolific film career, making his debut in the war picture The Day of the Trumpet (1958). Diaz soon amassed a huge number of credits, frequently appearing in movies for directors Eddie Romero and Cirio H. Santiago. Among his most noteworthy roles are a sneaky, ruthless diamond smuggler in Monte Hellman's Flight to Fury (1964), a cunning and devious Satan in The Beast of the Yellow Night (1971), an amiable mechanic in Jack Starrett's terrific The Losers (1970), a mute, whimpering, buck-toothed, hunch-backed village idiot in Night of the Cobra Woman (1972), and a flamboyant homosexual prison guard in Jack Hill's hilarious chicks-in-chains send-up The Big Bird Cage (1972). Moreover, Diaz has also acted on stage in plays, portraying a broad range of parts that include Iago in Shakespeare's "Othello" and the King of Siam in "The King and I." Alas, in 2001 he had to voluntarily quit acting because of old age and ill health. However, despite his retirement Vic Diaz's many delightful cinematic contributions shall continue to amuse and entertain B-movie fans for countless years to come.
Vic is best known for his viral video "Bread & Milk" nearing 12 million views on Youtube. This video has brought about a new wave of fans and followers for Vic both on social media and on the stand up comedy circuit. A powerful performer, comedian Vic DiBitetto churns energy, honesty and humanity into nonstop laughter. His pace is frenetic. His material vivid and true. From his first words, to his famous, word-free, mannequin head encore, DiBitetto leaves his audience breathless with laughter. Vic DiBiteto has appeared on television's "America's Funniest People" (ABC), where he was a $10,000 Grand Prize winner, as well as "Stand-Up Spotlight" (VH1) and "Last Laugh" at Pips, a pilot with Woody Allen and Danny Aiello. In addition, he has warmed-up hundreds of audiences for hit shows such as "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire" and "The Ricki Lake Show." Vic has performed at many of the nation's best comedy venues such as New York City's Dangerfield's, Los Angeles' Laugh Factory, Las Vegas' Riviera Hotel and Atlantic City's Borgata Hotel. He has opened shows for comedian Pat Cooper and the musical group Jay and the Americas ("This Magic Moment"). Vic can be found touring casino's around the country with Michael Imperioli (Christopher), Steve Shirrippa (Bacala), and Vince Curatola (Johnny Sacks) in a show called "Comedy You Can't Refuse." Vic is also a regular with "Goumba" Johnny from WKTU 103.5fm, in comedy shows through out the tristate area. He was also featured on the made for pay per view special called "Goumba Johnny's Slice of Italian Comedy." Vic has also starred in a show called "Jimmy Labriola's Night of a 1,000 Guidos.
Vic Fellowes is known for The Island with Bear Grylls (2014).