William Wang is an actor, known for Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014) and Song of Back and Neck (2018).
William Ward is an actor, known for Artik (2019).
William Wassem is an actor, known for For Love of Amy (2009), Fields of the Dead (2014) and The Dead Hour (2010).
William Wayne was born in Chicago. He studied acting at the University of Washington and after graduation acted with a repertory theater. During this time he acted in several indie features including an official selection to the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival. His first directing project was the award winning documentary short film 'Honor Flight'. William Wayne's 'Lost Angelas' is his directorial feature film, a psychological thriller which premieres at The Method Fest Film Festival in Beverly Hills March 26, 2019. It is also nominated for the Maverick Film Award. 'Lost Angelas' opened theatrically in LA June 14, 2019 and played for a week at The Laemmle Theater in Pasadena, CA. The South American premiere was at the Cinefantasy Film Festival in São Paulo, Brazil on September 3-8, 2019. 'Lost Angelas' opened in Seattle for a week's engagement at The Grand Illusion Cinema, November 22, 2019. William Wayne won Best Director and Best Indie Film (Made for under 100K) at Film Threat's Award This! 2020 show. The Amazon Prime Video premiere for 'Lost Angelas' was on June 9, 2020. Directs and edits commercials for advertising campaigns.
William Webb is known for NCIS (2003), Born on the Fourth of July (1989) and Zero Effect (1998). He has been married to Dianna since 24 March 1990. They have four children.
William Wei is known for A Stitch in Time (2022).
Rangy, sturdy-looking actor William Wellman Jr., was born in Los Angeles on January 20, 1937, one of seven children born to legendary director William A. Wellman and his fourth wife, one-time actress Dorothy Coonan Wellman, who appeared in a few of her husband's pictures. Bill Jr. spent most of his childhood surrounded by Hollywood celebrity. He got the fresh taste of a film set as a youngster when he appeared unbilled in a couple of his father's features. Following graduation, he attended Duke University but eventually abandoned that direction for a career in the movies. Starting off in featured parts in the war pictures Lafayette Escadrille (1958) and Darby's Rangers (1958), both of which directed by his father, Bill Jr. found other work on his own in less quality films. Some of the teen exploitation he found himself in have since attained cult status, including High School Confidential! (1958), Macumba Love (1960) and College Confidential (1960). "Billy Jack" director Tom Laughlin also began using Bill prominently in his early work such as Like Father, Like Son (1961) [The Young Sinner] and The Born Losers (1967). In sparser times he managed to find some unbilled bits in several of Jerry Lewis's film slapstick of the 1960s, and fell in with the party crowd in A Swingin' Affair (1963), Winter A-Go-Go (1965) and A Swingin' Summer (1965). His TV career kicked in as the 1960s approached with a number of rugged guest roles on such established westerns as "Have Gun, Will Travel," "Rawhide," "Laramie" and "Gunsmoke." In later years, Bill found work in a few more cult classics, including Black Caesar (1973), It's Alive (1974), and Laughlin's "Billy Jack" sequels. Establishing himself as a solid character actor, he took the lead in the apocalypse thrillers Image of the Beast (1981) and The Prodigal Planet (1983), the latter featuring daughter Cathy Wellman. While the quality of his films would vary over the years, Bill Jr.'s career has managed longevity and durability in a very difficult business. Moreover, he is credited with nearly 200 movies and television shows, 17 stage productions and some 200 commercial and industrial films. In addition to his acting work, his nearly 50-year career includes writing and producing efforts. He has occasionally appeared as a guest lecturer and has been active at autograph conventions. Primarily seen on TV in later years, he appeared on such programs as "Days of Our Lives" (recurring), "Alien Nation," "Beverly Hills, 90210," "The Pretender," "Star Trek" Deep Space Nine," "The Practice," "JAG," "Alias" and "CSI." Of his many siblings, sister Cissy Wellman has also established herself as an actress of stage, film and TV.
William Wesley began his movie career shooting both documentaries and training films while serving in the US Army. After attending Florida International University, where he majored in theatre, Wesley made his excellent and impressive feature film debut with the eerie and unsettling low-budget zombie horror variant "Scarecrows." He then directed "The Maker" episode of the fun anthology TV series "Monsters." Wesley also worked as a story development exec for Nightfall Films, under a "housekeeping deal" with Trimark Pictures. After a regrettably lengthy 13 year absence from directing features, William made a welcome comeback with the nifty "danger on the road" living dead entry "Route 666." Wesley was born in Cuba. When he was three years old, his family moved to America, where they settled in New York City and started several business, including Cuban restaurants and a hardware store. Wesley attributes (or blames) his macabre sensibility on growing up in the urban jungle of NYC and playing too long with sharp tools in the family hardware store.
William White is known for Winter's Bone (2010), Broken (2014) and She Wolf Rising (2016).