James Wilder (actor)
James Wilder (born August 5, 1968) is an American film and television actor.
Wilder was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and raised in Sausalito, California.[1]
The son of a French mother and an Italian father, Wilder performed as a fire eating street performer before he became an actor.[2]
Wilder portrayed Adam Louder on the Fox soap opera Models Inc.,[3] Christopher Searls on the ABC TV drama Equal Justice[4]:309 and Nick Lewis on the 1993 remake of Route 66 on NBC.[4]
Filmography
- Cracked Up (1987 TV Movie)
- Zombie High (1987)
- Murder One (1988)
- State Park (1988)
- Midnight Magic (1988 TV Movie)
- Equal Justice (26 episodes, 1990)
- Scorchers (1991)
- Prey of the Chameleon (1992)
- Route 66 (1993 TV series)
- Night Owl (1993 TV Movie)
- Melrose Place (7 episodes, 1994)
- Confessions: Two Faces of Evil (1994 TV Movie)
- Models Inc. (20 episodes, 1994–1995)
- Tonya and Nancy: The Inside Story (1994 TV Movie)
- A Face to Die For (1996 TV Movie)
- To Love, Honor and Deceive (1996 TV Movie)
- Our Mother's Murder (1997 TV Movie)
- Allie & Me (1997)
- Nevada (1997)
- Charades (1998)
- Veronica's Closet (3 episodes, 1998)
- Ivory Tower (1998)
- Closing the Deal (2000)
- Burning Down the House (2001)
- Touched by a Killer (2001)
- Heart of Stone (2001)
- Face Value (2002)
- Man of the Year (2002)
- Mind Games (2003)
- The Perfect Marriage (2006 TV Movie)
- The Funk Parlor (2009)
- 3 Holes and a Smoking Gun (2015)
gollark: Is it? Well, it's not a personal psychologically.
gollark: The government isn't a person. It's a vast corruptible organization with incentives which don't really align with your own.
gollark: I mean, if it was, I don't know, some totalitarian government or other, and I was protesting against them, that would be an incentive.
gollark: Uploading it to what?
gollark: Not really, and we can't.
References
- "James Wilder got start as actor in street theatre". The Transcript. Massachusetts, North Adams. July 16, 1988. p. 4. Retrieved June 22, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Actor turns in fire act for darkness". Lansing State Journal. Michigan, Lansing. January 17, 1994. p. 27. Retrieved June 22, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
- "New Job". The San Bernardino County Sun. California, San Bernardino. September 14, 1994. p. 40. Retrieved June 22, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
- Terrace, Vincent (2011). Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2010 (2nd ed.). Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 913. ISBN 978-0-7864-6477-7.
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