Morné du Toit is a director and editor, known for Lioness (2021), Vuil Wasgoed (2017) and Siende Blind (2020).
Moro Morooka was born on February 20, 1959 in Yachimata, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. He is an actor, known for Shin Gojira (2016), Koroshiya 1 (2001) and Kamen raidâ Daburu (2009).
Moroccan Cannon was born on 30 April 2011 in Santa Monica, California, USA. He is an actor, known for Mariah Carey: Merry Christmas to All! (2022), Mariah's World (2016) and Mariah Carey's Magical Christmas Special (2020).
Morocco Omari was born on May 7, 1975 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He is an actor and producer, known for P-Valley (2020), 21 Bridges (2019) and Homeland (2011). He was previously married to JoNell Kennedy.
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Morocco Vaughn yet.
Morokort Chhith is known for Karmalink (2021).
Moronai Kanekoa is an actor, known for Bosch (2014), Kuleana (2017) and Castle (2009).
Even his more courteous, somewhat friendlier types gave one pause for concern. The tall, beefy, balding, icy-eyed character actor Moroni Olsen was one of Hollywood's more popular and imposing performers of film during the late 1930s, 1940s and early 1950s. The versatile player was born Moroni Olsen and raised in Utah to Mormon parents (Edward Arenholt Olsen and Marsha Holverholst). Acting in church theatricals, Olsen attended and graduated from Weber State Academy before studying drama and elocution at the University of Utah. The voice training he received there served him quite well in the years to come, both on the Broadway stage and in Hollywood. After scattered performances in stage and tent shows in the East, he spent some time selling war bonds during World War I, then organized The Moroni Olsen Players in his native Ogden. The Utah-formed touring company eventually became one of the better known repertory companies around the county. Olsen made his Broadway debut portraying Jason in "Medea" in 1920, and continued in NY for the next couple of years with a series of classical plays that included "The Trial of Joan of Arc," "Iphegenia in Aulis," "Mr. Faust" and "Candida". For the next eight seasons he continued to direct and coach his repertory Players, while also handling scenery, staging and choreographing duties. The actor returned to Broadway (after a decade's absence) in 1933 with "Her Man of Wax," which was followed by appearances in "Mary of Scotland" (as John Knox), Katharine Cornell's production of "Romeo and Juliet" (as Lord Capulet) and in 1935's "The Barretts of Wimpole Street" (as Doctor Chambers). Olsen made a tepid film debut as Porthos in The Three Musketeers (1935), a rather dull version of the classic Dumas story that starred an uninspired Walter Abel as D'Artagnan. His strong, regal bearing and classically trained voice, however, was not to be denied and he proved quite suitable for movies in the ongoing years. Staying in Hollywood, he played a formidable Buffalo Bill opposite Barbara Stanwyck's Annie Oakley (1935) and, in other key historical supports, was quite good in the Katharine Hepburn vehicle Mary of Scotland (1936) (again as John Knox, the role he played on Broadway), The Plough and the Stars (1936) (as Gen. Connolly), Santa Fe Trail (1940) (as Robert E. Lee) and Lone Star (1952) as Sam Houston. He played a much older Porthos (at age 63) in At Sword's Point (1952) opposite Cornel Wilde's D'Artagnan and Alan Hale Jr. as the younger, more limber Athos. Olsen's voice will be forever recognized from the Disney animated movie classic Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) as the prophetic baritone voice of the Magic Mirror ("Mirror, mirror, on the wall...). The actor's intimidating, unsympathetic features were very much in demand during the 40s and 50s and he proved quite at home portraying corrupt villains, dogged inspectors, no-nonsense doctors, barnstorming preachers, powerful attorneys and other men of distinction. In between film assignments Olsen was active with the Pasadena Playhouse as both director and performer. For several years, the character actor and devout Mormon also directed the Pilgrimage Play, Hollywood's great passion play that predated the arrival of motion pictures. One of his last film assignments was as Pope Leo I in Sign of the Pagan (1954). The never-married actor died of a heart attack in Los Angeles on November 22, 1954, and was survived by a nephew, Edward Olsen (of Los Angeles). Funeral services were held back in his native Ogden, Utah, and was buried there at the Ogden City Cemetery.
Moronke Akinola is a British actor and writer born in Lewisham, England. She trained at Bristol Old Vic Theatre School from 2016 to 2019 completing the BA (Hons) Professional Acting course. She was awarded the Andrew Lloyd Webber Scholarship which helped to fully fund her tuition for her three years of training. During her final year, Moronke became the 2019 Alan Bates Award Winner, the most prestigious award for graduating UK actors, obtained by one graduating actor after a rigorous four stage audition and interview process. Upon graduating, she debuted her first work in progress play 'Give Me A Minute' (2019) which she not only wrote, but starred in, produced and directed. Moronke made her professional stage debut at The Finborough Theatre in the European Premiere of the hit Off-Broadway play The Niceties (2019), a challenging and thought-provoking two-hander that earner her an Off West End nomination for Female Performance in a Play. Moronke makes her screen debut in Coffee Wars and graces the screen in a more prominent role in the horror movie adaptation of Adam Nevill's novel of the same name No One Gets Out Alive (2021) for Netflix.