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- Actor
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Goran Visnjic is a Croatian American actor and producer, born in Sibenik, Croatia. He is married to Eva Visnjic (formerly Ivana Vrdoljak) with whom has three children. From an early age Visnjic started appearing in various theater plays. At the age of 16, he had his screen debut in the film Braca po materi (1988). In 1990, when the dissolution of Yugoslavia began, Visnjic was serving a one-year military obligation in the Yugoslavian Army (JNA). He left the JNA and returned to Sibenik, where he joined the Croatian Army in the defense of his hometown. After leaving the army, he moved to Zagreb and enrolled at the Academy of Dramatic Art. In his second year of studies at the academy, Visnjic was chosen for the title role in Shakespeare's Hamlet, which made him the youngest actor to play that role. Prior to joining ER (1994) in 1999, Visnjic played several minor roles in the films like The Peacemaker (1997), Welcome to Sarajevo (1997) and Practical Magic (1998). In 1998, he appeared in Madonna's music video for the song "The Power of Goodbye", which opened the doors of Hollywood for him.- Actor
- Writer
- Director
Rade Serbedzija was born in Bunic (Korenica) in 1946. Graduated from the Academy of Dramatic Arts in Zagreb. Still a student, he started to play the leading roles in films and theater productions. He is remembered as an outstanding Peer Gynt, Don Juan, Georgij, Melkior, Oedipus, Hamlet, Leon and Richard III. He wrote and published four books of poetry and released four albums, as well as directed 12 plays (Balade Petrice Kerempuha, Kazu da je sova nekad bila pekareva kci, Judita, Hrvatski slavuj...). He shot more than seventy films (Rdece klasje (1970), Zadah tela (1983), Hajka (1977), Vecernja zvona (1986), Bravo maestro (1978), Variola Vera (1982), Una (1984), Usijanje (1979), Life Is Beautiful (1985), Cyclops (1982), Povratak (1979), Horvatov izbor (1985), Dreaming the Rose (1986), Kontesa Dora (1993)...), and starred in leading roles of several TV-series (Sam covjek, U registraturi (1974), Prosjaci i sinovi (1971), Bombaski proces (1977), Nikola Tesla (1977), Putovanje u Vucjak (1986)...). He joined Vanessa Redgrave to found a theater that produced plays such as Brecht in exile, Liberation of Skopje, Smoke, Opera Sarajevo. He took part in many charity and peace initiatives. After a world famous film Before the Rain (1994) where he played the leading role, he was cast in films by prominent directors of the world (P. Noyce, J. Woo, S. Kubrick, F. Rossi...), in films such as The Saint (1997) (P. Noyce), The Truce (1997) (F. Rossi), Prague Duet (1998), Broken English (1996), Eyes Wide Shut (1999) (S. Kubrick), Polish Wedding (1998), Stigmata (1999), Mighty Joe Young (1998), The Sweet Sounds of Life (1999), Open Sea (1999), Mission: Impossible II (2000), Space Cowboys (2000), Snatch (2000), and in South Pacific (2001), Hermano (2007), Quicksand (2003), currently in post-production. He starred alongside Val Kilmer, Elisabeth Shue, John Turturro, Tom Cruise, Glenn Close. He lives in London.- A leading actress of theatre, film and TV in the former Yugoslavia, Mira Furlan emigrated to the U.S. with her husband, Goran Gajic, in November 1991, due to the intolerable political circumstances in her homeland. Ms. Furlan starred in the Warner Brothers TV series Babylon 5 (1993) as "Ambassador Delenn" (Sci-Fi Universe Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Genre TV-series 1996 and 1997).
Her other American credits included the TV movie My Antonia (1995) directed by Joseph Sargent, the title roles in "Sophocles Antigone" at the Hudson Guild Theatre in Los Angeles (Dramalogue Theatre Award for Outstanding Performance in 1995) and Lorca's "Yerma" at The Indiana Repertory Theatre. She also appeared in Brecht's "Baal" at The Second Stage in Los Angeles and Shaw's "Don Juan In Hell" in which she co-starred with Edward Asner and Rene Auberjonois. Ms. Furlan was a member of The Actor's Studio.
Ms. Furlan's film credits include leading roles in over 25 films. She co-starred in Emir Kusturica's Cannes award-winning and Oscar-nominated film When Father Was Away On Business (2000). Films include: Three For Happiness, (Grand Prix, Valencia Film Festival), Beauty Of Vice, In The Jaws Of Life, The Loves Of Blanka Kolak, and Dear Video. In addition, Ms Furlan has appeared regularly on Yugoslav television, playing leading roles in numerous series and TV films. She received all the highest awards in her former country, both for her stage and film work, including two Golden Arenas (Yugoslav Oscars) for Best Actress.
In the former Yugoslavia, Furlan was a member of the Croatian National Theatre and a frequent guest star at major theatres in the whole country. Her favorite roles include: 'Natalya' in "A Month In The Country", 'Mrs. Elliot' in "Alpha-Beta", 'Celimene' in "The Misanthrope", 'Judith' in "The Devil's Disciple", 'Annabella' in "Tis Pity She's A Whore", the title role in Euripides' "Helen", 'Lea' in "Dybbuk", 'Isabelle' in Corneille's "L'Illusion Comique", 'Yvette' in "Mother Courage", 'Natasha' in "Three Sisters" and 'Ophelia' in Jiri Menzel's production of "Hamlet". - Art Department
Allan Roy Marceta was born on 12 November 1973 in Croatia, Yugoslavia [now Croatia]. Allan Roy is known for Star Trek: Discovery (2017). Allan Roy died on 22 August 2022 in Trenton, Ontario, Canada.- Actor
- Producer
- Director
Born in Croatia and raised in Windsor, Ontario, Steve Bacic initially pursued a career in academics, earning an honors degree in kinesiology and a minor in math. However, his true passion for film drew him away from that path, and he decided to try his luck in the entertainment industry. His talent and dedication have since earned him international recognition, landing leading roles in popular TV series like NCIS, E.R, and CSI Miami. Steve is a versatile actor, equally adept at playing dramatic or comedic roles, as demonstrated in his work on Andromeda, The Guard, Crash and Burn, HBO's Big Love, and Showtime's Out of Order. He has also made notable appearances on Virgin River and Republic of Doyle.
Notable achievements include starring alongside Anthony Hopkins in the feature film "Go with Me," supporting roles in "Why We're Killing Gunther" with Arnold Schwarzenegger, and "Wonder" with Julia Roberts and Owen Wilson. Additionally, he received critical acclaim for his lead role in the indie feature "Lemonade." Steve has guest starred on several well-known shows, including The Spielberg series "The Whispers," "Arrow," "Aftermath," "The 100," and even took on a transformative role with heavy prosthetics on "Once Upon a Time in Wonderland." One of his breakthrough moments was playing Anna Gunn's husband on the pilot episode of "Rita" for Bravo.
Not neglecting his younger audience, Steve also starred as a series regular in the hit Netflix series "Julie and the Phantoms" and the children's series "Spooksville." Furthermore, he has embraced his softer and romantic side with numerous leading roles on the Hallmark Network.
Throughout his career, Steve Bacic has remained dedicated to the film industry, constantly honing his craft and extending his creativity behind the camera as well. He has delved into writing, editing, and other aspects of filmmaking, even creating, directing, and executive producing three full-length features.
When asked for advice to aspiring actors and filmmakers, Steve emphasizes the importance of not being driven solely by fame or fortune. He believes in immersing oneself in the process of creating and being fully present in each moment, trusting that the outcome will naturally take care of itself.
Over the past three decades, Steve Bacic has amassed an impressive body of work with over 160 credits to his name, working tirelessly in Canada, the United States, and around the world. His passion and dedication continue to drive him forward in the ever-evolving world of film and television.- Zlatko Buric was born on 13 May 1953 in Osijek, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He is an actor, known for Triangle of Sadness (2022), Pusher (1996) and 2012 (2009).
- Laura Antonelli was born on 28 November 1941 in Pola, Istria, Italy [now Pula, Istria, Croatia]. She was an actress, known for Passion of Love (1981), Malicious (1973) and The Innocent (1976). She was married to Enrico Piacentini. She died on 22 June 2015 in Ladispoli, Rome, Lazio, Italy.
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Sylva Koscina was born on 22 August 1933 in Zagreb, Croatia, Yugoslavia [now Zagreb, Croatia]. She was an actress, known for Hercules (1958), Hornets' Nest (1970) and Judex (1963). She was married to Raimondo Castelli. She died on 26 December 1994 in Rome, Lazio, Italy.- Actress
- Director
- Writer
Enigmatic, dark-haired foreign import Alida Valli was dubbed "The Next Garbo" but didn't live up to postwar expectations despite her cool, patrician beauty, remote allure and significant talent. Born in Pola, Italy (now Croatia), on May 3, 1921, the daughter of a Tridentine journalist and professor and an Istrian homemaker, she studied dramatics as a teen at the Motion Picture Academy of Rome and Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia before snaring bit roles in such films as Il cappello a tre punte (1935) ["The Three-Cornered Hat"] and I due sergenti (1936) ["The Two Sergeants"]. She made a name for herself in Italy during WWII playing the title role in Manon Lescaut (1940), won a Venice Film Festival award for Piccolo mondo antico (1941) ["Little Old World"] and was a critical sensation in We the Living (1942) ["We the Living"]. She briefly abandoned her career, however, in 1943, refusing to appear in what she considered fascist propaganda, and was forced into hiding. The next year she married surrealist painter/pianist/composer Oscar De Mejo. They had two children, and one of them, Carlo De Mejo, became an actor. She divorced in 1955, then she came back to Italy,
Following her potent, award-winning work in the title role of Eugenie Grandet (1946), she was discovered and contracted by David O. Selznick to play the murder suspect Maddalena Paradine in Alfred Hitchcock's The Paradine Case (1947). She was billed during her Hollywood years simply as "Valli," and Selznick also gave her top femme female billing in Carol Reed's classic film noir The Third Man (1949), but for every successful film--such as the ones previously mentioned--she experienced such failures as The Miracle of the Bells (1948), and audiences stayed away. In 1951 she bid farewell to Hollywood and returned to her beloved Italy. In Europe again, she was sought after by the best directors. Her countess in Luchino Visconti's Senso (1954) was widely heralded, and she moved easily from ingénue to vivid character roles. Later standout films encompassed costume dramas as well as shockers and had her playing everything from baronesses to grandmothers in such films as Eyes Without a Face (1960) ["Eyes Without a Face"], Le gigolo (1960), Oedipus Rex (1967) ["Oedipus Rex"], The Big Scare (1974), 1900 (1976), Suspiria (1977), Luna (1979), Inferno (1980), Aspern (1982), A Month by the Lake (1995) and, her most recent, Angel of Death (2001).- Femi Benussi was born on 4 March 1945 in Rovigno, Istria, Italy [now Rovinj, Istria, Croatia]. She is an actress, known for Poppea... una prostituta al servizio dell'impero (1972), Bloody Pit of Horror (1965) and La commessa (1975).
- Iva Babic's latest role as the female lead in 'The Machine' highlights her comedic and dramatic talents. Legendary Pictures' 'The Machine' opens Memorial Day weekend 2023 via Sony Pictures Releasing. It tells the hit viral story of stand-up comedian Bert Kreischer's brush with the Russian Mafia as a 21-year-old student on a semester abroad in Moscow. Directed by Peter Atencio (Key & Peele), 'The Machine' features Star Wars alum Mark Hamill as Kreischer's father.
Born in Croatia, Iva has appeared in both English-language as well as many projects in several other languages. Her English-language projects include Alan Ball's 'Virtuoso' for HBO (2015), and 'The Romanoffs', Matthew Weiner's Amazon series (2018).
Iva studied at the Academy of Arts and Drama in Zagreb. Director Branko Schmidt cast her in his films 'Metastases' (2009) and 'Vegetarian Cannibal' (2012). Her breakthrough, however, came with the series 'Sunday Mornings, Saturday Nights' (2012), for which she was widely praised. Her burgeoning acting skills were next put to the test in the Croatian version of the renowned US/Israeli TV series 'In Treatment' (2013), for which she won Best Actress in a TV series. Her first major role as a lead in a theatrical film came in 2014 with the suspense drama 'One Shot', playing a young woman who kills an innocent passer-by in a shooting accident.
She has since worked with some of the most renowned directors in Croatia, such as Antonio Nuic in his dramedy 'Life is a Trumpet' (2015), Lukas Nola's spy thriller 'Guardian of the Castle' (2017) and Vinko Bresan's 'Perica's Diary' (2021) where she displayed her musical talents: singing, dancing, and piano playing, as well as her capability with a variety of accents. The series won numerous awards and has received enthusiastic reviews from both audiences and critics. - Luka Peros was born in Zagreb October 28th 1976. He lived in Zagreb, Vienna, Abu Dhabi, Boston and Los Angeles. He is currently settled in Barcelona from where he is continuing his acting career in Spain and Europe. He graduated from Emerson College in 2000 with a BFA in Performing Arts, Acting Major. He worked at the Croatian National Theatre in Rijeka and the Zagreb Puppet Theatre. Luka has a vast experience in Voice-over work as well as a puppeteer, performer and host functions.
- Actress
- Make-Up Department
- Stunts
Néa Dune is a Croatian-American actress, creature performer, model and neurodiverse creative splitting time between Los Angeles, California, USA and Croatia, EU (where she was born-and-raised in ex-Yugoslavia). After arriving in Hollywood, it took less than 2 weeks to land her first feature film role ("Female Fight Club" as Ring Girl, starring Dolph Lundgren) and book hair modeling campaigns (Wella). Her educational background is very diverse, in line with her neurodivergent polymath nature - Néa speaks 8 languages with an ear for dialects/accents and nurtures a rich skillset, breaking glass ceilings and reaping awards in every field she immerses herself into. She first gained recognition through international publications worldwide and vixen roles starting in late 2009, having graced 45+ magazine covers to date. Néa studied acting at the only English-language acting school in Zagreb - International Arts Center, and continued honing her craft through L.A. workshops with respected teachers and industry coaches. She's been implementing her linguist skills as a Voice-Over actress and translator for over a decade. Now SAG-Core, Néa directed, wrote, cast and produced 2 projects in festival circuit gathering over a dozen laurels, including winning Best International Short Film award for her debut. She is a regular invitee as a peer review and judge - including World Monologue Games 2 years in a row. When not in front of the camera, Néa brings looks to life as a certified Make-Up/Hair/SFX celebrity artist. Before starting her on-camera career, she earned two Master degrees, won a Rector's Award for her STEM work (still cited weekly) and continued with a ph.D. before switching to a career in entertainment full-time. Néa has been a dedicated volunteer and humanitarian for the majority of her life, in various causes she advocates for: invisible illnesses, Earth conservation and innovation, equality, alt subcultures and her native culture to help remove stigmas. She served in the European Youth Parliament for a decade which also enabled her to master English language. Néa also offers her expertise to fellow foreigners to the USA specializing in O1 and EB1 visas, with all success stories! After having received two "extraordinary abilities alien" visas since fall of 2015, she earned her greencard in record time. Always on the hunt for new skills and abilities, Néa thrives on opportunities to intertwine them. As a trained ballroom dancer/aerialist with 20+ years of experience specializes in stunts of such nature; is mermaid SireNea and a certified PSS freediver; seasoned creature performer and stilt-walker, archer, lover of extreme sports, an avid globetrotter and linguistic aficionada (native Croatian; native level in Balkan languages Serbian and Bosnian; fluent English and Master degree in Spanish; proficient in German, French, Latin, Slovenian etc.)- Actor
- Writer
- Producer
Slavko Stimac is a Serbian actor, who was born on October 15, 1960 in Konjsko Brdo, a village in municipality of Perusic, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He began acting when he was only 12 years old and starred in popular movies like "Sutjeska", "Cross of Iron" "Specijalno vaspitanje" and "Ko to tamo peva". With his leading role in Emir Kusturica's classic "Sjecas Li Se, Dolly Bell" Stimac gained international popularity. Then he graduated from Faculty of Dramatic Arts in Belgrade. His collaboration with Kusturica continued in the next years.- Writer
- Producer
- Director
Vanya Asher was born on 20 December 1985 in Zagreb, Croatia. He is a writer and producer, known for Electric Easy (2021), Shadow and Bone (2021) and The Sandman (2022).- Actor
- Director
- Writer
Andrej Dojkic is a Croatian actor. His first official screen part was in the 2005 TV series, "Forbidden Love", followed by the 2007 TV series drama "Good Intensions". He then went on to do a number of theater plays from 2008 up until recently in 2015. His notable film parts include the lead in "Glembay " playing the part of Leone and a lead in a film "I Was Not Afraid To Die" co-staring Armand Assante, Alan Sklar, John Nielsen, Matthew Newton. He has received "The Chancellors Award "in 2007.- Actress
- Writer
- Director
Oja Kodar was born in 1941 in Dubrava kraj Zagreba, Croatia, Yugoslavia [now Croatia]. She is an actress and writer, known for Jaded (1989), The Other Side of the Wind (2018) and The Deep (1970).- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Vanja Cernjul was born in Zagreb, Croatia. He is a cinematographer and assistant director, known for Crazy Rich Asians (2018), The Hunting Party (2007) and Marco Polo (2014).- Gianni Garko was born on 15 July 1935 in Zara, Dalmatia, Italy [now Zadar, Croatia]. He is an actor, known for Devil Fish (1984), ... If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death. (1968) and Waterloo (1970).
- Actress
- Writer
- Producer
Zrinka Cvitesic is a Croatian film, television and theater actress. She started acting at elementary school and her first role was Cinderella. As a theater actress, she has been a member of the Croatian National Theater since 2005. In April 2013, she made her West End debut at the Phoenix Theater in London as "Girl" in the musical Once. Her performance received rave reviews, and she won Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical.
For her performance in the 2005 film What Is a Man Without a Moustache? (2005), Cvitesic won awards for best actress in a leading role both at the 53rd Pula Film Festival and the 11th Sarajevo Film Festival. She received the Shooting Stars Award, the annual acting award for up-and-coming actors by European Film Promotion, at the 60th Berlin International Film Festival in 2010. She has been a recipient of Golden Arena, the top prize at Pula Film Festival for her work in the film Na putu (2010).
Other than her eminent role in Croatian theater, film and television, she is active as a voice actress. Her prolific voice acting range includes over twenty credits in Croatian dubs for animated films, including Princess Jasmine in the Aladdin (1992) franchise, Gloria in the Madagascar (2005) franchise, Ciara in The Lion King (1994) franchise and Beans in Rango (2011).- Ema Mur was born on 2 March 1995 in Cakovec, Croatia. She is an actress, known for Lamborghini: The Man Behind the Legend (2022), The Palace (2023) and Ciao Darwin (1998).
- Born in Split, Croatia. After finishing high school in his hometown, at 18, he moved to Los Angeles to graduate at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in 2006. He lives and works in Croatia now which gives him the opportunity to participate in both domestic productions as well as foreign co-productions. He does theater, film and TV.
- Director
- Writer
- Actor
Goran Dukic was born in Zagreb, Croatia. He is known for Wristcutters: A Love Story (2006), What Do We Have in Our Pockets? (2013) and Nosila je rubac crleni (2022).- Gracija Filipovic is one of the ten Berlinale Shooting Stars 2022, making her one of the most exciting new talents emerging from European cinema.
Born in Croatia, Gracija Filipovic received her theatre training in Dubrovnik and shot her first film in 2014. Her collaborative work with director Antoneta Alamat Kusijanovic includes two award-winning films which have brought her both international recognition and acclaim. In Kusijanovic's short film, Into the Blue, Filipovic plays an emotionally scarred young women, desperate to reconnect with her best friend. The film won numerous awards, including a Special Mention at the Berlinale's Generation programme, the Heart of Sarajevo Award for Best Short Film and the Prize of the Youth Jury at the highly regarded Oberhausen Short Film Festival. It was also a finalist for the Student Academy Award.
Filipovic's debut in a feature film was in Kusijanovic's Murina, which premiered in the Director's Fortnight of the Cannes Film Festival and won the prestigious Caméra d'Or.
Apart from her award-winning acting career, Filipovic is a professional swimmer and tap dancer. In her spare time, she is studying biology in Zagreb. - Writer
- Producer
- Director
Antoneta Alamat Kusijanovic is a writer, director, and producer born in Dubrovnik and based in New York. Her directorial feature debut, Murina, executive produced by Martin Scorcesse, premiered at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival in Directors Fortnight section and was honored with the the Caméra d'Or Award presented to the Best First Film and has proceeded to garner critical acclaim as one of the Best Films of 2022. Murina was nominated for three Film Independent Spirit Awards, including Best First Feature, Best Breakthrough Performer and Best Cinematography. Her short Into the Blue was awarded at the 67th Berlin International Film Festival and was nominated for a Student Academy Award. Antoneta is an alumna of the Résidence du Festival of Cinéfondation, Jerusalem Film Lab, the Berlinale Talent Lab, Sarajevo Talent Lab, La Femis Producing Atelier and Marcie Bloom Fellowship. She holds an MFA in Directing from Columbia University in New York, a Masters in Producing from the Academy of Dramatic Arts in Zagreb, Croatia and is a member of the Academy of The Motion Picture, Arts and Sciences, Oscars.- Actor
- Producer
Stipe Erceg was born on 30 October 1974 in Split, Croatia, Yugoslavia [now Croatia]. He is an actor and producer, known for The Edukators (2004), Unknown (2011) and The Baader Meinhof Complex (2008).- Actress
- Additional Crew
Iva Hasperger is a graduate of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and has performed in theater productions from Shakespeare to Tennessee Williams. Strong roots in a classical and European background often inform Iva's work-perhaps most notably in her performance as "Ilona" in the feature "Vlad" starring Billy Zane and Francesco Quinn. Hasperger plays a 15th century girl who only speaks middle English. In preparation for the shoot, the actress consulted Professor Edward Condron of UCLA to ensure accuracy with the complex ancient tongue.
Hasperger fulfilled a childhood dream when she came to the US to train as an actress. An avid student of the American cinematic tradition and its history she has repeatedly delivered nuanced and eye catching performances in film, television and theater. Hasperger readily admits that her favorite actress of all time is Meryl Streep, and makes no bones about a desire to emulate her heroine. From a Southern belle in "Cloud Seven" to a Czech communist in "Cold Case" she has consistently delivered depth and range.
As the projects get larger the approach remains the same-remain true to the character and serve the writing. So-no distraction by the bright lights for this terrific talent!- Actress
- Producer
- Soundtrack
Leona Paraminski is a European movie, theatre and TV actress born in Croatia. She has appeared in over 30 films and TV shows mostly as a leading actress. She is best known for "Winter in Rio", "The Society of Jesus", "The Party" and "Budva na pjenu od mora".
She enrolled in the Academy of Dramatic Art, University of Zagreb. While she was still at university she won an award for best actress in the film Vinko na krovu. She graduated in 2001. A year later she was honored with the most significant film award in Croatia - the 'Golden Arena' - for best actress in the film Prezimiti u Riu.
Her movies have been shown on more than 200 international film festivals and were awarded more than 30 times. For her appearances Leona has been awarded the best female actress award five times. She was awarded Golden Arena for best actress, the most significant film award in Croatia, for her appearance in the film "Winter in Rio". She has also been awarded for her performances in "Vinko na krovu" at FRKA film festival, and has won three international awards for her performance in "The Party" at Capalbio Cinema ISF 2010, La Normande et le monde and Nice Short Film Festival C'est trop court 2010.
She performs frequently in the theater in leading roles that portray strong and powerful women where she collaborated, among others, with Oscar winner Jiri Menzel. She has appeared in number of TV commercials, has worked as a TV host, did voiceovers both for commercials and films and has been very active in charity. She was also a member of jury in number of occasions including the Sarajevo Film Festival 2013. Leona is a member of the Croatian National Theater.
Recently she moved to California, USA.- Writer
- Actress
Tena Stivicic was born on 5 September 1977 in Zagreb, Yugoslavia [now Croatia]. She is a writer and actress, known for The Postcard Killings (2020), Treca zena (1997) and Is It Clear, My Friend? (2000). She has been married to Douglas Henshall since February 2010.- Director
- Writer
- Actor
Goran Gajic was born in 1962 in Zagreb, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He is a director and writer, known for Babylon 5 (1993), Dug moru (2019) and Level 9 (2000). He was previously married to Mira Furlan.- Bogdan Diklic was born on 1 August 1953 in Bjelovar, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He is an actor, known for Fuse (2003), Obrana i zastita (2013) and No Man's Land (2001).
- Actor
- Producer
- Stunts
Silvio Simac, was born in Croatia. A dedicated martial artist, Silvio trained in Taekwondo and became a world champion during his competitive years. His film career began in 2001 on an episode of Lexx (1996). Silvio's martial arts background served him well for a part in the action film Undisputed 2: Last Man Standing (2006). He had the privilege of fighting Scott Adkins in the opening sequences of the film. Silvio also appeared as the fighter Leon from the video game-turned action film DOA: Dead or Alive (2006). His next notable film project was in the high-octane action feature Transporter 3 (2008). Outside of acting, Silvio enjoys training hard, traveling, cooking, and even shopping. Silvio also enjoys Italian food and is a constant adventurer.- Marshal Josip Broz Tito, Communist President of Yugoslavia, and 1st Secretary-General of the Non-Aligned Movement, was born as Josip Broz on May 7, 1892, in the village of Kumrovec, in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire (present-day Croatia). He was the seventh of 15 children born to Roman Catholic peasants. His blacksmith father, Franjo Broz, was a Croat, and his mother, Marija, was Slovene. After spending part of his childhood years with his maternal grandfather in Podsreda (present-day Slovenia), he returned to Kumrovec to attend school. He failed the first grade and left his formal education behind in 1905, to be apprenticed with a locksmith. As a journeyman locksmith he moved around the Empire.
The 18-year-old Broz joined the Croatian Social Democratic Party, and in 1913, he was drafted into the Austro-Hungarian Imperial Army. At the beginning of World War I, Broz, who had won a silver medal at an army fencing competition in May of 1914, was sent to Ruma. It was there he began to find himself and his life's calling, and was later arrested for anti-war propaganda and imprisoned. He was sent to Galicia to fight against the Russians and Serbs in 1915, and was seriously wounded by shellfire. In April 1915 his entire battalion was captured by the Russians.
The wounded Broz spent several months convalescing in a military hospital, where he learned to speak Russian. In the fall of 1916 he was sent to a work camp in the Ural mountains. While at the camp the first Russian Revolution of February 1917 (March, new style) occurred, culminating in the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II on March 15th. Broz was arrested for organizing demonstrations among the prisoners of war in April 1917, but he escaped and joined the Bolsheviks in St. Petersburg (renamed Petrograd after the first revolution), engaging in street fighting during the attempted Bolshevik coup d'etat in Petrograd on July 16-17, 1917.
The Bolshevik insurrection failed to spark a wider revolt and was crushed by forces loyal to Aleksandr Kerensky, head of the provisional government. Broz fled for Finland to try to avoid arrest, but he was captured and sent to prison. He escaped from a train taking him to another work camp and in November joined the Red Army in Omsk, Siberia, fighting with the Red Guards in the first years of the Russian Civil War, pitting Reds against Whites (royalists). Broz applied for membership in the Russian Communist Party in the spring of 1918.
The Treaty of Versailles incorporated the territory of Croatia into the newly established Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later renamed to Kingdom of Yugoslavia), and when he returned to his village in 1920, he joined the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ). Now employed as a metalworker, Broz became a union organizer. He was arrested after a Bosnian KPJ member assassinated the Yugoslav Minister of the Interior, which led to the outlawing of the KPJ. Broz switched his organizing activities to the underground, and in April 1927 he had ascended to the KPJ's Committee in Zagreb. As a KPJ committeeman he caught the attention of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). Through Soviet influence, Broz was raised to the position of deputy of the Politburo of the KPJ Central Committee and named leader of the Croatian and Slovenian committees.
By 1934 parliamentary democracy in Yugoslavia had been replaced by a dictatorship under the Yugoslav king, and the KPJ remained banned. It was in this year, shortly after his release from his latest prison sentence, that Broz was named a full member of the KPJ Politburo and Central Committee. He adopted nomme de guerre "Tito" to use in his party work (possibly because "tito alba", the owl, a creature of the night, which also represents wisdom).
The newly nicknamed Tito went to the USSR in 1935, where he served in the Communist International's (Comintern) Balkan section. After a year with the Comintern, Tito, who apparently won the confidence of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, was named Secretary-General of the KPJ and returned to Yugoslavia to rebuild the party. Tito filled party posts with his hand-picked replacements. Eventually his position as Secretary-General of the KPJ was officially ratified by KPJ members at a secret meeting in Zagreb in 1940.
The Yugoslav government was pressured by Germany and Italy to join the Axis Powers. Initially it resisted, but finally threw in its lot with the Axis on March 25, 1941, under duress. On March 27th the government was overthrown by a pro-Western military coup in Belgrade, thus aborting Yugoslavia's alliance with the Axis. Ten days later, on April 6th, Yugoslavia was invaded by German, Hungarian and Bulgarian troops, and the Royal Yugoslav army was vanquished in less than two weeks, surrendering on April 17th.
When the Axis invaded Yugoslavia in 1941, Stalin ordered the KPJ to offer no resistance due to the Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact signed in August 1939. Despite ample warning, Stalin did not believe Adolf Hitler would attack the Soviet Union. What he did not know about the Axis incursion into Yugoslavia was that Hitler was securing his southern flank prior to the launching of Operation Barbarossa, the imminent invasion of the USSR. When Germany attacked the USSR in June 1941, it now became a duty for a communist to defend his "motherland" by fighting the Axis powers. Tito called a meeting of the Central committee, which named him Military Commander. The partisans' struggle began with Tito's call to arms for the people of Yugoslavia with the slogan, "Death to Fascism, Freedom to the People!"
Their prior organization as underground communist cells used to functioning in secrecy and with the strictest discipline meant that Tito's partisans were very well-organized and extremely effective. His aim was not only to liberate Yugoslavia but establish the KPJ in liberated areas. Revolutionary governments were established in areas the partisans liberated, which foreshadowed the administrative structure of postwar Yugoslavia.
The non-communists, mostly Serbian Chetniks, also fought against the Axis and had the support of both the British and the Yugoslav government in exile. However, they were not seen as effective as Tito's partisans, and the US and the UK switched their support to the partisans after they successfully fought off ferocious Axis attacks from January to June 1943. The partisans were officially recognized at the Tehran Conference, with the result that Allied arms, supplies and agents were parachuted behind Axis lines to assist them. Stilll, Tito refused to cooperate with the government-in-exile in London.
After the February 1945 Yalta Conference, at which the parameters of postwar Europe were agreed upon, Marshal Tito consolidated his power and that of the KPJ by purging his government of non-communists. Tito signed an agreement with the USSR on April 5, 1945, that permitted "temporary entry of Soviet troops into Yugoslav territory". With the help of the Red Army, Tito's partisans won the war against the Axis and their collaborators. Tito then ordered foreign troops off of Yugoslav soil after V-E Day, and turned to eliminating domestic rivals, including members of the originally anti-fascist Chetnik movement (who eventually collaborated with the Germans to try to stop Tito) and the fascist Ustashe, who from the beginning had supported the Nazis as a vassal state in Croatia. Members of both organizations were summarily tried and executed en masse. General Dragoljub Draza Mihailovic, the Chetnik leader, was executed in March 1946.
Winning the rigged November 1945 elections, Tito imposed a new constitution on Yugoslavia. He further consolidated his power by organizing a strong army and a secret police force (the UDBA), both of which were personally loyal to him. In the postwar years Tito used the UDBA to eliminate Nazi collaborators. He also targeted Catholic priests and those who had opposed the communist-led war effort. The purge was eventually extended to include even those communists who did not agree with Tito.
Initially, the economy and society were collectivized in Soviet fashion, although he did not push for the collectivization of agriculture. Tito began to resent Stalin's constant meddling with his government and his suggestions on how Tito should run his economy. On his part, Stalin was unhappy with what he perceived as an independent foreign policy that was out of sync with Moscow. Stalin tried to depose Tito but would not go so far as to invade Yugoslavia, whose mountainous terrain had hamstrung Hitler's troops and was ideal territory for partisan attacks against an organized military force.
Tito denounced the Soviet policy of "... unconditional subordination of small socialist countries to one large socialist country." In response, Stalin had Tito and the KPJ expelled from the Cominform in June 1948. The USSR, through its Common Market-style organization called Comecon, boycotted Yugoslavia.
Through the vehicle of UDBA, Tito purged the KPJ of hardcore Stalinists, those that could not be "reeducated." He began decentralizing the economy, putting more power into the hands of workers' councils on the principle of workers' self-management. To keep himself in power and Yugoslavia independent of the USSR, he turned to the West for financial aid. The Greek civil war, pitting mostly Communists against the anti-Communist Greek government, sputtered out after Tito sealed off the border with Greece, effectively keeping arms, supplies and fighters from getting to the Communist rebels.
After the death of Stalin in March 5, 1953, Tito attempted a reconciliation with the USSR, meeting with new CPSU party boss Nikita Khrushchev in Belgrade in 1955. The meeting resulted in the Belgrade Declaration, which affirmed equality in relations between communist countries (although in the case of Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968, that equality was observed in the breach rather than the observance).
Freed to a degree of the Soviet threat, Tito's policy of "nonengagement" developed into a policy of "nonalignment." He overhauled his foreign policy to promote a non-aligned bloc between the West and the Warsaw Pact. Convening a meeting of 25 non-aligned states with India's Jawaharlal Nehru and Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser in 1956, a third, alternative neutral bloc came into being. Tito traveled extensively in the developing world during the 1960s and 1970s to promote non-alignment.
On the domestic front, Tito maintained a balance among the different ethnic groups and nationalities of his multi-ethnic country. It ensured stability for as long as the KPJ and the secret police maintained control of Yugoslavia. Tito's system of "symetrical federalism," while predicated upon the principle of equality among the six republics and two autonomous provinces, in fact played the nationalities off against each other.
His ties with the West encouraged trade, which helped boost Yugoslavia's standard of living. Yugoslavia's beaches became a top tourist destination for Western European tourists, due to their beauty, the relative openness of Yugoslav society and the favorable exchange rate, which made an excursion to Yugoslavia very affordable. The economy of some of the Yugoslav provinces, particularly Croatia and Slovenia, thrived during the Cold War.
Marshal Tito was styled President-for-Life in 1974. While he allowed a freer exchange of people and ideas than most of the countries in the communist bloc, the major question of his regime remained would Yugoslavia survive the death of Tito. Without a strongman and the monopoly on power enjoyed by the KPJ, backed up by the army and the secret police, would Yugoslavia remain a country?
Josip Broz Tito died on May 4, 1980 in a hospital in Ljubljana, Slovenia, after being gravely ill for almost four months. He was the last of the World War II leaders to leave the world stage, having outlived his patron, then nemesis Stalin by almost 30 years. The country that he kept together did not outlive him by much more than a decade. Croatian nationalists won the first free elections in their republic in April and May 1990. The independence of Slovenia was proclaimed on June 25, 1991. Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina proclaimed their independence on October 8, 1991 and March 3, 1992 respectively, triggering civil wars in those republics, which left Yugoslavia a rump federation consisting only of Serbia and Montenegro. - Actor
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Rene Bitorajac is a Croatian actor. He has appeared in a number of Croatian and Bosnian films since the 1980s. Most notably, he starred in the 2001 Academy Award-winning Bosnian film "No Man's Land". He is also known for starring in popular Croatian television sitcoms "Bitange i princeze" (2005-2010) and "Nasa mala klinika" (2004-2007). In 2009, he won the Golden Arena for Best Actor at the 56th Pula Film Festival for his role in the 2009 film "Metastases", in which he portrayed the character of a sociopathic football hooligan named Krpa. He again won the Golden Arena for Best Actor in 2012 for his role of Dr. Babic in the same year's film "Cannibal Vegetarian" and, still in 2012, he has been awarded as "Best actor" at the Fantastic film festival in Austin, Texas, USA, 2013 Best actor Bruxelles and Paris Mediteraneo film festival ("Cannibal Vegetarian").
Bitorajac also worked prominently in Croatian-language versions of animated features. He provided voice acting for Syndrome in "The Incredibles", Buck in "Home on the Range" (both 2004), Ham in "Space Chimps" (2008), Gru in the "Despicable Me" franchise (2010-present) and Red in "The Angry Birds Movie" (2016) complete with its 2019 sequel.- Actor
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Goran Navojec is a Croatian actor and musician. In his three decade long career, Navojec has starred in numerous films. He has also had prominent roles on television. He has appeared regularly on stage, including a lauded performance as the title prince in a 2004 production of "Hamlet". He has also worked for various American and British stage and screen productions, including "Coriolanus" and "Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol" (both 2011). For his body of work, Navojec has received critical acclaim and numerous awards. For his role in 2016's "Sve najbolje", he won a Golden Arena for Best Supporting Actor.
His robust, distinct bass-baritone voice has landed him prolific roles within voice-work for numerous Croatian-language dubs of animated features and radio dramas. He has voiced Mr. Ray in the "Finding Nemo" franchise (2003-2016), Junior in "Home on the Range" (2004), Boog in "Open Season" (2006), Bad Bill in "Rango" (2011) and Bomb in "The Angry Birds" movies (2016, 2019).
Apart from his eminent acting career, he has also performed as a musician. Since 2010, he has been a part of Bosnian pop-rock band Karne, a group he formed alongside Miraj Grbic and Fedja Isovic. With Karne, Navojec released one album called "Diktatura amatera" in 2012.- Actor
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One of America's greatest racing drivers, Mario Andretti has virtually won it all, the Indianapolis 500, the Daytona 500, the International Race of Champions (IROC) series, CART, and Formula 1 World titles. Andretti was born in Montona, Italy (now Motvun, Croatia) and with his family, including twin brother Aldo, moved to the United States in 1955. Ever since he was a little boy, his goal was to win the world championship and he accomplished this in 1978 as America's second and last world champion (he was naturalized when he was in his teens). He later won the CART title (America's top open-wheel series) and retired from racing in 1995. His son Michael is also a CART champion and went on to become a successful team owner. Andretti is still enormously popular with race fans and is one of the most recognized personalities in the sport.- Writer
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Rajko Grlic was born on 2 September 1947 in Zagreb, Yugoslavia [now Croatia]. He is a writer and director, known for Just Between Us (2010), The Border Post (2006) and The Constitution (2016).- Actor
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Darko Ostojic was born in Bosnia and raised in Belgium. His introduction to the entertainment world began with a modeling career in Europe. Soon after, he was brought into the U.S. on a modeling visa, and signed with the Zoli Agency in NY. While in Los Angeles, Darko was cast as a lead dancer in a Broadway show version of the Chippendales, with whom he toured the world for 4 years. As singers and instrumentalists, Darko and his brother Jadranko performed and produced a record called "Super!", which became a hit in Europe, and they were signed as recording artists to Universal Music Belgium. While in NY, Darko found his way into film and television. His first film debut was as a lead actor in the drama "Invincible Scripture". Darko was later cast as the bartender in a short film called "Pact", and as the male lead in a short titled "Jump Bitch Jump". In 2014, Darko was cast as the lead actor in a short film titled "Top Drawer", and also as the lead in an Independent feature film called "She and I". Darko is contracted to co-produce a reality TV show called "Stallions" with Emmy-nominated producer Kent Weed (of American Ninja Warriors and Hell's Kitchen). In 2021, Darko co-produced and starred in another reality TV show called "Party Tyme", which is airing in 200 million households worldwide. Darko resides in Malibu, California.- Production Manager
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Branko Lustig was born on 10 June 1932 in Osijek, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He was a production manager and producer, known for Gladiator (2000), Schindler's List (1993) and The Saint (1997). He was married to Mirjana. He died on 14 November 2019 in Zagreb, Croatia.- Actor
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Leon Lucev was born on 26 November 1970 in Sibenik, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He is an actor and director, known for Circles (2013), The Load (2018) and Will Not End Here (2008).- Actor
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An American-Croatian director, actor, writer, and producer, that has appeared in Croatian, German, British, French, and American TV Series, as well as Feature Films, and many Short Films. He is a Method Actor known for a very intense look, mostly playing intense complex characters, known for his ability to transform psychophysically for a character, while completely changing his look and character for the role. He is also known for being able to produce a vast variety of different sounds and phonetic levels, giving him a broad range, and ability to speak in a vast variety of different dialects and voices, as well as the ability to learn and speak in different languages needed for the role, with the authentic pronunciations. For example, completely changing his appearance, and learning to speak the Afghan Pashto language, for the film Drop Gun (2011) by Magnus Persson.
Ivan Pavletic was born in Karlovac, Croatia, and grew up between Croatia, Germany, and the US. His love for films and arts began already in his early stages of life, when he was making films and drawing cartoons as a 10 year old boy, even appearing on a TV Show. By his teenage years he was the chief cartoonist for a High School newspaper, and by the age of 14, became a member of the Thespian Society of Theatre Arts. After experiencing the war in Croatia in the early 1990's, this gave him an extra edge in the Method Acting abilities, and then he finished the School of Applied Fine Arts in Zagreb, Croatia, where he mastered painting and drawing, which he also used for painting giant back drops for Theatre Plays and Musicals, such as My Fair Lady, Pirates of Penzance, and Oklahoma. He then studied Motion Picture Production at the Career Education center in Colorado, where he also made his first experimental psychedelic student film "Age of Pisces (1995)", inspired by his experiences in the Croatian Independence War.
After joining the US Navy in the mid 1990's, Ivan Pavletic started to model for John Casablancas, and John Robert Powers. After some modeling jobs, commercials, as well as training in Community Theatre and Situation Comedy, Pavletic started his career in the US films, where he got a role as a stuntman in the 20th Century Fox' "Titus (1999)" with Anthony Hopkins, and Jessica Lange. He then continued working both as an actor and a stuntman in other American and European co-productions. In 2003, he acted in an American-British-French co-production of "Le Femme Musketeer (2004)" with Gérard Depardieu, and Michael York. From there on, Ivan Pavletic worked for various Croatian and German Film Production Houses, such as Jadran Film, ZDF, and RTL, where he also got a supporting acting role as a doctor, on the first Croatian Telenovela TV Series "Villa Maria (2004-2005)", which also led to other TV and Feature Films, such as the TV Movie "Princess Undercover (2005)", and the German Feature Film "Eine Krone für Isabell (2006)" with Felicitas Woll. Pavletic also starred in many short films, of which some were shown and even won awards on International Film Festivals.
In 2008, Ivan Pavletic, furthered his studies and education in Writing and Directing at the Colorado Film School and Regis University in Denver, CO. By 2010, he started working on the Roman Epic Saga of two parts, called "476 A.D.", which he wrote, produced, and directed. The first part of this Roman Saga is the feature film 476 A.D. Chapter One: The Last Light of Aries (2013), which had it's premiere in February 2014, in the historic Mayan Theater, in Denver, CO. Where it also had a very successful turnout, and has since had festival showings, where it also won multiple awards. The second part of this Roman Saga, is the feature film 476 A.D. Chapter Two: The Dawning of the Age of Pisces (2014), and is presently in the finishing stages of post-production, which should have it's premiere in the late 2014, or early 2015. The 476 A.D. Saga, starring James Rusell, Spencer Kane, Piotr Gzowski, and the famous Croatian actor Igor Galo is about the very end of the Roman Empire and the beginning of the Dark Ages, which deals with human nature, and the fire in our hearts and souls, that burns forever. Both films were shot between 2010 and 2012, in and around Denver, CO., Rome, Italy, and Croatia.
Some of Ivan Pavletic's other directorial works includes a feature film SANE in 1974 (2013), about troubled Vietnam Vets returning to the US, after the ordeal of the Vietnam War, as well as short films such as Tough Luck (2009), The Cosmopolitan (2010). He is presently working on the pre-production for the biographical feature film about one of the biggest geniuses of all time, Nikola Tesla, called Tesla: Beyond Imagination (2014) (Tesla: Iznad maste). It is supposed to feature Rade Serbedzija as Milutin Tesla, Igor Galo, and Pavletic is presently in the talks with the Australian actor Eric Bana, to star as Nikola Tesla him self.
Some of Pavletic's other acting roles in Feature Films include The Cylinder (2013) a modern day Western, directed by L.J. Dougherty, Washington Park (2014) directed by Matty O'Connor, and White Orb (2014) directed by Alex Amadae, with whom Ivan Pavletic is also working as the lead role in a feature comedy, Captain Boom (2014). Pavletic has also acted in a vast variety of short films, such as Smoke (2008), Drop Gun (2011), Déchiré (2011), Homesick (2011), Tyranny and Grace (2012), Rebirth (2012), Open Your Eyes (2012), You versus Me (2012), Path to Nowhere (2012), Between Haircuts (2013), Escape (2013), The Low Road Baby (2013), Five Steps (2013), Fire Ripples (2014), The Field That Grows Faster (2014), and many more.- Director
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Sergio Mimica-Gezzan was born in 1957 in Zagreb, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He is a director and assistant director, known for Schindler's List (1993), Saving Private Ryan (1998) and Minority Report (2002).- Kristina Krepela is a Croatian actress. She trained on the Academy of Dramatic Arts in Zagreb. Her first role was in the short-movie Leptir (2003), in 2003. Her next role was not so small. She played the Spanish Infanta Maria Theresa in Hallmark Channel television movie La Femme Musketeer (2004), along with Gérard Depardieu.
She returned to Zagreb, taking role of Ivana in Croatian telenovela Love in Offside (2005). In 2007, she had a little appearance in the movie The Hunting Party (2007), along with Richard Gere. - Actress
Tara Thaller was born in 1998, in Zagreb, Croatia, as Tara Filipovic, and was raised in a family with five siblings. Thaller was her great-grandmother's maiden name and Tara first used it informally on social media sites, but, after her first movie role, she decided to officially change her last name to it. In 2017 she finished high school and tried to enter the Academy of Dramatic Art in Zagreb, but failed. She started working in a fast food chain and preparing herself for next year's entrance exam, but all that stopped when she got the lead role in HBO's TV series Uspjeh (Success). From the age of six, Thaller is a vegetarian. She speaks English and some German and French, she plays piano and knows how to dance. She has trained skiing, swimming and horseback riding.- Actor
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Amar Bukvic is a Croatian actor.[1] He is s famous Croatian actor who is recognizable for his work in theatre, television and film. He is a member of Gdk Gavella theatre in Zagreb, Croatia. He has received numerous acting awards, including the Croatian theatre award twice. He is married to Alma Vukicevic and they have two kids.- Milan Strljic was born on 22 March 1952 in Tordinci kraj Vinkovaca, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He is an actor, known for Svetozar Markovic (1980), Svetozar Markovic (1980) and Larin izbor (2011).
- Zoran Radanovich was born in Zagreb, Croatia. He is known for Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011), House of Sand and Fog (2003) and The Hunted (2003).
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Neb Chupin is an actor and producer originally from Zagreb, Croatia, that will soon be seen as Dr. Loesch in Lionsgate's upcoming thriller Mindcage with John Malkovich and Martin Lawrence, out December 16th. Neb lived in Croatia until he was 22. He later moved to the US to attend Northeastern University in Boston, graduating as a mechanical engineer in 1992. He then worked for the MIT Plasma Fusion Center, Gillete and began an engineering career with Nextel as a Sr. Design Network Engineer. In 2000 he started acting at the CP Casting Studio in Boston and soon after retired from engineering to pursue modeling and acting in Miami.
Neb worked as a stand-in for Michael Shannon in Bad Boys 2 and in 2005 he was cast in James Valentines feature 411 where he first began to learn about producing in addition to acting. He later moved to Los Angeles and continued acting lessons at Anthony Mendel's Actor Workshop. His first dramatic acting role was with Bobby B. Grubic in the award winning short 'Final Stop.' After that he starred in the television series "Feel The Dead" in Italy and a short film in Belgium that garnered him multiple acting award nominations.
Since then, Neb's career quickly took flight and in less than five years he was in twenty films including Fanatic and Poison Rose with John Travolta, Acceleration with Dolph Lundgren and Natalie Burn and Obsessio, again with Natalie Burn. For his role in Obsessio he went on to win a special acting award at The Venice Film Festival. He has multiple films in production that he both acts in and produces including Pig Killer, The Last Redemption and the apocalyptic fantasy The Islander.- Tihana Lazovic was born on 25 September 1990 in Zadar, SFR Yugoslavia [now Croatia]. She is an actress, known for The High Sun (2015), Aleksi (2018) and Hush... (2013). She has been married to Branislav Trifunovic since 21 August 2022.
- Lidija Bacic Lille was born on 4 August 1985 in Split, Yugoslavia [now Croatia]. She is an actress, known for Aleksi (2018), Firma (2020) and Direktor svemira (2021).