Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Michael Terry Weiss (born February 2, 1962) [1] is an American actor known for his role as Jarod in the television series The Pretender and for his role in Days of ...
Howling IV: The Original Nightmare is a 1988 British [1] direct-to-video horror film directed by John Hough from a screenplay by Freddie Rowe and Clive Turner. [2] Starring Romy Windsor, Michael T. Weiss, Antony Hamilton, Susanne Severeid and Lamya Derval, The Original Nightmare is the fourth entry in the series of seven standalone films with loose continuity and is not so much a sequel but ...
The film begins with Jarod (Michael T. Weiss) working as a professor and searching for a mysterious artifact.Both he and Ms. Parker (Andrea Parker) received e-mails containing a photograph of their mothers standing side by side at the end of the previous film, and it is revealed that the artifact Jarod is searching for appears in the photograph, engraved on a wall behind the two women.
Almost immediately thereafter, Jeffrey meets Steve (Michael T. Weiss), a hunky, charming HIV-positive man. He experiences an emotional conflict as he must face his fear in order to accept love, often breaking the fourth wall to do so.
Profiler shared the same universe with The Pretender, with three crossover episodes, three with Michael T. Weiss guest-starring on Profiler, Ally Walker made a guest appearance on The Pretender in season 3, episode 19, and Jamie Luner making a guest appearance on The Pretender in season 4, episode 10.
Jarod (Michael T. Weiss), Ethan, and Miss Parker (Andrea Parker) are alive after the bomb explosion on the train. Jarod is now posing as an agent of the National Security Agency; he is part of a task force assembled to find the "Chameleon", a killer who displays all the adaptive traits of a Pretender.
The 3-ingredient meal Stanley Tucci makes when he doesn’t feel like cooking. Lighter Side. Lighter Side. INSIDER. I spent 24 days traveling through Japan alone. There are 3 things I would have ...
While Tarzan helps Jane get over her romantic ideas about jungle life, she acts as his guide to the duplicity of human nature — and insists he eats his food from a plate. It is a never-ending growth process for both, with insights into what "being civilized" means. Michael T. Weiss replaces Tony Goldwyn.