Brandon Richardson

Brandon Richardson

Richardson in 2016
Born Brandon Quantavius Richardson
(1984-09-23) September 23, 1984
Miami Beach, Florida, United States[1]
Alma mater University of Miami
Occupation Actor
Years active 2003–present

Brandon Quantavius Richardson (born September 23, 1984)[1] is an American actor. He has played roles in Regular Show, The Heat, Meet the Browns, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Magic Mike XXL,[2][3] Horrible Bosses 2[4][5] and Jurassic World.[6][7] He is known for 2011 VH1 reality television Tough Love starring Steven Ward.

In 2012, Richardson appeared in a Gatorade commercial entitled, "Nightmare" along with NBA stars Kevin Durant and Dwyane Wade.[8]

Biography

Richardson was born in Miami Beach, Florida,[1] the son of Bernice Richardson (née Green), a real estate agent and Kenneth Smith, a physician assistant. He is of African American and Filipino descent.[9] He attended University of Miami, studied in business management.

Personal life

Richardson's duty station at Camp Pendleton, in San Deigo, California in 2008.

Richardson has a son named, Princeton Cartier Richardson, was born April 25, 2015 via Twitter.[10] He served in the United States Army as a sergeant, receiving the Operation Iraqi Freedom medal in 2006, 2007.[11][12] He is currently living in Houston, Texas.

Filmography

Film
Year Film Role Notes
2003 Tundra II Short film
2008 The American Dream Lil J
Meet the Browns Officer Thompson
2013 Shake Play
The Heat Factory Worker
2014 Dark House Axe
Horrible Bosses 2 Blake
2015 Jurassic World Christopher
Magic Mike XXL Scorpio
Television
Year Title Role Notes
2010 Kourtney and Kim Take Miami Cameo Episode: "Back in Miami"
2011 Human Desires Jake Johnson 2 episodes
LA Ink Prince (credit as Brandon Richardson) Episode: "New Beginnings"
Tough Love Brandon 23 episodes
2012 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Will Derrick Episode: "Rhodium Nights"
The Cleveland Show Mike (voice) Episode: "Menace II Secret Society"
2014 Family Guy (voice) Episode: "Brian's a Bad Father"

Awards and nominations

Award Year Category Work Outcome
Aspen Shortsfest Award 2003 Best Short Film Tundra II Won[13]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.