Donnie MacNeil is an actor, known for Diary of a Wimpy Kid (2010), If I Stay (2014) and R.L. Stine's The Haunting Hour (2010).
Donnie Marhefka is a heavy metal vocalist, musician and actor who hails from Northampton, Massachusetts, USA. Now based in Hollywood, California, Marhefka is best known for his appearance on the Adult Swim television series Music (2016) in which Donnie both performed as an actor and as the lead vocalist with his former band, Ancient Spell. Marhefka most recently appeared in the dark, independent feature film Girl Lost: A Hollywood Story (2020) in the role of "Candy Man". Next up for Donnie Marhefka is a leading role in the upcoming feature film Girls on Film scheduled for release in 2023.
Donnie B. Masihi was born on January 28, 2010 in Los Angeles, California. Donnie is an American actor known for This is Us (2017), Seal Team (2018), and Tea Time with Mr. Patterson (2018). I Know This Much Is True (2020). Donnie has an Identical twin brother, Rocco Masihi, who also is an actor. In his free time Donnie loves to skateboard, dirt bike, practice martial arts, basketball, and dance.
Donnie McCaa is known for Drive Angry (2011), The Collector (2009) and Apocalypse Rising (2018). He has been married to Janet Isbell Mccaa since 1971.
Donnie McInnes is an actor, known for God Help the Girl (2014).
Donnie Nelson is known for The Other Dream Team (2012), Nowitzki: Der perfekte Wurf (2014) and West Wing Week (2010).
Donnie Pierre is an American Actress known for her dramatic and comedic roles. She has trained at The Performers Studio Workshop in the Eric Morris method. She says that acting is what saved. her life. She was born in Independence, Louisiana. She is the daughter of Mary and Donnie Thaic. Second to the oldest of seven.
Donnie Smith was born on December 3, 1978 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He is known for The Lincoln Lawyer (2011), Crank (2006) and The Midnight Meat Train (2008).
Donnie Stallman is an actor and producer, known for G.P.S. (2007) and No Love Lost (2005).
Donald Edmond Wahlberg, Jr. was born August 17, 1969 in Dorchester Massachusetts, into a family of Swedish (from his paternal grandfather), Irish, and more distant French-Canadian, English, and Scottish, descent. He is the eighth of nine children of Alma Elaine (Donnelly), a nurse's aide and clerk, and Donald Edward Wahlberg, a delivery driver. His parents eventually divorced and Donnie, finding himself already in trouble, discovered a positive outlet performing in school plays and became involved in varied aspects of theater -- acting, writing, and directing. At the age of 15, he became a member of the teen vocal group originally called "NYNUK." Donnie's younger brother, Mark Wahlberg, was originally one of the Boys but balked at the direction the group was taking and backed out. A founding member of the boy band "New Kids on the Block," the five teens survived a false start with their debut album and proceeded to hit #1 with the single "Please Don't Go Girl" on their second in 1988. They continued to bombard the market with one-after-another "Top Ten" hits including "The Right Stuff" and "I'll Be Loving You Forever." Leaving the young girls panting for more, they became one of the hottest young singing/line-dancing groups to hit the late 80s/early 90s. The Boys went on to sell over 70 million albums worldwide, and provoke the spawning of other five-member harmony groups such as Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC. During its heyday, Donnie played up his resident "bad boy" persona by tallying up several run-ins with the law, including an alleged arson at a Kentucky hotel (charges were dropped). He also delved into "body art" with numerous tattoos and body piercings in an effort to buck their already-cloying image. Amid intergroup dissension and Milli Vanilli-like charges of not contributing all the vocals to their albums, the pop band finally disbanded in 1994 -- partly out of frustration but also having outgrown the group's juvenile moniker. Unsure of his direction while attracting more trouble in the tabloids, Donnie, who helped write, arrange and produce brother Mark's Funky Bunch group's first two albums a few years earlier, switched gears. He rapped some and modeled some, then transformed himself into an actor, a route taken earlier by his talented bro. While Mark has turned out to become the bigger film star over the years, Donnie has stepped out of his shadows to receive raves and renewed respect for his own tense and compelling character work. He first showed up in big screen action. Making his debut as a "tough guy" thug in the Mickey Rourke urban outing Bullet (1996), filmed in 1994 but not released until two years later. Usually cast as an amoral heavy, Donnie moved up the quality ladder with director Ron Howard's thriller Ransom (1996) as part of a gang of kidnappers who nab Mel Gibson's son, to their eventual regret, of course. His next repellent took the form of a drug dealer in the goth indie horror Black Circle Boys (1997), but the film came and went. After a couple of TV movies, he finally nabbed a starring role in the film Southie (1998) playing more or less himself as an Irish-American prodigal son who returns to the mean streets of his native Boston. The movie also featured another brother Robert Wahlberg who also was testing the acting waters. Ironically, one of Donnie's most powerful roles during this period was also one of his briefest. Seen in the opening sequence, he is nearly unrecognizable (having dropped an alarming amount of weight) portraying a deranged former patient of psychiatrist Bruce Willis whose sudden explosion into unfathomable violence sets up the clever twists and turns that turned M. Night Shyamalan's classic psychological thriller The Sixth Sense (1999) into a critically-acclaimed box office hit. Donnie's opening bit was mouth dropping and jarring in its horror. He also proved he wasn't a flash in the pan by backing up this performance with a major role as a WWII paratrooper in the critically-hailed ten-part epic Band of Brothers (2001), which won multiple Emmy awards (6). This TV role directly led to his casting as a gritty L.A. detective in the NBC dramatic series Boomtown (2002), an acclaimed series that didn't survive a second season. Since then Donnie has patented his unrefined intensity into a number of films such as Triggermen (2002), Dreamcatcher (2003), Saw II (2005), Annapolis (2006), Saw III (2006), Saw IV (2007) and Zookeeper (2011). He has also clocked in lead roles for such roughhewn TV series as Runaway (2006), The Kill Point (2007), Return of the Mac (2017) and, most notably, as detective Danny Reagan in Blue Bloods (2010). Donny has two sons, Xavier and Elijah, by first wife Kim Fey, and is married to actress/producer/writer Jenny McCarthy-Wahlberg. As a former teen heartthrob seemingly headed down a troubled and dangerous path after his initial success, he somehow managed to avoid the traditional pitfalls of drugs and self-destruction, and has since proven himself an actor with "the right stuff." In addition, the "New Kids on the Block" reteamed in 2007 in recording and book tours. The group received a Hollywood Walk of Fame star in 2014.