Sonny Landham

Acting

Sonny Landham

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Feb 11, 1941 (84 years old)
Death date
Aug 17, 2017

Sonny Landham

Known For

Mental Scars
1h 20m
DOLBY
Movie 2009

Mental Scars

An investor buys an old junkyard and plans to convert...

2090
1h 31m
DOLBY
Movie 1996

2090

Two men awaken from a long cryogenic sleep, to do...

Billy Lone Bear
1h 30m
DOLBY
Movie 1996

Billy Lone Bear

An honest cop named Billy Bear hides from the IRA...

Carnival of Wolves
1h 47m
DOLBY
Movie 1995

Carnival of Wolves

Four men plan a robbery in a pub

Guns & Lipstick
1h 36m
DOLBY
Movie 1995

Guns & Lipstick

A female private investigator's latest client turns up murdered, and...

Twisted Fate
1h 35m
DOLBY
Movie 1995

Twisted Fate

A FBI agent going back to his home town. He...

StreamPrime Logo
1h 30m
DOLBY
Movie 1994

Night Realm

Action-fantasy.

Taxi Dancers
1h 27m
DOLBY
Movie 1994

Taxi Dancers

This sleazy little drama offers a grim slice from the...

Best of the Best 2
1h 41m
DOLBY
Movie 1993

Best of the Best 2

In an underground fight club, blackbelt Travis Brickley is killed...

Action Jackson
1h 36m
DOLBY
Movie 1988

Action Jackson

Vengeance drives a tough Detroit cop to stay on the...

Biography

William Marion "Sonny" Landham (February 11, 1941 – August 17, 2017), or Sonny Landham, was an American film actor, stunt man and politician. He portrayed tracker Billy Sole in Predator. At the beginning of his acting career, Landham was an actor in pornographic films. He then became a mainstream movie actor and appeared in a number of Hollywood films, including The Warriors (as a subway policeman whose leg gets broken by a baseball bat-wielding Michael Beck), Predator, 48 Hrs., Lock Up and Action Jackson. In 2003, Landham ran in the Republican Party primary election for the post of Governor of Kentucky, hoping to repeat the success of his Predator castmates Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura and California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. He based his candidacy on opposition to an amendment which endorsed the Kentucky Family Court, saying his bad experiences at the hands of the family court had convinced him it was for the benefit of lawyers rather than families or children. He was unsuccessful in gaining the party's nomination. He ran briefly as an independent candidate, but withdrew on June 18, 2003, and endorsed the Republican slate. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia