Johnny Knoxville, of 'Jackass', Celebrates 53rd Birthday Today

Actors:

David Anders is 43 (“Alias,” “Heroes”)

John Barrowman is 57 (“Dr. Who,” “Torchwood”)

Thora Birch is 42 (“Ghost World,” “American Beauty”)

Jodie Comer is 31 (“Killing Eve,” “Free Guy”)

Terrence Howard is 55 (“Iron Man,” “Empire”)

Alex Kingston is 61 (“Dr. Who,” “ER”)

Elias Koteas is 63 (“Crash,” “Chicago PD”)

Johnny Knoxville is 53 (“Men in Black II,” “The Dukes of Hazzard”)

Jeffrey Nordling is 62 (“24,” “Desperate Housewives,” “Body of Proof”)

The late Anissa Jones (1958 – 1976)…she would have been 66 (Buffy on “Family Affair”) (FAST FACT: She died at 18 of a drug overdose) 

Musicians:

The Statler Brothers’ Jimmy Fortune is 69

Nina Hagen is 69 (her given name, Catharina Hagen)

Golden Earring’s George Kooymans is 76

Lisa Loeb is 56

LeToya Luckett (Destiny’s Child) is 43

Cheryl Lynn is 67

Good Charlotte’s Benji and Joel Madden is 45

Bobby McFerrin is 74

Dead Or Alive’s Mike Percy is 63

Big Country’s Bruce Watson is 63

The late HellYeah drummer Vinnie Paul (1964 – 2018)...he would have been 60 

Plus:

Actor-turned-director Peter Berg is 60 (“Battleship,” “Patriots Day”)

Joey Buttafucco is 68 (Best known as the auto body shop owner from Long Island who had an affair with "Long Island Lolita" Amy Fisher – when Fisher was just 17, she shot Buttafucco’s wife in the face. Buttafucco later pled guilty to one count of statutory rape and served four months in jail.)

Newsman Sam Donaldson is 90 (He’s the White House Correspondent for ABC)

Media mogul Rupert Murdoch is 93 (He has built a global empire of newspapers, TV, and movies through the holding company News Corporation)

Reality TV Star Melissa Rycroft is 41 (“The Bachelor” “Dancing With The Stars”)

Director Jerry Zucker is 74 (“Ghost,” “First Knight,” “Police Squad”)

The late civil rights leader Ralph Abernathy (1926 – 1990)…he would have been 98 (the close associate and right-hand man of Martin Luther King Jr. in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Abernathy was essential to the civil rights movement, but has been pushed out of the historical narrative because he wrote about King’s affairs)

The late bandleader Lawrence Welk (1903 – 1992) (He hosted “The Lawrence Welk Show” from 1945 to 1982)

(Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association)


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