Bart Johnson
  Call 1.888.752.3532 to Hire Bart Johnson   

Bart Johnson Speaker Agent

START YOUR BOOKING REQUEST
Celebrity Category: TV Personalities

Bart Johnson Available For: Corporate Appearances, Speaking Engagements, Endorsements & Autograph Signings

Bart Johnson Appearance Booking Fee Range: Call 888.752.3532 for Booking Fees

One of the leading celebrity booking agencies and motivational speakers bureaus in the country, CelebrityTalentPromotions assist corporations in finding Bart Johnson's agent, Bart Johnson speakers bureau, representation and business manager. Contact Bart Johnson's management company, assistant, PR Firm and publicist. Find out who represents Bart Johnson for speaker appearances, personal appearances and endorsements. View past Bart Johnson speaking engagements, who has hired Bart Johnson for product endorsements and book Bart Johnson autograph signings. Search for Bart Johnson's official website, charity and foundation, find Bart Johnson's email address and Bart Johnson's phone number and hire Bart Johnson for speaking engagements. Read about Bart Johnson's accomplishments, achievements, corporate appearances, endorsements deals and booking fees. We are a celebrity booking agency that also hires Bart Johnson for corporate event appearances, as a keynote presenter for speaking engagements, celebrity golf tournaments, being a special guest host, tradeshows, conventions, store grand openings, event hosting, licensing deals, product endorsements, print advertising and television commercials. Our booking agents specialize in finding the fees, price and costs to hire Bart Johnson for your next event. Visit Bart Johnson's official website at www.BartJohnson.com, follow Bart Johnson's Twitter account or read Bart Johnson's Latest News

      Print Bart Johnson's Bio  Bookmark Bart Johnson's Bio  Email Bart Johnson's Bio

Bart Johnson's Biography

Bart Johnson is now available for celebrity appearances, corporate appearances, personal appearances, casino appearances, tradeshow appearances, convention appearances, celebrity golf tournaments, coaching clinics, corporate sales meetings, autograph signings, endorsement deals, website endorsements, television commercials, radio commercials, store grand openings, VIP Meet & Greets, new product launch campaigns, spokesperson campaigns and speaking engagements. Hire Bart Johnson to meet and mingle with your best corporate clients, friends and business associates. Contact our celebrity agents to find out about Bart Johnson booking fees, costs, availability and upcoming appearance schedule.

A promising young actor noted for his worldly demeanor and an eye tic, Balthazar Getty exploded onto the scene as Ralph in Harry Hook's 1990 remake of "Lord of the Flies.” The great-grandson of oil tycoon J Paul Getty, the then-13-year-old was attending Los Angeles' Bel Air Prep when casting agents visited in search of young talent and discovered him. His harrowing intensity as the cadet leader who refused to descend into the savagery of his shipwrecked schoolmates earned him raves and a host of follow-up opportunities.
Since "Flies,” he has grown up in the business, holding his own alongside Christian Slater, Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips and Emilio Estevez in "Young Guns II" (1990), mentoring under the veteran but paternal Ben Johnson in "My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys" (1991) and working with the likes of Oliver Stone in 1994's "Natural Born Killers" as a gas station attendant seduced and murdered by Juliette Lewis), Sylvester Stallone (as a cadet in "Judge Dredd" 1995) and Ridley Scott (as one of the students in "White Squall" 1996). "December" (1991), in which he was Wil Wheaton's younger brother who wanted to enlist and fight in WWII, gave Getty his first chance to work almost entirely on a set while "Where the Day Takes You" (1992) afforded him the opportunity to expand his range as an actor by playing a street kid living on Hollywood Boulevard.
For Paul Haggis' "Red Hot" (1996), Getty's research included studying piano and guitar for months in order to play a 50s Russian music student who catches American rock-n-roll fever. The part allowed him to ". . . play music, be an outlaw, and fall in love." In real life, music claims great deal of his attention; under the moniker B-Zar, he produced tracks for the debut recording of the band Mannish. David Lynch cast the young actor to head the second part of his twisted thriller, "Lost Highway" (1996). In a convoluted turn, Getty's Pete is found a prison cell previously occupied by a murderer (Bill Pullman) and is released. The role was a variation on his performance in Stone's "Natural Born Killers" as the naive character is led astray by a mysterious femme fatale (Patricia Arquette). He followed with a turn alongside Burt Reynolds and William Forsythe in the comedy-thriller "Big City Blues" (1997). Around this time, Getty went into rehab for years of heroin and alcohol abuse, addictions he developed while a teenager and shared by grandfather J. Paul Getty, Jr. and father J. Paul Getty III. He has remained clean ever since.
Getty first appeared on the small screen as young Master Miles in Showtime's "The Turn of the Screw" (1989) and did not return to the medium until playing the role of Andreas Symes in the Sci-Fi Channel's movie "Habitat" (1997). Showtime's series "The Hunger" (1997) reunited him with Ridley Scott, its executive producer, when he portrayed James Chandler in "The Swords" episode, directed by Tony Scott, that depicted Getty as an American in London engaged in a steamy affair with a young woman (Amanda Ryan) seemingly not of this world. Getty next appeared in a string of low-budget indies that barely saw the light of day. After two straight-to-video releases—“Out in Fifty” (1999), about an ex-con determined to go straight, and “Voodoo Dawn” (2000), a cheese-ball thriller about a convict who learns voodoo to exact revenge on the people who put him behind bars—Getty starred as a gas station clerk looking to put his days of drugs and booze behind him in “Shadow Hours” (2000).
In “Four Dogs Playing Poker” (2000), another low-budget thriller failing to garner a theatrical distribution, Getty was one of four thieves who crash a Buenos Aires wedding with the intention of stealing a Degas statuette. When the prize turns up missing, the dealer (Forrest Whitaker) expecting the piece demands its delivery or $1 million immediately, forcing the gang to come up with a desperate plan—take out insurance policies on their lives and figure out who’s going to die. A supporting role in “The Center of the World” (2001) as the friend of a millionaire computer wizard (Peter Sarsgaard) who falls for musician-cum-stripper (Molly Parker) during a three-day Las Vegas tryst governed by strict no-contact rules was followed by a regular series role as the drug-abusing black sheep of a wealthy publishing family in the short-lived primetime soap “Pasadena” (FOX, 2001-2002).
Getty continued keeping a low profile in little-seen features while randomly showing up on television. He had a small, but interesting role in “Deuces Wild” (2002) as the loyal right-hand man to the leader (Norman Reedus) of a 1950’s gang who’s released from prison and causes trouble for another gang trying to keep heroin of its block. Getty next joined Christian Slater and Val Kilmer in the heist thriller “Run for the Money” (2002), then gave an energetic performance in “Sol Goode” (WB, 2002) as a 20-something ladies man whose life takes a sudden turn for the serious when he faces the prospect of getting evicted. Forced to get a real job—and a real life—he starts falling for his best friend, Chloe (Katherine Towne), who is not convinced that he turned over a new leaf. In a different turn for the actor, Getty was portrayed as one of the good guys in “Ladder 49” (2004), director Jay Russell’s melodramatic tribute to firefighters.
Returning to television, Getty joined an ensemble for “Traffic: The Miniseries” (USA, 2004), playing a failed Seattle businessman who returns to his father’s garment business and is appalled to see the old man giving cover to the Chinese underworld smuggling illegal aliens, followed by a small role in the epic western miniseries “Into the West” (TNT, 2005). He gave a compelling performance as son of a dead soldier (Wentworth Miller) in the pilot episode of “The Ghost Whisperer” (CBS, 2005- ), then joined the cast of “Alias” (ABC, 2001-2006) for its fifth and final season, playing an agent in Authorized Personnel Only—a black-ops division of the CIA. A storyline involving Getty’s character being targeted for assassination by a mysterious operative called The Cardinal was never wrapped due to the show’s abbreviated last season. He then joined an all-star cast that included Calista Flockhart, Sally Field and Rachel Griffiths for “Brothers & Sisters” (ABC, 2006- ), a “Dallas”-like primetime soap about a group of troubled siblings dealing with the family’s lucrative food business after the death of their father (Tom Skerritt). 

If your company is interested in finding out booking fees and availability for hiring Bart Johnson for an appearance, autograph signing, endorsement or speaking engagement, call us at 1.888.752.3532 or fill out the form below.

Are You a SuperFan of Bart Johnson?

Show your support for Bart Johnson and display a badge on your site or blog by copying the code below.














Unable to open RSS Feed http://news.google.com/news?q=Bart+Johnson&output=rss with error HTTP ERROR: 302, exiting

Disclaimer:
Some parts of the celebrity's biography may be used from Wikipedia, which is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. CelebrityTalentPromotions.com acts only as an celebrity broker for corporate functions, private events, speaking engagements and endorsement deals. CelebrityTalentPromotions.com does not claim or represent itself as Bart Johnson agent, Bart Johnson speakers bureau,Bart Johnson manager, Bart Johnson publicist, Bart Johnson PR firm or Bart Johnson management company. CelebrityTalentPromotions.com is an celebrity booking agency and speaker booking agency representing organizations seeking to hire motivational speakers, athletes, celebrities and corporate entertainment for private corporate events, endorsements, personal appearances, spokes person campaigns, meet and greets and speaking engagements. Bart Johnson booking and appearance fees, costs and prices on this website are estimates and are only act as a guideline. Exact booking fees are determined by a number of factors, including location of event, the celebrity’s schedule, desired duties, supply and demand and other market factors. Bios on this site are for informational purposes only and deemed to be reliable resources, but not guaranteed.