
Age: 76
male
Donald Wayne Johnson (born December 15, 1949) is an American actor, producer, director, singer, and songwriter. He's best known for his role as Det. James "Sonny" Crockett in the 1980s television series Miami Vice, winning a Golden Globe for his work in the role. In 1984, after more then a decade of acting on television, Johnson landed a starring role as undercover police detective Sonny Crockett in the Michael Mann/Universal Television cop series, Miami Vice (1984-1990). Miami Vice made him "a major international star." According to Rolling Stone, "No one had more swagger in the Reagan era than Don Johnson." His work on Miami Vice earned him a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor In A Television Series - Drama, in 1986, and he was nominated for the same award in 1987. He was also nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series in 1985. Between seasons on Miami Vice, he gained further renown through TV miniseries such as the 1985 remake of The Long, Hot Summer. In 1996, he had a supporting role in Tin Cup, along with Kevin Costner, Rene Russo, and Cheech Marin. Johnson received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1996. He later starred in the 1996–2001 CBS-TV police drama Nash Bridges with Cheech Marin, Jeff Perry, Jaime P. Gomez, Kelly Hu, Wendy Moniz, Annette O'Toole, Jodi Lyn O'Keefe as his daughter Cassidy, and James Gammon as his father Nick. In October 2010, he began appearing on the HBO series Eastbound & Down, playing Kenny Powers' long-lost father, going by the alias "Eduardo Sanchez." He also reprised his role as Sonny Crockett for a Nike commercial with LeBron James in which the NBA player contemplates acting and appears alongside Johnson on Miami Vice. He had a supporting role in the 2012 Quentin Tarantino film Django Unchained, playing a southern plantation owner named Spencer "Big Daddy" Bennett. In 2014, Johnson starred as the character "Jim Bob" opposite Sam Shepard and Michael C. Hall in Jim Mickle's critically acclaimed crime film, Cold in July. In 2014, he had a supporting role in the film The Other Woman as Cameron Diaz's character's father. In 2015, Johnson began starring in the ABC prime time soap opera Blood & Oil. In 2018, he starred as the character of Arthur, the love interest of Vivian, played by Jane Fonda in Bill Holderman's romantic-comedy Book Club. In 2019, Johnson played the role of Richard Drysdale in Rian Johnson's murder-mystery Knives Out; and starred as Police Chief Judd Crawford in the HBO series Watchmen. In 2021, he co-starred on Kenan, until its cancellation in May 2022. He also appeared in a Nash Bridges television film, with co-star Cheech Marin, on the USA Network in 2021.

Don Johnson

Judge Overton
for Judge Overton in Lone Wolf — Chapter One: A Reckoning
Suggested by misterwolf

Lone Wolf — Chapter One: A Reckoning (also known as just Lone Wolf — A Reckoning), is a 2025 American Western film written, co-produced, and directed by Denis Villeneuve. Produced by Legendary Pictures and The Stone Quarry and distributed by Lionsgate Films, it is the first installment in the Lone Wolf franchise. Starring Cara Delevingne as Harley Stone, the film co-stars an ensemble cast that includes Emma Roberts, Michael Shannon, Scott Eastwood, Diane Lane, Viola Davis, Don Johnson, Ethan Hawke, Jeff Bridges, and Samuel L. Jackson. Set in 1875 Nevada, Harley Stone returns to Reno, her hometown, to discover the whereabouts of her father's murderer, and reunites with her childhood best friend in the process while also allying with Reno's marshall and its sheriff to complete her revenge. Lone Wolf — Chapter One: A Reckoning had its world premiere at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on November 14th, 2025, and opened in theaters on December 12th. The film received generally positive reviews, with praise for the story, visuals, direction, action sequences, Hans Zimmer's musical score, Delevingne's performance, screenplay, themes, and emotional weight, but criticism for its long running time of 190 minutes. It was also a box-office success, earning $945 million worldwide and becoming the fourth-highest-grossing Western film of all time and the highest-grossing Western film to be rated PG-13. A sequel is in development.