
Age: 33
male
Nicholas Jerry Jonas (born September 16, 1992) is an American singer, songwriter and actor. Jonas began acting on Broadway at the age of seven and released his debut single in 2002; this caught the attention of Columbia Records, where Jonas formed a band with his older brothers and Joe, known as the Jonas Brothers. The group released their debut studio album, It's About Time, through the Columbia label in 2006. After leaving Columbia Records and signing with Hollywood Records, the group released their self-titled second studio album in 2007, which became their breakthrough record. The band became prominent figures on the Disney Channel during this time, gaining a large following through the network, and appeared in the widely successful musical television film Camp Rock (2008) and its sequel Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam (2010), as well as two of their series, Jonas Brothers: Living the Dream (2008–2010) and Jonas (2009–2010). The band's third studio album, A Little Bit Longer(2008), saw continued commercial success for the group; the album's lead single, "Burnin' Up", hit the top five on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Following the release of their fourth studio album, Lines, Vines and Trying Times (2009), the Jonas Brothers confirmed a hiatus. Jonas formed a new band known as Nick Jonas & the Administration, who released the album Who I Am in 2010. Afterwards, Jonas shifted his focus to acting. He had a recurring role on the television series Smash and some Broadway shows. After the group's official disbandment in 2013, Jonas began work on his second solo studio album, signing with Island Records and releasing Nick Jonas through the label in 2014, which saw the commercial success of the single "Jealous". Jonas later co-founded Safehouse Records, a record label in conjunction with the Island and Hollywood labels. His third studio album, Last Year Was Complicated (2016), peaked at number two on the Billboard 200 chart in the United States. Jonas won the Songwriters Hall of Fame's Hal David Starlight Award in 2016 following the release. In 2017, Jonas appeared in the adventure comedy film Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, which became the fifth highest-grossing film of the year. The Jonas Brothers reformed in early 2019 and released the album Happiness Begins in June of that year. Jonas' fourth solo studio album, Spaceman, was released on March 12, 2021. Description above from the Wikipedia article Nick Jonas, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Nick Jonas

James Smith Young
for James Smith Young in Story of my life
Suggested by jakubduda

James Smith was born in 1940 in Oak Lawn, Illinois. 1945 - He met Candace Orange '55 - He invited her on a first date '57 - buy dog 1959-62 He study in Washington and began playing football, wins Rose bowl, drafted by Bears '63 - met Candace, became the NFL champion. Takes her to Elvis concert. '68 - draft to Vietnam 1971-72 Battlefield was calm, platoon have to return to base and fly home, he flew flag, platoon sang, then Vietnam soldier shot him, he was taken to a hospital, met Candace and started with basketball, play on court, play in bed and throw in the trash. He hits every shot, Lakers wanted him. Everyone laughed, but he won. Met horse, he didn't want to eat, owners worried, he fed him. (Secretariat) 1973-74 He married Candace, son was born, retired from NBA 1975-76 took part in Apollo 18, Daughter was born, Met the chess player Ed, who took him to a contest in LA, met director of new film, Star Wars, he casted him 1978-79 He pushed a man at bar, was challenged to battle. When Larry Holmes wanted to punch him, James avoided and he slammed the wall, felt pain, James punched him. People come, wanted him run for president, told them to give chance to Reagan, cause he can be good president '86 - Went to jail, investigation led by Reagan revealed innocence. Played baseball with friends, Jesus appeared, told that family needs him, he arrived, home burned, pulled them out '89 - Met golfer, James invited him for a drink. Golfer ordered Ice Tea and lemonade. (Arnold Palmer)