CBS Logo
Dean Cain (Bruce Murakami) grew up in Malibu and attended Santa Monica High School. He was a history major at Princeton, where he set an NCAA record for interceptions in a season. After signing with the Buffalo Bills, a knee injury ended his pro career before it began. His father, director Christopher Cain (Hallmark Hall of Fame's Rose Hill), gave him his first job acting in the film "The Stone Boy." His breakthrough role as Superman/Clark Kent came with the TV series "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman." Subsequent feature films include "The Broken Hearts Club: A Romantic Comedy" (with Zach Braff, Jennifer Coolidge), "Rat Race" (Whoopi Goldberg, Jon Lovitz, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Kathy Bates) and "Out of Time" (Denzel Washington, Eva Mendez). His many films for television include "The Runaway," "The Perfect Husband: The Laci Peterson Story" and "Mayday." Series credits include "Beverly Hills 90210," "The Division," "Hope & Faith" and "Las Vegas."

Shiloh Fernandez (Justin) was born in Ukiah, a small town two hours north of San Francisco. He attended the University of Colorado at Boulder and then moved to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career. He appeared in several episodes of the CBS series "Jericho," and will be seen later this year in the feature film "Gardens of the Night," opposite John Malkovich, Jeremy Sisto, Tom Arnold and Michelle Rodriguez.

Peri Gilpin (Erin Teller) was born in Waco, Texas and grew up in Dallas. She studied at the Dallas Theater Center and then at the University of Texas at Austin. She appeared in guest roles on such popular series as "Designing Women," "Cheers" and "Wings," before becoming the iconic Roz Doyle on "Frasier." She found time during the nine-year run of that popular series to appear in several films for television, including "Fight For Justice: The Nancy Conn Story," "The Secret She Carried" and "Laughter on the 23rd Floor."

Ryan Kennedy (Josh) was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He moved in March 2005 to Vancouver, where he entered an acting competition and won. Soon thereafter he got a part in the Lifetime movie, "More Than Meets the Eye," and in the Judy Davis film, "A Little Thing Called Murder" (also for Lifetime). Two feature films in which he appears, "The Invisible" (with Marcia Gay Harden) and "Ogre" (with John Schneider). are scheduled for release later this year. He is currently starring in the second season of the hit Canadian drama series, "Whistler."

Landon Liboiron (Brody) is from the small farming community of Jenner, Alberta, about two and a half hours southeast of Calgary, Canada. Twenty-eight students attend his high school. Asked how he got the acting bug, he says, "I guess I was just kinda born with it." His real introduction to the stage came via the Missoula (Montana) Children's Theatre, which consists of two adults touring Western Canada and the U.S. Northwest in a little red truck. During their annual "week in residence," the adults mount a production using local children as actors. Landon's mother, an artist, drove for 14 hours to bring her son to Vancouver for the "Crossroads: A Story of Forgiveness" audition. When he's not farming, Landon's father works on oil rigs.

Julie Warner (Melissa) grew up on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. She majored in theater arts at Brown University. Her feature film credits include "Indian Summer" (with Alan Arkin, Diane Lane, Bill Paxton), "Tommy Boy" (Chris Farley, David Spade) and "Wedding Bell Blues" (Carla Gugino, Debbie Reynolds). She has appeared in several television series, including "Party of Five," "Scrubs," "Just Legal," "House M.D." and "Nip/Tuck."