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Baron Jay Littleton, Jr. (born 3 December 1976; age 47) is an actor, model, and filmmaker who appeared as a regular background Enterprise operations crewman in Star Trek: Enterprise. He also portrayed an Enterprise-E command officer in Star Trek Nemesis.

Beside supporting roles in films such as the comedy Foolish (1999, with Jonathan Banks and Fred Tatasciore), Fight Club (1999, with Zach Grenier, Tim de Zarn, Matt Winston, Louis Ortiz, and Eugenie Bondurant), the comedy Marriage Prep (2000), Bedazzled (2000, with Aaron Lustig, Rudolf Martin, and stunts by Brian Avery, Shawn Crowder, Vince Deadrick, Mark Chadwick, and Anita Hart), A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001, with April Grace and Matt Winston), and Minority Report (2002, with Neal McDonough, and stunts by Dana Dru Evenson and Justin Sundquist), Jay also appeared in episodes of Battle Dome (1999), Off Centre (2002, with John Cho), The Young and the Restless (2002), and Spy TV (2002).

Jay also worked as stand-in on Training Day (2001), for Gabriel Casseus on Black Hawk Down (2001), for Don Cheadle on The United States of Leland (2003), Daredevil (2003, working with Michael Muñoz), the comedy Bringing Down the House (2003), for Morris Chestnut on the comedy Breakin' All the Rules (2004), and for Jamie Foxx on the crime thriller Collateral (2004, working with Bryant Powell).

Further acting work includes the daily soaps Days of Our Lives (2003, with Renée Jones), The Bold and the Beautiful (2003-2004), and Passions (2003 and 2005, with Bruce French and McKenzie Westmore), episodes of America's Most Wanted (2004), Entourage (2007), Involuntarily Single (2012), Mistresses (2013), Ned (2003), Soul Plane (2004, co-written and executive produced by Bo Zenga), the short drama The Garnishment (2012), Iron Man 3 (2013, with William Sadler, Miguel Ferrer, Tom Virtue, Mike Massa, Sala Baker, Chien Funan, and Ilram Choi, produced by Stan Lee, and music by Brian Tyler), Fast & Furious 6 (2013, directed by Justin Lin and with Dwayne Johnson, Joe Taslim, and Kim Kold), and the comedy Not Another Celebrity Movie (2013) in which he played the double of Kanye West.

In 2009, Jay worked as executive producer, casting director, and actor on the drama Safe House with Al Burke. Further stand-in work includes Desperate Housewives (2005-2006, starring Teri Hatcher, Brenda Strong, and Mark Moses), Dirty Sexy Money (2007, with Nolan North), Wedding Band (2012-2013), Masters of Sex (2014), Criminal Minds (2015, with Gwen Van Dam and Jeff Doba), NCIS: Los Angeles (2015), and Black-ish (2015), G-Force (2009, with Steve Kelso, Michael Papajohn, and Arne Starr), the television comedy Self Promotion (2015), and the television comedy 48 Hours 'til Monday (2015). Jay has also worked as stand-in for actors such as Chris Rock and Andre Benjamin and on projects such as Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003, with Kristanna Loken), the action comedy Be Cool (2005), the drama Dream Girls (2006), the action sequel Rocky Balboa (2006), Spider-Man 3 (2007), and E-Ring.

He worked again as double for Kanye West on episodes of Super Fun Night (2014, with Ser'Darius Blain) and Henry Danger (2015, stunt coordination by Vince Deadrick, Jr.). Between 2015 and 2016, he worked as producer on the comedy series Mi Casa Mi Casa, starring Alma Yvonne Dixon, on which he also appeared as an actor in the episode "Pinata Pinata" (2016). In 2015 he starred in the romantic comedy The Condo on which he also worked as location manager, casting director, and executive producer. In the same positions he also worked on the 2016 horror thriller Deadly Reunion.

More recent projects include the drama Chocolate City (2015), episodes of Stitchers (2015, with Salli Richardson-Whitfield), Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp (2015, with Chris Pine), 100 Things to Do Before High School (2016), and Angie Tribeca (2016, with Jonathan Frakes), and the horror thriller Virus of the Dead (2016). Jay also worked as stand-in on the television series The Real O'Neals (2016), for Jerry Minor on episodes of The Grinder (2016, with Caryn Mower and Scott Lawrence), for Tom Wright on Ray Donovan (2016, with Michael McGrady), and for Ernie Hudson on Grace & Frankie (2017).

Star Trek appearances[]

(This list is currently incomplete.)

External links[]

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