
James Landry Hébert
Biography
James Landry Hébert (born October 4, 1984) is an American actor. Hébert was born in Lafayette, Louisiana, on October 4, 1984. At a young age, both of his parents had died, and he was adopted by a Chitimacha couple, Ted and Rhonda Darden. In 2017, Hébert played the role of Rem in the NBC television drama series Taken for 10 episodes.[4] In 2020, Hébert was cast as Wade in the Paramount+ Western television miniseries 1883, which is a prequel to Yellowstone.
Filmography updated · daily-synced from TMDB
Movies (25)

























TV Shows (1)
Frequently Asked Questions
What movies and TV shows has James Landry Hébert been in?▼
Zoovie indexes 26 projects for James Landry Hébert — 25 films and 1 TV series. The filmography above is sorted by release year, newest first; click any poster to open the watch page.
Can I watch James Landry Hébert's movies free on Zoovie?▼
Yes — every James Landry Hébert project listed on Zoovie is available free in HD with multiple streaming servers per title. No signup, no subscription, no payment. Click any poster to open the watch page and pick a server.
What is James Landry Hébert best known for?▼
Per TMDB, James Landry Hébert's primary credit category is acting. The biography section on this page covers their career background; the filmography below shows every project we've indexed across film and TV.
How current is James Landry Hébert's filmography on Zoovie?▼
Catalog data is synced from TMDB every 24 hours. New projects, recent premieres, and upcoming releases featuring James Landry Hébert appear here within a day of being added to TMDB. If a recent James Landry Hébert project is missing, it may not yet have a TMDB record.
Where can I find similar actors and directors?▼
Browse our full actors index (linked from the main menu) for popular cast members across the catalog. Each movie and TV page also lists the full credited cast and director, so you can hop directly from one James Landry Hébert project to other actors and creators they worked with.
