Blayne Weaver

Blayne Weaver (born April 9, 1976) is an American actor and writer, born in Bossier City, Louisiana. He did the voice acting for Peter Pan in the 2002 Disney sequel Return to Never Land.

Weaver began to perform in the children's theater group the Peter Pan Players in Shreveport, Louisiana. His first major film performance was in the independent film Where the Red Fern Grows (Part Two). In the late 1990s, he appeared in several TV movies and was also a guest star on several shows including ER, JAG, and Chicago Hope. In 2001, the film Manic, co-written by Weaver, was a favorite at the Sundance Film Festival. A gritty movie about young delinquents in a mental hospital, it starred Weaver as well as actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

His first performance as Peter Pan was in the 2001 special Mickey's Magical Christmas: Snowed in at the House of Mouse, and he continued in 2002 episodes of House of Mouse and Return to Never Land, in Mickey's Philharmagic in 2003, the direct-to-video The Lion King 1½ in 2004, as well as in recordings for the Disney theme parks.

In 2004 he wrote, directed, and played Clark Kent/Superman in the independent short Losing Lois Lane, in which Clark has been dumped by Lois and moves in with Jimmy Olsen. It received critical praise at a variety of film festivals.