Birthdays: April 1
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Rudolph Isley was born on 1 April 1939 in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. He was a composer and producer, known for Okja (2017), Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003) and Out of Sight (1998). He was married to Elaine Jasper. He died on 11 October 2023 in Chicago, Illinois, USA.- Camera and Electrical Department
- Actor
- Producer
Aaron Goodwin was born on 1 April 1976. He is an actor and producer, known for Space Detective (2017), Malevolence (2004) and Crimps (2011).- Director
- Actor
- Writer
Abner Biberman was born on 1 April 1909 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA. He was a director and actor, known for His Girl Friday (1940), The Golden Mistress (1954) and Winchester '73 (1950). He was married to Sibil Kamban (editor), Helen Churchill Dalby and Tolbie Snyderman. He died on 20 June 1977 in San Diego, California, USA.- Actor
- Producer
- Director
Adam Karst is best known for his role as the bad guy in The Equalizer 2 (2018) opposite Denzel Washington, Bill Pullman and Melissa Leo for director Antoine Fuqua. Recently Karst co-starred in the film Tehran (2024) opposite Bollywood super-star John Abraham and the stunning Manushi Chhillar in the action thriller Tehran (2024) for Maddock Films. Filming was in Scotland, India and Abu Dabi. Karst was also the lead villain, Soli, in the Jean-Claude Van Damme film, The Eagle Path (2010). Karst guest starred on The Rookie (2018) and NCIS: Hawai'i (2021) for CBS Network. His first TV appearance was on Body Language and then recurred on Entourage (2004). Some other notable TV credits is a recurring role on the hit series Snowfall (2017) for the late John Singleton on FX and Transparent (2014) on Amazon. Prior he filmed 3 seasons on Fauda (2015) the Netflix series about the human stories on both sides of the Isreal - Palestine conflict filmed throughout Israel.- Producer
- Director
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Albert and Allen Hughes began making movies at age 12, but their formal film education began their freshman year of high school when Allen took a TV production class. They soon made a short film entitled How To Be A Burglar and people began to take notice. Their next work, Uncensored videos, was broadcast on cable, introducing them to a wider audience. After high school Albert began taking classes at LACC Film School: two shorts established the twins' reputation as innovative filmmakers and allowed them to direct Menace II Society (1993), which made its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival and grossed nearly 10 times as much as its $3 million budget. After following up with Dead Presidents (1995) they directed the feature-length documentary American Pimp (1999) .- Aldo Pignanelli was born on 1 April 1950 in Argentina. He died on 15 June 2019 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
- Aleta Morrison was born in April 1932 in Bromley, Kent, England, UK. She was an actress, known for The Sicilians (1964), Half a Sixpence (1967) and Petticoat Pirates (1961). She was married to Desmond Ainsworth. She died on 13 July 2020.
- Actress
- Producer
- Soundtrack
Ali was educated at Wellesley College, where she studied art history. After graduating, she worked on fashion magazines. Her interest in fashion photography led her to become a top model, a profession she carried on until 1968, when she made a late start in what was to be a sporadic film career, mainly due to her marriage to Steve McQueen. Even so, what films she did make were in the main either hugely successful (Goodbye, Columbus (1969), Love Story (1970), The Getaway (1972), Convoy (1978)) or fairly so (Players (1979), Just Tell Me What You Want (1980), The Winds of War (1983)). Today, the former star leads a surprisingly modest lifestyle in New Mexico.- Aliza Gur was born Aliza Gross in Ramat Gan, Israel, in 1944. She was Miss Israel of 1960 in the Miss Universe pageant, placing in the top 15. Her parents had fled Germany during the rise to power of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and they eventually settled in Israel, where she and her brother were born.
She emigrated to the US in her 20s and settled in California, where she began her film and television career. Her television credits include guest appearances on Get Smart (1965) and The Wild Wild West (1965), among other shows. Her film credits include From Russia with Love (1963), Kill a Dragon (1967) and the cult vampire film Beast of Morocco (1968) (she was also, at 12 years of age, an extra in The Ten Commandments (1956). Her parents came to the United States and settled in Cleveland, Ohio, for a time. They passed away in the mid-'70s. - Director
- Producer
- Writer
Albert and Allen Hughes began making movies at age 12, but their formal film education began their freshman year of high school when Allen took a TV production class. They soon made a short film entitled How To Be A Burglar and people began to take notice. Their next work, Uncensored videos, was broadcast on cable, introducing them to a wider audience. After high school Albert began taking classes at LACC Film School: two shorts established the twins' reputation as innovative filmmakers and allowed them to direct Menace II Society (1993), which made its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival and grossed nearly 10 times as much as its $3 million budget. After following up with Dead Presidents (1995) they directed the feature-length documentary American Pimp (1999).- Actress
- Writer
- Director
Amelia Brantley is an actor and writer, based in Los Angeles, CA. She is best known for her roles in The Lincoln Lawyer (2022), The Young and the Restless (2018), Krampus Unleashed (2016) and Martian American (2014). She is also the founder of a non-profit theater company called, "Sessions", which aims to support actors navigating the industry.- Anamaria Marinca was born on 1 April 1978 in Iasi, Romania. She is an actress, known for 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (2007), Europa Report (2013) and Fury (2014).
- Andrea Feldman was a performer in several of Andy Warhol's films, most prominently in the film "Heat" as Sylvia Miles's daughter. She was notable for her screechy voice and hysterical performance style, and she often played out-of-control characters unable to cope with their circumstances.
She committed suicide in 1972 by jumping from the fourteenth floor of her apartment building in New York City. In her hands were a rosary and a can of Coca-Cola. - Actress
- Writer
- Music Department
Annette O'Toole grew up in the Houston dance studio run by her mother. She made her television debut at the age of two, as a kid on The Don Mahoney Kiddie Trooper Show. When she was 13, with ten years of singing and dancing lessons behind her, she and her mother went to L.A. for a year to see if she could have a career in show business. Within two months, she got her first professional job: dancing with Danny Kaye on The Danny Kaye Show. "I've used my singing and dancing training in so many ways," she says. "The discipline you get from that is wonderful for an actor."
O'Toole's first acting role was in My Three Sons, followed by appearances in Gunsmoke, The Partridge Family, The Mod Squad, and Hawaii Five-O. Over the decades she has appeared in more than 40 series (among them Law & Order, Nash Bridges, and The Outer Limits), mini-series (Lonesome Dove, Dead by Sunset, Jewels) and TV movies, most notably playing (and singing as) Tammy Wynette in Stand By Your Man and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy in The Kennedys of Massachusetts, for which she received an Emmy nomination.
Playing Beverly Marsh in Stephen King's It is one of her fondest memories. (O'Toole judges her favorites based on the filming experience.) In this century, she played a bounty hunter on The Huntress, Clark Kent's adoptive mom on Smallville (where she and John Glover became lifelong friends) and Jim Carrey's mom on Kidding. She is currently a regular on the Netflix series Virgin River, renewed for a fifth season.
Her film career began in 1975, playing a Young American Miss contestant in Michael Ritchie's Smile. She has since appeared in such iconic films as 48 Hrs., Cat People, and Superman III as Lana Lang. (She has played Superman's adoptive mother and, here, his girlfriend.) Her favorite - out of all the TV and films - is the 1987 movie Cross My Heart, in which she co-starred with Martin Short as a couple on their third date, both of whom are trying to figure out how to share their biggest secrets.
For all her success in film and television, O'Toole's deepest love is the theater. When her six-year run on Smallville ended, she decided to focus on theater, which she has been doing for the past decade. She went to New York and her first audition led to her being cast in The Sea Gull. She has appeared in several off-Broadway productions, among them Adam Rapp's Kindness, Tracy Letts' Man from Nebraska, and Tennessee Williams' A Lovely Sunday For Creve Couer. (Performing on Broadway is still her goal.) She has also appeared in many regional productions, including Wendy Wasserstein's Third, Regina Taylor's Magnolia, and Jane Anderson's The Quality of Life.
Her most rewarding theatrical role was in Southern Comfort at the Public Theater in 2016. She played transgender male Robert Eads, for which she received the Lucille Lortel Award. ("Today they'd hire a transgender male," she says. "As they should.")
O'Toole's most fortuitous casting was co-starring with Michael McKean in the Lifetime movie Final Justice. Having known each other casually, they became good friends as they filmed in Portland. Back in L.A., their first date was the 1997 UCLA concert with Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, and Van Morrison. Soon after that they were married, each bringing along two children from previous marriages. Prolific songwriters - they co-wrote the Academy Award-nominated song "A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow" for the Christopher Guest film A Mighty Wind, which McKean starred in - they took their repertoire on the road in 2005, performing all around Los Angeles and at Feinstein's at the Regency in New York. They are currently working on a new musical called Harold and Lillian, based on a documentary of the same name.
"I'm really lucky because I found something that I love early on," O'Toole says, "and I love it even more now than I did then."- Actress
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April Stewart is an American voice actress from Truckee, California who is known for voicing dozens of female characters from South Park. She also voiced in Evil Con Carne, Marvel Ultimate Alliance, Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, El Tigre, Infamous: Festival of Blood and The Legend of Korra. She had a daughter.- Soundtrack
Armando Gama was born on 1 April 1954 in Luanda, Angola, Portugal [now Angola]. He was married to Valentina Torres. He died on 17 January 2022 in Lissabon, Portugal.- Actor
- Soundtrack
Art Lund was a lead singer in the Benny Goodman Orchestra in the 1940's who also appeared on Broadway, on television and in films.
Mr. Lund, a baritone, created the role of Joey, the foreman, in the 1956 Broadway musical ''The Most Happy Fella.'' But he was best known for his years with the Goodman band, which he joined in the early 1940's and then rejoined after serving with the Navy in the South Pacific in World War II. He earned five gold records for songs that included ''Blue Skies,'' My Blue Heaven'' and ''Mam'selle.''
As the simple-minded Lennie in a 1958 Off Broadway musical adaptation of ''Of Mice and Men,'' he was ''tremendously effective,'' wrote a New York Times reviewer, Louis Calta, who praised his voice as well as his portrayal.
Mr. Lund also had roles in the 1961 Broadway musical ''Donneybrook!'' and in touring companies of ''Fiorello!,'' ''No Strings'' and ''Destry Rides Again.'' He appeared in films including ''The Molly Maguires'' (1968) and ''The Last American Hero'' (1973). On television, he was seen on ''Gunsmoke,'' ''The Rockford Files,'' ''Little House on the Prairie'' and ''The Winds of War.''
The 6-foot-4 performer graduated from Westminster College in his native Salt Lake City and from Eastern Kentucky State Teachers' College. He also received a master's degree in aerological engineering from the United States Naval Academy in 1943.
His first wife, Kathleen Virginia Bolanz, died in a car accident in 1969. In 1989, Mr. Lund married Janet Burris Chytraus. They lived in Sherman Oaks, Calif., until moving recently to Utah.
Besides his wife, he had a daughter, Kathleen Ann Olson of Canoga Park, Calif.; a son, Arthur Earl Lund 3d of Pittsburgh; a sister, Ruth Glover, a grandson and two granddaughters.- Asa Butterfield was born in Islington, London, England, to Jacqueline Farr and Sam Butterfield. He began acting at the age of 8, after a talent spotting casting director saw him at his local after school drama club, The Young Actors Theatre in Islington. Following on from a couple of small roles in films, he was cast, at 10 as Bruno in The Boy in the Striped Pajamas (2008). Since then, he has been acclaimed for his titular roles in Hugo (2011) and Ender's Game (2013), as well as other major roles as Nathan in A Brilliant Young Mind (2014), Jude in Ten Thousand Saints (2015), Jake in Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (2016), Gardner Elliot in The Space Between Us (2017), Norman in Nanny McPhee Returns (2010), and Mordred in the BBC's Merlin (2008).
Asa was born Asa Maxwell Thornton Farr Butterfield, but now uses the middle name "Bopp" on his passport instead (after Comet Hale-Bopp), and is known as Asa Bopp Farr Butterfield. - Actress
- Casting Department
Diminutive, sharp-featured English character actress, one of two daughters born Avril Williams at military barracks in West Yorkshire to an army officer and subsequent teacher. On stage in amateur dramatics from 1949, she was trained at the Old Vic school in London and made her debut at the Royal Court Theater eleven years later as the second witch in Macbeth. By that time, she had adopted her middle-name 'Elgar' as a surname. In the course of a lengthy career on the stage, Elgar was lauded for her versatility, her broad gallery of characters ranging from eccentric to waspish and from arch to timid. Noteworthy stage portrayals have included Miss Havisham in Great Expectations, the Duchess of York in Richard III and Mrs. Bennet in Pride and Prejudice. On television from 1956, Elgar proved equally adept at both comedy and drama. Among few recurring appearances were the eponymous hero's dominating mother in the police sitcom Rosie (1977), followed by what was arguably Elgar's best known role, as Yootha Joyce's snobbish sister Ethel in George & Mildred (1976). Other interesting performances have included a BBC adaptation of Jean Anouilh's Joan of Arc (1964) (as Joan), busybody neighbour Betsy-Jane Duckworth in Spring and Port Wine (1970) and the austere matriarch of the Fenwick mining family in The Stars Look Down (1974).
Avril Elgar retired from acting in 2011 and died on September 17 2021 at the age of 89. Her husband of 43 years was the actor James Maxwell who predeceased her in 1995.- Actress
- Soundtrack
Barbara Bryne was born on 1 April 1929 in London, England, UK. She was an actress, known for Amadeus (1984), American Playhouse (1980) and The Bostonians (1984). She was married to Denny Spence. She died on 2 May 2023 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.- Producer
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Barry Sonnenfeld was born and raised in New York City. He graduated from New York University Film School in 1978. He started work as director of photography on the Oscar-nominated In Our Water (1982). Then Joel Coen and Ethan Coen hired him for Blood Simple (1984). This film began his collaboration with the Coen Bros., who used him for their next two pictures, Raising Arizona (1987) and Miller's Crossing (1990). He also worked with Danny DeVito on his Throw Momma from the Train (1987) and Rob Reiner on When Harry Met Sally... (1989) and Misery (1990). Sonnenfeld got his first work as a director from Orion Pictures on The Addams Family (1991), a box-office success released in November 1991 followed by its sequel, Addams Family Values (1993). He received critical acclaim for his fourth directorial effort, Get Shorty (1995). Produced by Jersey Films and based on a novel by Elmore Leonard, the film won a Golden Globe for best male performance. In 1996 Steven Spielberg asked him to direct Men in Black (1997). Starring Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith, the movie was a critical and financial smash. Producer Jon Peters then asked Sonnenfeld to direct Wild Wild West (1999), an adaptation of an old TV series. He also directed the comedy Big Trouble (2002), after which he made his most successful film sequel, Men in Black II (2002).- Actress
- Additional Crew
Beatriz Batarda was born on 1 April 1974 in London, England, UK. She is an actress, known for Night Train to Lisbon (2013), Great Yarmouth: Provisional Figures (2022) and Yvone Kane (2014). She was previously married to Bernardo Sassetti.- Actress
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Betsy Jones-Moreland once said that she never decided to be an actress, it just happened, one step after the other, and that she resisted all the way. She started out doing office work in New York, working for the organization that owned TV shows like Gabby Hayes and Howdy Doody. To overcome shyness, she took an acting class, and to prove to herself that the strategy had worked, she got a job as a showgirl. This in turn led to a role in road company of the Broadway hit The Solid Gold Cadillac, which took her to California. There, she began appearing in movies, first in small parts at Columbia, followed by leads in Roger Corman movies. She ended her career playing a judge in the 1990s series of Perry Mason movies with Raymond Burr. A lifelong animal lover, Betsy concentrated on animal rescue work.- Actress
- Costume and Wardrobe Department
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The multi-talented Bijou Phillips has led an unusual life. She spent her childhood in New York, California and South Africa. She excelled in equestrian sport. When she was 13, she became a model to escape boarding school and became one of the youngest people to grace the cover of "Interview" Magazine and "Italian Vogue". Bijou also appeared in several ads for Calvin Klein. At 17, she acquired a record deal and began work on her album "I'd Rather Eat Glass" produced by Talking Heads' Jerry Harrison. She was later cast in Black & White (1999) by director James Toback and garnered nothing but glowing praise from critics for her performance. Larry Clark cast her in Bully (2001) which led "The Hollywood Reporter" to name her one of 2002's "Shooting Stars of Tomorrow". Bijou continues to make great films with last year's role opposite 'Jeff Bridges' and Kim Basinger in The Door in the Floor (2004), a film adaptation of John Irving's novel, "A Widow For One Year". She most recently completed a leading role opposite Anne Hathaway in Oscar-winning writer, Stephen Gaghan's Havoc (2005), directed by Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker, Barbara Kopple. This is only the beginning for her, with several projects on the horizon, including her portrayal of "Lorna Doom" opposite Shane West in a feature film, about late 70s seminal-punk band The Germs, called What We Do Is Secret (2007), Venom (2005) (aka "Backwater"), produced by Scream (1996)'s Kevin Williamson, she is in the new film Choke (2008), with Anjelica Huston and Sam Rockwell. As well as starring in a comedy called Made for Each Other (2009) with Christopher Masterson, she just played "Nancy Spungen", as in "Sid and Nancy", in a bio-pic about the Chealsea Hotel, Chelsea on the Rocks (2008), directed by Abel Ferrara.- Actor
- Soundtrack
Bobby was raised in Flatbush, Brooklyn. By the time he was four and a half, he could act, tap dance and play the Saxophone. He made his stage debut in 1930 and film debut at Warner Bros./Vitaphone in 1931. He also reportedly had a bit part in the 1934 Eddie Cantor film, "Kid Millions". He then appeared on Broadway in "Dead End", which opened on October 28, 1935. He left the show in mid-November 1936 to appear in the The Samuel Goldwyn Company film version of "Dead End". Warner Brothers studios signed the all of the Dead End Kids to contracts. At the peak of his career, Bobby made $1,500 a week, owned a $150,000 home in Beverly Hills and was the sole support of his mother, two brothers a sister and a niece. In 1940, Bobby returned to Universal to appear with several other Dead End Kids in The Little Tough Guys series. Later the same year, Monogram featured him in his first East Side Kids film, "Boys of the City". In 1943, Bobby was drafted. He served as a foot soldier in the 97th Infantry until 1945 with his only film appearance being the East Side Kid's "Bowery Champs" (1944), playing himself in a running gag. In 1946, Bobby appeared in the first Bowery Boys picture, "Live Wires". But, after eight films he left because he was forced to take a backseat to Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall. In March of that year, he married Lee, and in 1949, they had a son, Robert Jr. Bobby worked sporadically in film and television afterwards. He tried a nightclub act, then he found additional work as a bartender, door-to-door photograph salesperson and he later worked as an oil driller in Coalinga. In 1957, he and Lee divorced, and in 1958, he declared bankruptcy when he failed to pay alimony and child support. On August 25, 1965, Bobby collapsed at the home of a friend he had been living with. Already a heavy drinker, he was admitted to a Veterans Administration Hospital in Los Angeles for treatment for Cirrhosis of the liver.- Writer
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Boots Riley was born on 1 April 1971 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He is a writer and director, known for Sorry to Bother You (2018), I'm a Virgo (2023) and The Losers (2010).- Actor
- Soundtrack
Brendan Grace was born on 1 April 1951 in Dublin, Ireland. He was an actor, known for Father Ted (1995), Moondance (1994) and Backyard Ashes (2013). He was married to Eileen Grace. He died on 11 July 2019 in Dublin, Ireland.- Brooke Ishibashi was born on 1 April 1986 in Orange, California, USA. She is an actress, known for Stars in the House (2020) and The Future of America's Past (2019).
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Carol White was born on 1 April 1943 in Hammersmith, London, England, UK. She was an actress, known for Poor Cow (1967), The Wednesday Play (1964) and Some Call It Loving (1973). She was married to Mike King, Stuart Lerner and Mike Arnold. She died on 16 September 1991 in Miami, Florida, USA.- Carter Mullally Jr. was born on 1 April 1924 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA. He was an actor, known for The Twilight Zone (1959), Dallas (1978) and How to Marry a Millionaire (1957). He was married to Martha Jane Palmer. He died on 25 July 1992 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA.
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Chris Evans was born on 1 April 1966 in Warrington, Cheshire, England, UK. He is a writer and producer, known for Don't Forget Your Toothbrush (1994), The Big Breakfast (1992) and Glöm inte tandborsten (1994). He has been married to Natasha Shishmanian since 11 August 2007. They have two children. He was previously married to Billie Piper and Carol McGiffin.- Actor
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Christian Finnegan is a stand-up comedian, writer and actor based in New York City. In high school he attended Walnut Hill, a boarding school focused programs in the performing, visual, and creative arts located in Natick, Massachusetts. He is a graduate of NYU where he studied acting and playwriting. He began his stand up career in 1995 in New York and regularly performs at comedy clubs and colleges around the country.- Actor
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Christopher Moynihan was born on 1 April 1973 in New York City, New York, USA. He is an actor and writer, known for A Mighty Wind (2003), Man Up! (2011) and 100 Questions (2010).- Clarence was born in Suriname and is widely considered as one of the 'greats' of modern football. He has been a permanent fixture in the Dutch international squad for a number of years and is the first player to have won the Champions League four times and with three different clubs - Ajax in 1995, Real Madrid in 1998 and Milan in 2003 and 2007.
He made his professional debut on 29th November 1992 against Groningen at the age of 16, making him the youngest debutant for Ajax ever! Even at the tender age of 16 Clarence was setting records and it was only 2 years after this that he was called up to represent the Dutch national squad, at the age of 18. He scored on his debut, helping his team to a 5-0 victory in a Euro 1996 qualifying match.
He went on to become a key player in Ajax's midfield and helped them to their 1995 UEFA Champions League winning campaign.
This sparked interest in the talented midfielder from Europe's biggest clubs. In 1996 he moved to Real Madrid where he became a mainstay for 3 seasons in an incredibly talented midfield. In his first season, he helped Madrid regain the La Liga title; in his second season (1997-98), he played a major role in the team's Champions League success, as Real Madrid secured a 1-0 victory over Juventus in the final, earning his second Champions League title of his career.
At the end of the 2006-07 season, Seedorf was voted as the best midfielder in the Champions League. He played his 100th game in the Champions League on 4 December against Celtic.
In recent years Clarence has done a lot of media-related work, becoming a familiar face in the punditry world. He joined the BBC's team covering the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa, working as a television pundit. He has also presented a number of features for the BBC, including one about Robben Island. He also joined the BBC for their Match of the Day Live coverage of the 2012 UEFA European Championship in Poland and Ukraine.
Clarence has strong connections to Suriname (where he was born) and has been involved in many social development projects there. He built his own "Clarence Seedorf Stadium" in the district of Para and the teams of the Suri Profs & Brothers play there regularly. With his Champions for Children Foundation he supports projects for good causes in Suriname.
For this, Suriname has honoured him to Commandor of the High-Order of the Yellow Star and recently in 2011 the Netherlands also honoured him to Knight in the Order of Orange-Nassau (OON). - Actor
- Producer
Colby Donaldson was born on 1 April 1974 in Christoval, Texas, USA. He is an actor and producer, known for Red Eye (2005), Good Girls Don't... (2004) and Joey (2004). He has been married to Britt Bailey since 24 September 2016.- Stunts
- Actor
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Cyril Raffaelli was born on 1 April 1974. He is an actor, known for District B13 (2004), District 13: Ultimatum (2009) and Live Free or Die Hard (2007).- Daniel Garnero was born on 1 April 1969 in Lomas de Zamora, Argentína.
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David Oyelowo also known as 'David O', is a classically trained stage actor who has quickly become one of Hollywood's most sought-after talents. He graduated from the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA), and received the "Scholarship for Excellence" from Nicholas Hytner in 1998.
David most notably starred as Martin Luther King Jr. in Paramount's drama Selma (2014). Directed by Ava DuVernay and produced by Oprah Winfrey and Brad Pitt's Plan B, the film follows Dr. King's struggle to secure voting rights for black people culminating in the march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama and President Lyndon Johnson's signing of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Oyelowo received Golden Globe and Film Independent Spirit Award nominations and won the NAACP Image Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Dr. King. The film also received an Oscar nomination for Best Picture.
More recently, David's leading roles have included: Jack Radcliff in Blumhouse's Don't Let Go (2019) alongside Storm Reid, Javert in BBC and PBS Masterpiece's six-part adaptation of Les Misérables (2018) where he also served as executive producer, joining Rose Byrne and Domhnall Gleeson in Sony's Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway (2021), and opposite Angelina Jolie as the father and mother duo to Alice and Peter, the two beloved characters from the well-known fairy tales Alice in Wonderland and Peter Pan.
David has also been seen in Christopher Nolan's sci-fi adventure Interstellar (2014), J.C. Chandor's crime drama A Most Violent Year (2014), Paramount's true-life crime thriller Captive (2015) with Kate Mara, A United Kingdom (2016) with Rosamund Pike, Disney's Queen of Katwe (2016) opposite Lupita Nyong'o for which he earned an NAACP Image Award nomination and Simon Brand's Default (2014), and STX and Amazon Studio's Gringo (2018) also starring Joel Edgerton and Charlize Theron.
Additional film credits include The Butler (2013), [linknm0000229]'s Academy Award nominated drama Lincoln (2012), with Daniel Day-Lewis, Sally Field and Tommy Lee Jones, the critically acclaimed independent drama Middle of Nowhere (2012), which earned David individual NAACP Image Award and Independent Spirit Award nominations, Jack Reacher (2012) opposite Tom Cruise, Lee Daniels' The Paperboy (2012) opposite Nicole Kidman, Matthew McConaughey and Zac Efron, the British made for television movie Complicit (2013), George Lucas' produced WWII drama Red Tails (2012), which won "Best Motion Picture" at the 2013 NAACP Image Awards, Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) alongside James Franco and Freida Pinto, the Academy Award nominated drama The Help (2011), 96 Minutes (2011), which premiered at the 2011 SXSW Film Festival, Kevin MacDonald's The Last King of Scotland (2006) opposite Forest Whitaker and James McAvoy, Who Do You Love (2008), in which he played the iconic Muddy Waters, A Sound of Thunder (2005) fro Warner Brothers, Derailed (2005) for Miramax, and Shoot the Messenger (2006) for BBC2.
Oyelowo first impressed audiences on the stage when he starred in "The Suppliants" at the Gate Theatre playing King Palasgus, for which he received the Ian Charleson Award commendation. Following this he played the title role of "Henry VI", becoming the first black actor to play an English king for the RSC (Royal Shakespeare Company). The role won him the Ian Charleson Award and an Evening Standard Award nomination. Other theatre credits include an acclaimed performance in Richard Bean's "The God Botherers" at the Bush Theatre, the title role in Aeschylus' "Prometheus Bound', which was Off-Broadway for which David received rave reviews, and most recently, appeared in New York Theatre Workshop's Off-Broadway production of Othello with Daniel Craig and Rachel Brosnahan.
Beyond theatre, David starred in the BAFTA Award winning series MI-5 (2002) playing Danny Hunter also known as "MI:5" which aired in the United States on BBC America as well. Additionally, he won the Royal Television Society Award for Best Actor and was also nominated for a BAFTA Award for the same role for his work on Small Island (2009). David also starred in the BBC1 original television movie Born Equal (2006) opposite Colin Firth as well as ABC's production of A Raisin in the Sun (2008), alongside Sanaa Lathan and Sean 'Diddy' Combs. Another small screen role which garnered him attention was HBO's film, Nightingale (2014), which earned him a Golden Globe nomination and two Emmy Award nominations, including one for his work as executive producer.
He will be making his directorial debut with the feature The Water Man (2020), written by Emma Needell and produced by Shivhans Pictures. David's production company, Yoruba Saxon, will also produce alongside Harpo Films. Not only will David O direct and produce, but star in the film as well with Rosario Dawson, Lonnie Chavis, Amiah Miller, Alfred Molina, and Maria Bello.
In 2015, in association with The Geanco Foundation, Oyelowo established the David Oyelowo Leadership Scholarship to fully fund the education and rehabilitation of girls who have been directly affected by terrorism in Nigeria. He has continued to raise support for the Leadership Scholarship over the last four years, which is now providing thirty-two girls with an education in Nigeria.
Oyelowo was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Queen Elizabeth II in the 2016 New Year Honours for his services to drama.- Actress
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Debbie Reynolds was born Mary Frances Reynolds in El Paso, Texas, the second child of Maxine N. (Harmon) and Raymond Francis Reynolds, a carpenter for the Southern Pacific Railroad. Her film career began at MGM after she won a beauty contest at age 16 impersonating Betty Hutton. Reynolds wasn't a dancer until she was selected to be Gene Kelly's partner in Singin' in the Rain (1952). Not yet twenty, she was a quick study. Twelve years later, it seemed like she had been around forever. Most of her early film work was in MGM musicals, as perky, wholesome young women. She continued to use her dancing skills with stage work.
She was 31 when she gave an Academy Award-nominated performance in The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964). She survived losing first husband Eddie Fisher to Elizabeth Taylor following the tragic death of Mike Todd. Her second husband, shoe magnate Harry Karl, gambled away his fortune as well as hers. With her children as well as Karl's, she had to keep working and turned to the stage. She had her own casino in Las Vegas with a home for her collection of Hollywood memorabilia until its closure in 1997. She took the time to personally write a long letter that is on display in the Judy Garland museum in Grand Rapids, Minnesota and to provide that museum with replicas of Garland's costumes. The originals are in her newly-opened museum in Hollywood.
Nearly all the money she makes is spent toward her goal of creating a Hollywood museum. Her collection numbers more than 3000 costumes and 46,000 square-feet worth of props and equipment.
With musician/actor Eddie Fisher, she was the mother of filmmaker Todd Fisher and actress Carrie Fisher. Debbie died of a stroke on December 28, 2016, one day after the death of her daughter Carrie. She was survived by her son and granddaughter, up-and-coming actress Billie Lourd.- Writer
- Producer
- Director
Writer/director Deborah Kaplan met partner, writer/director Harry Elfont, at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts' prestigious film school. In a strange coincidence, they discovered that their parents were friends and that they both attended neighboring high schools in Philadelphia. Kaplan had spent time abroad in high school at a film production program at Oxford University in England, UK. Kaplan relocated to Los Angeles and was working behind the scenes in the movie business. When Elfont headed to California after college, they joined forces and crafted "The Family Way", a romantic comedy that was purchased by Can't Hardly Wait (1998) producer Jenno Topping, during her stint at The Ladd Company. The writing duo continued working with Topping, writing A Very Brady Sequel (1996). Kaplan and Elfont also lent their talents as contributing writers to Homeward Bound II: Lost in San Francisco (1996) and Jingle All the Way (1996). In her spare time, Kaplan enjoys kick-boxing, photography, and hiking with her Mongolian Ferret Hound. Can't Hardly Wait (1998) was both Kaplan and Elfont's directorial debut.- Denali is known for Chicago Drag Excellence (2021), RuPaul's Drag Race (2009) and Look at Huh (2023).
- Denis Lalanne was born on 1 April 1926 in Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France. He was a writer, known for Salut champion (1981), Allez la rafale! (1977) and Le devoir de français (1978). He died on 7 December 2019 in Biarritz, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France.
- Denise Nickerson was best known for her role as Violet Beauregarde in Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971) and as a member of the Short Circus on The Electric Company (1971). She left the acting business at the end of 1993, and she worked as a nurse and later a stay at home mom. She will be remembered as Violet!
- Actor and writer, best known as "The Video Ranger", "Jack Lane", and "Dr. Bob Hughes" on television. The youngest son of Hazel and Charles Hastings, he lived in Brooklyn's Bedford-Stuyvesant area until he was six, attending Our Lady of Victory parochial school for one year. The family then moved to St. Alban's, Queens and, about that time, his older brother, Bob Hastings, was singing on Chicago's "National Barn Dance" and New York's "Coast to Coast on a Bus" radio shows, where Don was given a few lines, on occasion, earning $2.00 per week. Soon, he won the role of young Harlan in a touring company of "Life With Father", traveling ten months a year with his father. MGM offered Don a contract, but he wanted to return home, where he did the radio programs "Hilltop House", "Cavalcade of America", "One Foot in Heaven" and "Theater Guild on the Air" and some modeling (which he hated) and "I Remember Mama" on Broadway. Returning to school for fifth grade, he enrolled in the Professional Children's School and, later, Lodge High School and soon took up sports, playing for the St. Alban's Knights, the Police Athletic League, the Queens Village Ramblers and the Cambridge Heights Mohawks. At this time, he appeared in "A Young Man's Fancy" and "Summer and Smoke" on Broadway. While auditioning for DuMont's "The Magic Cottage" in 1949, the casting director, instead, cast Don as the "Video Ranger" in the new Captain Video and His Video Rangers (1949), a six-year role which kept him from attending college. His hobbies include traveling and spending time with his family. His children include Jennifer Hastings (born 29 October 1957), Julie Hastings (born 25 April 1960), Matthew Hastings (born 21 October 1967), and Katharine Hastings (born 23 September 1982).
- Don Steele was born on 1 April 1936 in Hollywood, California, USA. He was an actor, known for Death Race 2000 (1975), Gremlins (1984) and Rock 'n' Roll High School (1979). He was married to Shaune McNamara Steele. He died on 5 August 1997 in Hollywood, California, USA.
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Visual Effects
- Actor
- Composer
Eddie Pequenino was born on 1 April 1928 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He was an actor and composer, known for Stay Tuned for Terror (1965), Quiere casarse conmigo...?! (1967) and El tinglado de la risa (1970). He died on 21 July 2000 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.- Writer
- Director
- Producer
Edgar Wallace was born on 1 April 1875 in Greenwich, London, England, UK. He was a writer and director, known for King Kong (2005), King Kong (1933) and King Kong (1976). He was married to Ethel Violet King and Ivy Maude Caldecott. He died on 10 February 1932 in Hollywood, California, USA.- Elizabeth Gutierrez was born on 1 April 1979 in Los Angeles, California, USA. She is an actress, known for El Rostro de la Venganza (2012), El Fantasma de Elena (2010) and El Rostro de Analía (2008).
- Actress
- Director
- Producer
Emily Goss got her BA in Theatre from the USC's School of Dramatic Art and Masters in Classical Acting from LAMDA (London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art). She works in film, television, voice over, and theatre. Her work in the psychological horror indie hit "The House On Pine Street" earned her 3 awards, and she has now won 4 awards for her portrayal of the bold, charismatic Louise in the period romance "Snapshots." A California native, Emily grew up playing soccer and dreamed of being a member of the USWNT.- Writer
- Producer
Ernest Kinoy was born on 1 April 1925 in New York City, New York, USA. He was a writer and producer, known for The Defenders (1961), Naked City (1958) and Roots (1977). He was married to Barbara Powers. He died on 10 November 2014 in Townshend, Vermont, USA.- Fernando del Paso was born on 1 April 1935 in Mexico City, Mexico. He was married to Socorro Gordillo. He died on 14 November 2018 in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.
- Fletcher Humphrys was born on 1 April 1976 in Australia. He is an actor, known for The Dressmaker (2015), Underbelly (2008) and Chopper (2000).
- Flora Steinberg was born in Argentina. She was an actress, known for Enséñame a quererte (1974), Julián de madrugada (1982) and Profesión, ama de casa (1979). She died on 1 April 1989 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
- Franco Hernandez was an actor, known for Kaleidoscope World (2013), Ipaglaban mo (2014) and It's Showtime (2012). He died on 11 November 2017 in North Lamidan, Davao Occidental, Phillipines.
- Composer
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Fuat Güner was born in 1948. He is a composer and actor, known for Karisik Kaset (2014), The Protector (2018) and Love Is in the Air (2020).- Director
- Writer
- Actor
Gabriel Bologna was born on 1 April 1969 in the USA. He is a director and writer, known for Tango Shalom (2021), Love Is All There Is (1996) and Captain EO (1986). He was previously married to Athena Ashburn.- Actor
- Writer
- Additional Crew
George was stage struck at the age of 14 and ran away from school to get a 25 shilling (25p) a week job at a seaside theatre, He spent 6 years going through the mill of small town repertory theatre then the cinema discovered him. After making 12 films he left the studios for 7 years during which time he went back to the theatre appearing in classics at the Old Vic and plays in the West End with films in between - his 13th was The Curse of the Fly,- In retrospect, he was considered an actor's actor to be sure. Renowned theater performer George Grizzard would make his biggest impact under the Tony-winning Broadway lights in a career spanning over five decades. Born an only child on April 1, 1928, in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, George Cooper Grizzard, Jr. was raised (from age 7) in Washington D.C., and graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1949. Precoccupied for a time in the advertising field, he then seemed bent on a radio broadcasting career when the "acting bug" suddenly bit.
Grizzard studied with respected acting coach Sanford Meisner in New York and went on to apprentice in stock plays. He eventually took on Broadway where he earned major kudos right off the bat for his debut role as Paul Newman's younger brother in "The Desperate Hours" (1955). More New York acclaim came in the form of "The Happiest Millionaire" (1956), for which he won the "most promising" Theatre World Award; "The Disenchanted" (1958), which earned him a Tony nomination; "Big Fish, Little Fish" (1961), for which he won the Outer Critic's Circle award; the Edward Albee's emotional roller-coaster ride "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" (1962), wherein he originated the rakish, fair-haired role of Nick; and, more recently, in a revival of "A Delicate Balance" (1996), wherein he finally won the coveted Tony. Never far away from Broadway, he returned again and again over the years in both comedies and dramas: "Mary, Mary", "The Glass Menagerie", "You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running", "The Country Girl", "The Royal Family", "California Suite", "Man and Superman", "Judgment at Nuremberg" and "The Creation of the World and Other Business" in which he played Lucifer himself. Other noteworthy theatrical events away from Broadway ranged from his title role in "Hamlet" at the Tyrone Guthrie Theater, to his mental patient who thinks he's Einstein in "The Physicists", to his Big Daddy in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" at the Kennedy Center.
Films beckoned in the 60s with a sampling of handsome, intellectual, white-collared roles. Making his Broadway debut with Paul Newman in 1955, he made his film debut with Newman as well, in the role of a ruthless young tycoon in From the Terrace (1960). He also earned excellent notices as a crafty senator in the well-mounted political drama Advise & Consent (1962). He found, however, more durable, frequent work on the smaller screen playing various politicians (presidents, governors, mayors, etc.), notably his Emmy-nominated portrayal as John Adams in The Adams Chronicles (1976). He won the Emmy for his portrayal of Henry Fonda's opportunistic son in the TV special The Oldest Living Graduate (1980). Often seen in a calculating, unsympathetic light, he continued to mix stage and on-camera work for the remainder of his career.
A co-founder of the APA Repertory Company in New York, Grizzard took his final Broadway bow bantering with life-sized lizards in the surreal Edward Albee drama "Seascape" in 2005. His last movie role was a part in Clint Eastwood's memorable Flags of Our Fathers (2006). He died the following year, on October 2, 2007, of complications from lung cancer at a New York City hospital. His sole survivor is long-time partner William Tynan. - Composer
- Music Department
- Actor
Gil Scott-Heron was born on 1 April 1949 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He was a composer and actor, known for State of Play (2009), Dope (2015) and Undercover Brother (2002). He was married to Brenda Sykes. He died on 27 May 2011 in New York, New York, USA.- Actor
- Director
- Producer
The burly character actor Gordon Jump will probably be best remembered for the role of the radio station manager Arthur Carlson in the TV sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati (1978). This is coincidental since, in the first part of his working life, he was found either behind a microphone or camera in stints with radio and TV stations in the Midwest, including producing jobs at stations in Kansas and Ohio.
Moving to Los Angeles in 1963, he quickly became involved in stage productions with Nathan Hale and Ruth Hale, a couple who had opened a small theater in Glendale, California, several years earlier, in order to make ends meet. The Hales preferred the stage to film, and they abandoned Hollywood film hopes when their theater was successful. Others developing their acting talents with the Hales included Mike Farrell and Connie Stevens. Jump always credited Ruth Hale for the real start of his career as an actor, and it has been said that Jump remained most passionate about acting in live theater.
He soon started appearing in numerous TV series, including Daniel Boone (1964), Get Smart (1965), and Green Acres (1965). Through his association with the Hale clan, he became a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, which led to appearances in educational and religious short films produced and directed by Judge Whitaker at Brigham Young University in the 1960s. He played a Mormon bishop in "You Make the Difference", a thoughtful husband in Marriage: What Kind for You? (1967), and even the Apostle Peter in Mormon Temple Film (1969). Ruth was instrumental in getting Jump to give up smoking, and she also admonished him to turn down offers to do beer commercials. To the end of his life, he took his membership in his faith seriously, including its health codes. He also was in other LDS church films including When Thou Art Converted 1967, What about Thad? 1969, The Guilty 1978 and Families are Forever 1982.
Gordon remained predominantly a television actor throughout a long career in the arts, but he did appear in some small parts in feature films such as Conquest of the Planet of the Apes (1972). He also had a cameo appearance in The Singles Ward (2002), a comedy involving young Latter-Day Saint cultural experiences, which was written and directed by Kurt Hale, the grandson of Ruth and Nathan.
Beyond his acting career, Gordon produced The Tony Randall Show (1976) and directed an episode of WKRP in Cincinnati (1978). In the last years of his life, he was readily recognizable as the lonely Maytag Washer repairman in commercials that ran on television for several years starting in 1989. He effectively portrayed Ol' Lonely until retiring from the role just before his death. (The repairman was lonely because the machines never broke down.) As is often the case for actors with a flair for comedy, he was also adept at playing dramatic roles. As is also often the case with character actors, his face is recognizable to many who never knew his name.- Actress
- Composer
- Soundtrack
Grace Lee Whitney was a versatile actress and vocalist born in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Beginning as a "girl singer" on Detroit's WJR radio, she soon opened in nightclubs for Billie Holiday and Buddy Rich, and toured with the Spike Jones and Fred Waring Bands. Grace debuted on Broadway in "Top Banana", and subsequently appeared in the United Artists film Top Banana (1954). Grace is probably best known for her portrayal of Yeoman Janice Rand on the original Star Trek (1966) series. She later reprised her role for a string of successful Star Trek films: Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979), Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984), Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986), and Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991). Grace continued to delight fans in personal appearances at conventions and events throughout North America and Europe. In 1998, she appeared in an episode of Diagnosis Murder (1993) with her Star Trek castmates George Takei, Walter Koenig and Majel Barrett. Grace Lee Whitney died at age 85 of natural causes in her home in Coarsegold, California on May 1, 2015.- Actor
- Director
- Writer
Grayson Thorne Kilpatrick began his acting career in small student and indie films in the Southeast. Grayson Thorne Kilpatrick was born in Huntsville, Alabama, to Sherry (Lowery), an Engineer for the SpaceForce, and Charles Kilpatrick an Engineer working for NASA. Grayson's mom always encouraged him to take up acting but he was not interested until a traumatic event occurred and at age three, his parents placed him in Child Play Therapy to help him cope with events surrounding a home invasion.
In the Spring of 2013 after meeting Grayson Russell from "Dairy of a Wimpy Kid "who was in town filming "Space Warriors". Grayson volunteered to be an extra on Space Warriors and completely fell in love with the environment of film acting. In 2013 Grayson started taking classes at a local acting school "Hollywood Huntsville" and that same year he made his screen debut in the feature film "Campin Buddies" working alongside legends like Tom Lester known for his role as Eb in "Green Acres" and Ray Stevens, Don Most known for his roles as Ralph the Mouth on "Happy Days" and Victoria Jackson known from her time at "SNL".
Grayson has worked on many student, independent, and feature films as well as TV shows, like "Documentary Now!", "Chicken Girls: The Movie", "This Isn't Working", "Daddy's Home", Cinemax "Outcast", Netflix's "Wet Hot American Summer: Ten Years Later" "Your Pretty Face Is Going To Hell", "Vikes", "American Horror Story", "To Tell The Truth" and FX's "Dave" among others.
Grayson is also interested in the writing and directing side of the entertainment business. In 2017, he wrote his first SAG Short Film called "John Foley: Motivationally Speaking" in honor of one of his favorite actors, Chris Farley. In the skit for which he won Best Actor in a short film at the Young Artist Awards, Grayson plays John Foley son of Matt Foley. Grayson is a member of SAG-AFTRA since 2016 and in 2020 he passed the California High School Proficiency Exam (CHSPE), he is a Legal 18. Grayson resides in Los Angeles, CA and his hometown of Huntsville, AL with two dogs (Teacup Pomeranian: Cinnamon Grace and Henry) he also has a cat (Luna).
Grayson plays guitar, Ukulele, flute, Oboe and harmonica. Grayson is a huge Rubik's Cube fan. He has over 100 Rubik's Cubes of all sizes and styles and he usually has at least one of these on set with him. His hobbies is Archery, Rubik's Cube and watching College Football (Alabama Crimson Tide).
Luber Roklin Entertainment in Los Angeles and People Store Talent Agency in Atlanta, Ga. currently represent Grayson.- Actress
- Composer
- Soundtrack
Hannah was born on 1 April 1981 at Great Yarmouth, England. At the age of 3 she modelled in a Mothercare catalogue. At school she liked sports but at 12 she decided she wanted to be a performer. She landed a part in a local production of Annie. Hannah enjoyed it so much she decided to join the National Youth Music Theatre production of Pendragon where she met S Club 7 member Paul. She also appeared in English TV shows such as Blue Peter and the National Lottery. Then at age 18 she joined the pop group S Club 7.- Harry Lewis was born on 1 April 1920 in Hollywood, California, USA. He was an actor, known for Key Largo (1948), Gun Crazy (1950) and Arthur Hailey's the Moneychangers (1976). He was married to Marilyn Lewis. He died on 9 June 2013 in Beverly Hills, California, USA.
- Soundtrack
Harry Sheppard was born on 1 April 1928 in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA. He died on 27 December 2022 in Houston, Texas, USA.- Actress
- Soundtrack
Heather Young is best known for her regular role as "Betty Hamilton" in the sci-fi two-season cult series, Land of the Giants (1968), produced by Irwin Allen.
She also appeared in one episode, Town of Terror (1967), of another Irwin Allen sci-fi cult series, The Time Tunnel (1966).
With this sort of history, you would expect Young to have a love of sci-fi, but this is not the case at all, she got these roles because she was one of the last 20th Century Fox contract players and Irwin Allen selected her for this reason.
As well as not being not totally comfortable with Land of the Giants (1968), she never really got a lot to do in the series, however this problem was addressed by series co-star Don Matheson (as explained in the "Land of the Giants" DVD set). Matheson would simply hand some of his lines to Young to give her more to do.
Perhaps she looked most at home in the second season episode, titled The Marionettes (1970). In this episode, Betty helped out a kind giant circus guy, by acting as a singing dancing marionette, to replace a real marionette.
In 1995, the entire living Land of the Giants (1968) cast was interviewed on The Fantasy Worlds of Irwin Allen (1995) TV show, but Young was oddly missing.- Actress
- Composer
- Soundtrack
Hillary Dawn Scott was born on April 1, 1986 in Nashville, Tennessee, USA to her parents, mother Linda Davis and father Lang Scott. She is best known as one of the group members in the country music group, Lady A. She has been married to Chris Tyrrell since January 7, 2012. They have three daughters.- Actress
- Soundtrack
Ingrid Steeger was the third child of Kurt and Käthe Stengert, who already had son Udo and daughter Jutta. After school Ingrid worked as a secretary when she was discovered by photographer Frank Quade. Soon pinup photos of her appeared in numerous men's magazines, especially "SEXY", where even today she is the girl with the most cover shots. She was elected Miss Filmfestival (Berlin 1968) and soon was into movies herself. Her early films were cheap sex movies, mostly of the "Report" type. Not wanting to use her real name--because her father objected--and not yet having decided on a stage name, her first movie billed her as "Ingrid Stengel".
Her "very" first movie deserves a special mention. Before the age of video, porn films for home viewing were Super 8 shorts and Ingrid starred uncredited in one of those, Die perverse Herrin und ihre Opfer (1969) ("The Perverted Mistress and Her Victims"). This movie had long been forgotten when, at the height of her career, producer Gerd Wasmund (aka Mike Hunter) reissued it on video, retitled "Ingrid Steeger's Porno Action". She went to court to stop distribution and won. The same thing happened again when Beate Uhse distributed a collection of old naturalist shots of Ingrid, titled "Ingrid - blutjung und verführerisch" ("Ingrid--Youngblooded and Tempting"). Again she had to go to court to stop distribution. In addition to her movies, she was given small but serious roles in TV productions, where--strange as it might seem--nobody seemed to know about her sex films. Helmut Holger, one of her colleagues, suggested her to director Michael Pfleghar, who was casting for a new TV comedy series called Klimbim (1973), a German version of the American show Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (1967). This was her breakthrough. The public loved her in her new role as "Klimbim-clown", and decent pictures of her appeared in women's and teen's magazines. The readers of Germany's biggest teen magazine, "BRAVO", awarded her the "Otto", its top award, four times. (1975: Bronze, 1976 & 1977: Silver, 1978: Gold). It seemed that nobody could stop her now.
She followed "Klimbim" with Zwei himmlische Töchter (1978) ("Two Heavenly Daughters"), another successful comedy series, but flopped badly with Susi (1980) a third one, all directed by Pfleghar. From then on it was downhill for her. She went to France to live with her actor-friend Jean-Paul Zehnacker, but they soon separated. Ingrid returned to Germany to become a mature, serious actress, in the vein of her idols Shirley MacLaine and Goldie Hawn, but the public wouldn't let her. The same public that once had forgiven her sex-film past would not forget "Klimbim", though the series hadn't been shown for ages. Nearly every article on her began with "Ingrid Steeger, ex-clown ("Klimbim"), will ...".Michael Phlegar couldn't help her, either; he ran into severe personal problems and committed suicide a few years later. Though Ingrid can act, her few serious roles were doomed from the start. In recent years she has concentrated on theater and played mostly boulevard comedies. In 1995 she starred in the Karl May summer theater in Bad Segeberg as "Cowgirl Mona".
Her private life has been rather chaotic, too. Her marriages, liaisons and affairs are well chronicled and always mentioned when she is seen with somebody new. When she first entered films, she married cameraman Lothar E. Stickelbrucks in 1973, but they divorced two years later. She had an affair with director Michael Pfleghar, though neither one admitted it at that time (it was rumored that she even wanted to leave Germany to go to Hollywood with him). Next was Peter Koenecke, who organized safari tours in Kenya. They planned to marry in 1979 and move to Kenya together. She was even said to have learned Swahili. Next was French actor Jean-Paul Zehnacker, who starred with her in "Susi". She moved to live with him in France, but returned to Germany in 1984 when love turned to friendship. After him came Lothar Köllner (1985-86), owner of a hi-fi shop in Murnau, and she even obtained her driver's license at the age of 38 to see him more often. Then came film director Dieter Wedel (1988-91), whom she shared with another woman. At least, he starred her in his TV series Wilder Westen inclusive (1988) and Der große Bellheim (1993), giving her a chance for some serious acting.
Then she met Tom LaBlanc, an American Indian of the Dakota tribe, at a World Uranium hearing and they got married in a rush in August 1992. Nobody gave them much of a chance, because he didn't speak German and she didn't speak much English. Most photos show them side by side, Tom having to wear Indian clothing with feather headdress for the photographers, holding Ingrid's dachshund and looking very uneasy. Nevertheless, the press never accepted him. The couple was always referred to as "Ingrid and her Indian". Soon he was spending most of his time in America, fighting for the rights of his people while Ingrid was left at home. They divorced in October 1995.
Next was Swiss actor Bernd Seebacher. Immediately following her divorce from LaBlanc, she fell in love with Bernd and August 1996 was set as the date for the wedding. The couple was shown in magazines, choosing rings and posing in their wedding dresses, but at the last possible moment the wedding was postponed. Unfortunately, Ingrid had already sold her apartment in Munich to live with her husband in Switzerland. Now that she remained a foreigner, she had to leave the country. Her only true friend in all those years was her dachshund Felix. There is scarcely one private photo of Ingrid without her dog. When Felix was killed in France by a hit-and-run driver, she mourned a long time and finally got Felix II. This one even went on stage with her in "Champagner-Complex" and was said to have been the matchmaker when she met Dieter Wedel. When Felix II had to be put to sleep in 1995, she didn't want another one, but Wedel kept up the tradition by presenting her with a young dachshund called Lucky Luke.- Actor
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
- Stunts
Ivan G'Vera was born on 1 April 1959 in Prague, Czechoslovakia [now Czech Republic]. He is an actor and assistant director, known for Terminator Salvation (2009), Casino Royale (2006) and The Hunt for Red October (1990).- Jan Wahl was born on 1 April 1931 in Columbus, Ohio, USA. He was a writer, known for Jackanory (1965), Why We Need Each Other, or the Animals' Picnic Day (1972) and CBS Library (1979). He died on 29 January 2019 in Toledo, Ohio, USA.
- Actress
- Writer
- Soundtrack
Jane Adams has performed theatre at the Seattle Repertory Theatre. The plays include "Love Diatribe," "The Nice and the Nasty," and "Greetings From Elsewhere Cabaret." She also performed in "Careless Love" at the Empty Space Theatre, "Candide/Len Jenkin" at the Pioneer Square Theatre," "Talking With" at the Group Theatre and "Camino Real" at the Juilliard School. She won a Tony Award for best performance by an actress in a play for the Broadway play, "An Inspector Calls." She also won the Outer Critics Circle Award for best featured actress in a play in the Broadway play, "I Hate Hamlet."- Actress
- Soundtrack
Jane Powell was singing and dancing at an early age. She sang on the radio and performed in theaters before her screen debut in 1944. Through the 1940s and 1950s, she had a successful career in movie musicals. However, in 1957, Jane's career in films ended, as she had outgrown her innocent girl-next-door image. She made brief returns to acting in front of the camera -- on television, in commercials, and in a workout video. She also had a variety of roles on stage after the end of her movie career, including the musicals "South Pacific," "The Sound of Music," "Oklahoma!," "My Fair Lady," "Carousel," and a one-woman show "The Girl Next Door and How She Grew," from which she took the title of her 1988 autobiography.- Stunts
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
- Actor
Jeff Dashnaw was born on 1 April 1956. He is an assistant director and actor, known for News of the World (2020), Sin City (2005) and The Terminator (1984).- Actor
- Producer
- Writer
Jeff Witzke was born in Michigan, USA. He is an actor and producer, known for Money Monster (2016), Labor Day (2013) and Thank You for Smoking (2005).- Actress
- Producer
- Soundtrack
Jennifer Runyon was born on 1 April 1960 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. She is an actress and producer, known for Ghostbusters (1984), A Very Brady Christmas (1988) and Up the Creek (1984). She has been married to Todd Corman since 9 March 1991. They have two children.- Director
- Production Manager
- Additional Crew
Jeremy Silberston was born on 1 April 1950 in England, UK. He was a director and production manager, known for Coasting (1990), EastEnders (1985) and The Inspector Lynley Mysteries (2001). He was married to Catherine Napier. He died on 9 March 2006 in Kent, England, UK.- Emmy Award-winning actress Jessica Collins is known for a variety of dramatic and comedic roles in film and television including Catch Me If You Can, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, and Tru Calling. She is an American actress of Italian, Irish, French, Polish and English ancestry, and was born in Schenectady, New York. At 18, she moved to New York City to pursue an acting career, landing work right away in national commercials and television and would later study at the prestigious Royal National Theatre in London. Jessica is also professional chef, graduating with highest honors from the acclaimed cooking school, Le Cordon Bleu. She has been married to writer/director Michael Cooney since May 4th, 2016. They have one daughter, Jemma Kate Collins Cooney.
- Jessica Provencher was born on 1 April 1988 in Santa Clara County, California, USA. She is an actress, known for A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas (2011), One Day Like Rain (2007) and Blind Ambition (2008).
- Actor
- Producer
- Soundtrack
JJ Feild was born on 1 April 1978 in Boulder, Colorado, USA. He is an actor and producer, known for Captain America: The First Avenger (2011), Centurion (2010) and Austenland (2013).- Additional Crew
Joan Colom was born in April 1921 in Barcelona, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. He is known for La silla de Fernando (2006) and Afal, una mirada libre (2009). He died on 3 September 2017 in Barcelona, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.- Joanna Kanska was born on 1 April 1957 in Nowy Sacz, Malopolskie, Poland. She is an actress, known for The Tall Guy (1989), A Very Peculiar Practice (1986) and Screen One (1985).
- Producer
- Writer
- Additional Crew
Joe Francis, founder of Girls Gone Wild ®, has grown accustomed to being a lightning rod for discussions ranging from First Amendment rights to personal freedom to obscenity to simple Hollywood gossip. But Francis's most impressive role is frequently overlooked: that of the consummate businessman. The details of Joe's phenomenal success don't often make it into the media, but it is a story worth telling. Francis was born in Atlanta in 1973 and grew up in Laguna Beach, California with three sisters, an Austrian-born mother and a father who ran a snack food business. Francis was always a quick study, but rarely found himself engaged by schoolwork. As soon as he was old enough, Francis found his first job at a small ice cream store. While attending Laguna Beach High School, Francis landed a job at a computer/video store, where he learned to fix computers and sell video rental memberships. He discovered that he had an affinity for sales. After high school, Francis chose the University of Southern California for its Entrepreneur Program. Determined to one day run his own company, Francis poured himself into study, fascinated with the complexities and challenges of business. Francis also took courses in film and television. As a condition for completing the USC Entrepreneur Program, each student is required to develop a viable business plan, including selecting a product or service and putting together a strategy for its successful marketing. By this time, Francis's father had found success in direct marketing a line of skin care products. After studying his father's business, Francis put together a plan designed to market a series of instructional videotapes called "Secrets of Successful Gambling." His business plan was not a big hit with his professors, but Francis wasn't disappointed. He decided that if the university faculty had actually known how to create a successful business, they would be running their own businesses instead of teaching how to do it. Upon graduating from USC in 1995, Francis hoped to put his business plan into practice, but couldn't raise enough capital to actually produce the gambling tapes. Tapping the skills he'd developed in film and TV classes, Francis went to work in television as a production assistant at "Real TV," a syndicated TV show that featured footage of extraordinary events not covered in mainstream news. Working in the studio, Francis heard of a compilation tape the show's staff members were passing around to each other. The tape contained footage too disturbing for broadcast TV, but was wildly popular with the staff. Recalling the direct marketing plan he'd developed in school, Francis drew cash advances on his credit cards and licensed the sensational footage. With a partner, he wrote, produced and edited a tape together they titled "Banned From Television" and Francis set about marketing the new product. The VHS tape was promoted exclusively via late-night cable TV commercials, where it found immediate success. Francis gathered more footage and produced three volumes of "Banned For Television" but remained unsatisfied with his product, convinced that the material was too graphic to be enjoyed over and over. By chance, Francis came upon a videotape of some Spring Break revelers getting arrested for public nudity at Lake Havasu. The tape also contained footage of real college girls flashing their breasts to the camera during Spring Break and Mardi gras. It was playful, joyous nudity and it immediately struck a chord in Francis. He recognized that that this wasn't pornography. It was something much better: It was REAL. Francis watched the video over and over and realized that other young men would love this material just as much as he did. He searched for similar footage and compiled it into a tape distinct from the "Banned From Television" series. Francis decided this product needed a catchy name of its own. He considered hundreds of titles before settling on "College Girls Gone Wild." He stared at this title, then impulsively crossed out the word "College" and circled "Girls Gone Wild." He worked hands-on with a graphic designer to help create an eye-catching logo featuring the three now-famous words, and a legendary brand was born. Francis produced a 60-second commercial for Girls Gone Wild but saw it rejected by uptight station owners who'd never advertising anything featuring nudity. Finally, Howard Stern accepted the Girls Gone Wild commercials for his late broadcast on the E! Channel. Once the commercials began to air, word spread across college campuses everywhere and Girls Gone Wild was on its way to becoming a genuine phenomenon. As sales grew, Francis convinced more broadcast and cable stations to run commercials for Girls Gone Wild until his brand dominated the late night TV landscape. Reaction from TV broadcasters was wary at first, but they quickly discovered that 1) unlike with other TV commercials, viewers didn't change the channel when the Girls Gone Wild commercial came on, and 2) the Girls Gone Wild half hour infomercials routinely scored higher ratings than the programs they aired against, and scored even higher than the network's regularly programmed lead-in shows after which they aired. In short, TV stations across the country quickly learned that Girls Gone Wild programming was good for business. Demand for additional volumes of Girls Gone Wild videos grew. Instead of licensing additional material, Francis decided to produce his own footage. This provided the ability to control the quality of the content, and, not coincidentally, a way to have some real fun. Francis discovered that he LOVED asking girls to take off their tops. And he was good at it. Opportunities and demand grew so quickly that Francis assembled several freelance camera crews to travel the country, shooting footage for his popular video series. As sales of Girls Gone Wild climbed, Francis expanded his 60-second TV spots to a 30-minute infomercial format. Francis's infomercial offered a snapshot of a lifestyle that most red-blooded men normally only dream about. Rather than taking the form of a solid 30-minute pitch, the program was designed as an entertaining TV show with "commercials" interspersed throughout. Francis dubbed this innovative form the "entermercial." Soon, college guys across the country were staying up all night to enjoy the Girls Gone Wild program over and over again. Imitators inevitably sprang up, hoping to grab a share of the revenue that Francis's brainstorm was generating. Just as inevitably, every imitation quickly failed. Having an idea is one thing; having the savvy to turn that idea into a $100 million company is another talent altogether. Impressed with the success Francis had in marketing the Girls Gone Wild tapes, Playboy contacted Francis and asked if he could perform similar magic for their own brand. Francis developed two products: "Playboy Mansion Parties: Uncensored" and "Playboy's Casting Calls." Francis wrote and produced several 60-second commercials advertising the Playboy tapes, which immediately returned a profit. Playboy founder Hugh Hefner was delighted. Girls Gone Wild captured the attention of Hollywood and the recording industry, too. Francis hooked up with Snoop Dogg for a wild tour of Spring Break and Mardi gras, which was filmed for a Girls Gone Wild video. "Girls Gone Wild: Doggy Style" remains one of the most popular titles in the company's history. When the "Doggy Style" infomercial hit the airwaves, Francis received a plethora of offers from other celebrities who wanted to align themselves with the Girls Gone Wild brand. Francis filmed tours with comedian Doug Stanhope, musicians Eminem, Baby Bash and Bubba Sparxx and HDNet's Zane Lamprey. To provide a "home base" for his video crews, Girls Gone Wild acquired two million-dollar tour buses decked out with the "Girls Gone Wild" logo. The buses serve as rolling billboards, creating attention and excitement wherever they appear. The buses travel to over 700 live events per year and interact with more than 30,000 college-age consumers every week. Bars, clubs and entertainment venues across the country are eager to book Girls Gone Wild events for the crowds it brings in, providing yet another revenue stream for Girls Gone Wild. Francis expanded the Girls Gone Wild catalog of titles, opened new markets such as pay-per-view TV and video on-demand, and hired a talented production staff to sharpen the look of the GGW videos. But the core element of Girls Gone Wild has always remained the same: real college girls, real hot. By staying true to the original vision, Girls Gone Wild eventually achieved what most marketers only dream of: brand ubiquity. USA Today affirmed Girls Gone Wild as one of the top 25 most important trends of the last quarter-century. As a result of his success, Joe found himself in demand for interviews and public speaking engagements. He was invited to share his perspectives on business development in three separate speeches at Yale University, and has shared his wisdom with members of the International Young President's Organization (YPO) a nonprofit network comprised of more than 20,000 leaders in 100 countries dedicated to helping its members become better leaders and make a positive difference in the world, for almost a decade. In 2002, Francis helped design a corporate retreat in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico to serve the expanding needs of his company. Featuring a main house, two guesthouses, three pools and lush tropical gardens, Francis named the estate Casa Aramara from the local Indian name for "The Goddess of the Pacific Ocean." The house has been featured in several magazines and TV shows and is a centerpiece of the book Casa Mexicana Style by Tim Street-Porter. Celebrities such as Jennifer Aniston, Vince Vaughn, Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, Courtney Cox, Sheryl Crow, Quincy Jones, Kimberly Stewart, Farrah Fawcett, Mimi Rogers, the Kardashians and many others have stayed there and sung its praises. The property serves as a shooting location for infomercials, making it a valuable asset to the company and an excellent investment, much like the Playboy Mansion. In 2004, IN DEMAND, a pay-per-view TV company, asked Francis to produce an event for broadcast during the Super Bowl Half-time. Francis recruited college girls from all across the country to come to "Girls Gone Wild Island" to participate in a series of naked games for what became his biggest production yet, the "Girls Gone Wild Halftime Games." A DVD of the games remains one of Girls Gone Wild's most popular titles. In May 2006, as Francis was about to turn 33, his company showed its appreciation for his achievements by renting Southern California's Magic Mountain amusement park and throwing the biggest birthday party in recent Hollywood history. More than 5,000 friends, business acquaintances and celebrities enjoyed the park's rides, restaurants and food stands along with four full bars and a dinner buffet with sounds provided by the late DJ AM. The event was covered extensively by the mainstream entertainment media, adding further luster to the Girls Gone Wild brand. In early 2007, Francis commissioned a complete line of high-quality Girls Gone Wild apparel, including casual wear, sleepwear and, with famed designer Ashley Paige, a line of spectacular swimwear. A runway fashion show was held during Mercedes Benz fashion week in South Beach and the GGW designs were an instant hit. The line has been carried by retailers such as Urban Outfitters, Zumiez, Fred Segal, Bloomingdales, Kitson and Lisa Kline. As Francis explains, the Girls Gone Wild clothing line helps expand the brand to an audience that wouldn't normally order a DVD, but still wants to experience the Girls Gone Wild lifestyle. In early 2009, during the government TARP controversy, Francis and Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt announced that they were petitioning the US Congress for a $5 billion financial bailout for the adult entertainment industry. The bailout request was regarded by many as a simple PR stunt, but Francis insists that his intent was to make an impact on the discussions surrounding the government's role in business. It had an impact, becoming headline news in the mainstream print and TV media.
Girls Gone Wild has grown into a diversified global media company, rounded out with a highly-skilled team of professionals who have unparalleled experience in the company's core business segments. While overseeing this diverse business organization, Francis also devotes much of his energy and financial resources to supporting a variety of charities, including the Lili Claire Foundation, established to help enhance the lives of children with neurogenetic disorders; the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation, which works to secure a better future for children in conflict areas around the world; The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, which seeks to prevent pediatric HIV infection and to eradicate pediatric AIDS through research, advocacy, and prevention and treatment programs, and Direct Relief International, which provides medical assistance to improve the quality of life for people victimized by poverty, disaster, and civil unrest at home and throughout the world. In addition, Girls Gone Wild has donated 100 percent of the gross sales, not profit, from the sale of Mardi gras-themed DVDs and videos to the Red Cross to help victims of Hurricane Katrina. Francis has proven adept at keeping his brand in the public consciousness through his high-profile lifestyle and provocative public statements. For example, when a Girls Gone Wild commercial was inadvertently shown throughout the Philadelphia market by the Comcast cable network during the broadcast of a Good Friday service at the Vatican, Francis noted publicly that the cable service received only one complaint, and sales of Girls Gone Wild spiked.
Francis' dependably cogent viewpoints on current affairs have made him a sought after commentator by TV journalists ranging from Anderson Cooper, Greta Van Susteren, Dateline NBC, Neil Cavuto, Geraldo Rivera, Martin Bashir, The Daily Show, CBS's 48 Hours, and all the entertainment television shows. Girls Gone Wild lifestyle entertainment products continue to be developed and distributed to audiences worldwide through television, live events, wireless, Internet, VOD, SVOD, Pay Per View, mobile and home video distribution channels. The company is a leader in the direct response marketing and membership segments, and has been a home entertainment pioneer in both DVD and Blu-Ray Disk formats. Additionally, GGW spans the licensing, apparel, cross promotion, television, and gaming industries with an aggressive push into new lifestyle segments and product offerings. In 2008 Francis launched Girls Gone Wild Magazine, a monthly publication that is available at over 16,000 newsstands and retail outlets across North America and per dollar sales, is ranked 5th best-selling men's magazine in the United States. In 2009, Francis was approached by Dallas Mavericks owner and entrepreneur Mark Cuban who had been an admirer of the Girls Gone Wild brand for years. Cuban asked Francis to develop a reality TV series focusing on Girls Gone Wild's search for the hottest girl in America, for airing on Cuban's HDnet television network. Francis oversaw the production of and starred in Girls Gone Wild Presents: Search for the Hottest Girl in America, which was an immediate hit and has become the number one series on the network. Impressed with the production values of the show and with its runaway popularity, Cuban quickly ordered up an addition three seasons of the show. Francis has since created a production company called WILDHD to develop additional reality TV series concepts. What this impressive entrepreneur has achieved up to this point in history makes for a compelling story, but perhaps even more interesting is what the future holds for Joe Francis, the consummate businessman.- Joe Lambie was born on 1 April 1944 in the USA. He is an actor, known for MacGyver (1985), Search for Tomorrow (1951) and Guiding Light (1952). He was previously married to Juanin Clay and Madelon Thomas.
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John Gay was born on 1 April 1924 in Whittier, California, USA. He was a writer and actor, known for Separate Tables (1958), Lux Video Theatre (1950) and Run Silent Run Deep (1958). He was married to Barbara (Bobbie) Elizabeth Meyer. He died on 4 February 2017 in Santa Monica, California, USA.- Actor
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Character actor John Quade was born John William Saunders III on April 1, 1938 in Kansas City, Kansas. Quade transferred from Perry Rural High School in Perry, Kansas to Highland Park High School in Topeka, Kansas in 1954. John was a football tackle and participated in both track and basketball at Highland Park High School. Moreover, he was a member of the Stamp, Radio, and Chess/Checkers clubs. Quade graduated from high school in 1956 and attended Washburn University. John worked for the Santa Fe Railway repair shop in Topeka, Kansas.
Quade moved to California in 1964 and met an engineer building missile silos in Kansas, which led to a job in California working at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) as an aerospace engineer. Some of the parts Quade constructed are still on the Moon.
After meeting a movie industry talent scout he made his television acting debut in 1968 on an episode of "Bonanza." He acted in his first movie in 1972. With his strong, stocky build, distinctive rough face, drawling accent, squinty eyes, and often aggressive and intimidating screen presence, John was frequently cast as either mean, nasty heavies or hostile redneck law enforcers. Quade was probably best known as Cholla, the bumbling leader of the inept biker gang the Black Widows in the Clint Eastwood comedy vehicles "Every Which Way But Loose"" and "Any Which Way You Can." He had previously acted alongside Eastwood as despicable villains in the Westerns "High Plains Drifter" and "The Outlaw Josey Wales." John was likewise memorable as Sheriff Biggs in the epic TV mini-series "Roots." Quade had regular roles on the short-lived TV shows "Flatbush" and "Lucky Luke." Among the many television programs John made guest appearances on are "Gunsmoke," "Ironside," "Kung Fu," "Kojak," "Starsky and Hutch," "The Bionic Woman," "Charlie's Angels," "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century," "Vega$," "The Dukes of Hazzard," "CHiPs," "Hill Street Blues," "The A-Team," "Hunter," "Werewolf," and "Baywatch." After he stopped acting in the 1990s, Quade became a devout Christian activist and outspoken opponent of the American government and its New World Order. John was opposed to the 14th Ammendment, Social Security numbers, and drivers' licenses. He supported the Alledial Title belief in common law. Quade was married to his wife Gwen for thirty-eight years and was the father of six children.
John Quade died sleeping as the result of a heart attack at age 71 at his home in Rosamond, California, on August 9, 2009.- Jonathan Gosselin was born on 1 April 1977 in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, USA. He was previously married to Kate Gosselin.
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Jonathan Haze is an American actor, producer and scary movie idol. Best known for his work in Roger Corman films, and especially for playing "Seymour" in Corman's black comedy cult classic, The Little Shop of Horrors (1960), Haze's career spans more than 20 films in six decades, including screen-writing the science fiction comedy Invasion of the Star Creatures (1962).
Born in Pittsburgh into a show business family, Haze's cousin was legendary jazz drummer and bandleader Buddy Rich. Haze started his career behind-the-scenes working stage production for his cousin Buddy, eventually becoming stage manager for Josephine Baker. A move to Los Angeles lead to Haze to working in film production and consequently becoming an almost exclusive player for low-budget producer/director Roger Corman. The slight-framed, curly-haired, gawky-looking lad made his inauspicious screen debut in Corman's Monster from the Ocean Floor (1954), but managed to continue on a steady scale in minor roles of tough guys and weirdos. He played a pickpocket in Swamp Women (1955), an ex-convict in Five Guns West (1955) and a man contaminated by radioactive fallout in Day the World Ended (1955), which was Corman's first foray into the sci-fi genre. His on-screen versatility noted, Haze received larger roles and subsequent better billing in the cheapjack productions Gunslinger (1956), It Conquered the World (1956), Naked Paradise (1957), Carnival Rock (1957), Not of This Earth (1957), and Bayou (1957) (a.k.a. "Poor White Trash").
Following work as a Viking in the incredulous The Saga of the Viking Women and Their Voyage to the Waters of the Great Sea Serpent (1957), Haze landed his first starring role in the Warner Bros. drama Stakeout on Dope Street (1958), directed by Irvin Kershner. Haze plays an average teenager who, along with 2 friends, finds $250k of heroin and decides to go into the drug selling business. The Little Shop of Horrors (1960), however, catapulted Haze into cult stardom. As the slow-witted sad sack Seymour Krelboyne, Haze plays the unassuming Skid Row flower shop assistant who nourishes a seemingly harmless seedling, then falls prey to its grotesque, bloodthirsty plant while having to kill and serve up human beings as plant food. The comedy, which featured Haze's good friend Dick Miller and an unknown Jack Nicholson, grew overwhelmingly in status over the years thanks to midnight TV and spawned a hit Broadway musical and resulting musical film. Haze worked alongside Miller and Nicholson again in Corman's Edgar Allan Poe-like The Terror (1963) which starred Boris Karloff.
Near this time Haze began to veer away from acting opting to work behind-the-scenes again. He wrote the script for the sci-fi comedy Invasion of the Star Creatures (1962) and worked in production for such films as The Premature Burial (1962), Medium Cool (1969) Another Nice Mess (1972), and Corman's The Born Losers (1967).
Experience, connections and opportunity then lead to Haze producing commercials. As a CEO of a commercial production company, he created successful national and international campaigns for the likes of United Airlines, Kool-Aid, Schlitz Beer and more during the 1970s, '80s and '90s. In 1999, he made a cameo in Corman's "The Phantom Eye" (1999).- Jordan Charney was born on 1 April 1937 in New York City, New York, USA. He is an actor, known for Ghostbusters (1984), Network (1976) and Hill Street Blues (1981). He has been married to Nancy Cooperstein since 14 November 1966. They have two children.
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Josh Zuckerman was born on 1 April 1985 in Stanford, California, USA. He is an actor and writer, known for Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002), Surviving Christmas (2004) and Feast (2005).- Juan Carlos Acosta died on 26 January 2020 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
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Juan Echanove was born on 1 April 1961 in Madrid, Spain. He is an actor and director, known for Madregilda (1993), The Flower of My Secret (1995) and Las chicas de hoy en día (1991). He has been married to Cuchita Lluch since 14 May 2015.- Ju-Lung Ma was born on 1 April 1939 in Taiwan, Japan. He was an actor, known for Monga (2010), Cape No. 7 (2008) and Half a Loaf of Kung Fu (1978). He was married to Hsiao-Lan Pei. He died on 9 June 2019 in Taipei, Taiwan.
- He made his debut in 2014 after his military service in the TV drama Bride of the Century, after an appearance in the music video "Moya" in 2013.
His popularity started to grow, in 2016, with a special appearance in the drama Goblin, as Choi Tae-Hee, the first love of the female lead, Ji Eun-Tak ( the actress Kim Go Eun). In the same year, he appeared in a more relevant role in the drama White Nights, as Tak.
In 2017, his outstanding performances in the dramas While You Were Sleeping and Prison Playbook made him more and more popular amongst the insiders.
Jung Haein's achievements did not come overnight. In the first years of his career, he worked on strengthening his acting skills by appearing in several independent and short films. He got every possible chance to closely watch the performances of prominent actors. Every experience was precious to him to build up his career.
In Spring 2018, his popularity impressively rose thanks to the JTBC drama Something in the Rain, in which he acted beside Son Ye-Jin as the lead character.
In the second half of 2018, he joined actress Kim Go-Eun and director Jung Ji-Woo in the movie Tune In For Love, released on August 28, 2019.
In 2019, he appeared in the lead role - as Yoo Ji-Ho - with Han Ji-Min in the MBC drama One Spring Night - written and directed by the same team who created Something In The Rain - and as Sang-Pil, the co-lead in the movie Start-Up, directed by Choi Jeong-Yeol.
In March 2020, starred in tvN drama A Piece Of Your Mind in the lead role of Moon Ha Won, an AI programmer gifted and sensitive.
Something In The Rain, Tune In For Love and One Spring Night - all available on Netflix - have been three consecutive box office hits, loved by the audience and the critics. Jung Hae-In received reviews for always showing the character itself with emotional acting, delicate and intense.
August 2021, with the D.P. release on Netflix, marks a turning point in Jung Haein's career. With his intense Ahn Junho, the young man assigned to the deserter pursuit unit while serving in his military service puts the versatility of his talent to the test and comes out highly successful. The webtoon this series is based on, written by Kim Bo-tong, garnered over 10 million views for its realistic portrayal of the brutal violence and human rights violations committed in the military. D.P.'s international success and the praise he received for his outstanding performance led him to represent South Korea in Netflix's celebratory event, Tudum.
The year 2021, which also saw him starring in the short film Blue Happiness directed by his friend Lee Je-hoon as part of the Unframed project, comes to a close with the release of Snowdrop, Disney's first original Asian series launched by the Disney Plus platform and the Korean JTBC. Thanks to the powerful and multifaceted performance of Jung Haein in the leading role, Lim Sooho, the series allows Disney a significant debut in the Asian market, ranking as the most-watched in several regions. Acclaimed Japanese director Takashi Miike casts him in the lead role, Ha Dong Soo for his first Korean project, the Connect series, expected in December also on Disney Plus. Meanwhile, 2022 sees Jung Haein busy filming the second season of D.P., renewed by Netflix in December 2021 in light of its incredible success.
After triumphing as Best Actor in the eighth Apan Awards, Jung Haein headlined the 27th Busan International Film Festival with the world premiere of Connect, which generated excitement and expectations thanks to the actor and the director. With the release of the series, in December 2022, the actor once again showcased his acting skills, proving that no genre is beyond his reach. His performances have made history in the romantic genre, and they have left a profound mark with the intensity of his characters even in the dramatic, action, and thriller genres.
In July 2023, he led the cast once more in the second season of the Netflix series "D.P.," reprising the role of Ahn Junho. Following the success of the first season, both critics and the audience had immense expectations even before the series' release. Jung Haein did not disappoint, portraying Ahn Junho with a range of expressive nuances, an intensity, and a depth even richer than those expressed in the first season. His performance has garnered enthusiastic reviews worldwide from critics and the public alike. Director Han Junhee calls him "The Face of D.P.," and creator and screenwriter Kim Botong stated that when he enters a room, it's the Ahn Junho he had always imagined who enters.
Jung Haein's established fame as an actor with the potential to embody any character across various genres was solidified by his dazzling performance in "12.12: The Day," Kim SungSu's remarkable success at the end of 2023. Portraying Major Oh JinHo, in just 8 minutes of screen time, Jung Haein infused his intensity into the character, the hero opposing the military insurgency of December 12, 1979, further endearing himself to critics and audiences.
It comes as no surprise that director Ryoo SeungWan, known for his works "Veteran" and "Escape From Mogadishu," chose him for the role of Park SunWoo, the co-lead in "I, The Executioner," the sequel to the "Veteran" saga, alongside Hwang JungMin. Expected to hit theaters in the latter half of 2024, the film is the only Korean production invited to the 77th Festival de Cannes, in the Official Selection.
Summer of 2024 sees Jung Haein's return to the romantic drama with his debut as Choi SeungHyo, a young and esteemed architect, both professionally and personally appreciated, grappling with embarrassing memories and a disruptive return from the past, his childhood friend Bae SeokRyu, portrayed by Jung SoMin, who leads a very different life. The series, acquired by Netflix, will be available for streaming in the summer of 2024 under the title "Golden Boy" (broadcasted in Korea on the tvN network under the title "Mom's Friend's Son"). - Actress
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Karen Dunbar was born on 1 April 1971 in Ayr, Scotland, UK. She is an actress and writer, known for Mary Queen of Scots (2018), Journey Bound and The Karen Dunbar Show (2003). She has been married to Jennifer since 2005.- Actress
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Kayla Collins was born on April 1, 1987 in Reading, Pennsylvania. Kayla grew up in Mohnton, Pennsylvania. She worked at the tanning saloon the Baja Beach Tanning Club in Pennsylvania. Collins graduated from Twin Valley High School in Elverson, Pennsylvania in 2005 and attended Penn State University for three years. Kayla eventually moved to California to pursue a modeling career. She was discovered on MySpace by Holly Madison. Collins was the Playmate of the Month in the August, 2008 issue of "Playboy." Kayla has appeared as herself in several episodes of the reality TV series "The Girls Next Door." Collins owns a cat named Baby Boo. She lives in Los Angeles, California.