- Iwao Takamoto
Iwao Takamoto (29 April 1925 - 8 January 2007) was a Japanese American animator, television producer, and film director. He was most famous as being a production and character designer for Hanna-Barbera Productions shows such as "Scooby-Doo". - Brian Yuzna
Brian Yuzna is a director, writer and producer of films. Yuzna grew up in Nicaragua, Puerto Rico and Panama before moving to the United States in the 1960s. Most of Yuzna's film work is in the horror genre, though he has also ventured into science fiction. Like his friend and fellow filmmaker Stuart Gordon, Yuzna is a big fan of H.P. Lovecraft and has adapted several Lovecraft stories for the screen. - Rajkumar Hirani
Rajkumar Hirani is best known as the creator of "The Munna Bhai series." He is a writer, director and producer of Bollywood movies from Nagpur who is associated with Vinod Chopra Productions. - Danny Bilson
Danny Bilson is a writer, director, and producer in movies, television, videogames, and comic books. With his writing partner Paul DeMeo, Danny Bilson wrote the movie "The Rocketeer" (1991), the videogame "James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing" (2003), the television series "The Sentinel" (1996) and "The Flash" (1990), and recent issues of the comic book, "The Flash". - Mitch Schauer
Mitchell Schauer (pronounced "shower") (born December 18, 1955 in Pawhuska, Oklahoma) is a television professional who worked on children's shows starting in 1990, when he produced Bobby's World. In 1995 he produced Freakazoid! for the first season only. In 1997, he created his own show, The Angry Beavers, which was by far his most popular project, but was cancelled amid controversy in 2001. Little is known about Schauer other than that he has two daughters. - Eva Almos
Eva Almos is a Canadian voice actress, who voiced Friend Bear and Swift Heart Rabbit in Nelvana's Care Bears films and TV series, and also appeared in "AlfTales". Almos was also a writer of USA Network's animated sitcom, "Duckman", and as of 2006 has continued this job with "An American in Canada" and several animated series. In her heyday, she guest-starred in the Canadian television series, "Diamonds". - Asia Argento
Asia Aria Anna Maria Vittoria Rossa Argento (born 20 September, 1975, Rome) is an Italian television and film actress and director. In Rome, the city's register office refused to acknowledge "Asia" as an appropriate name, and instead officially inscribed her as Aria Argento. Despite this, she uses the name Asia Argento professionally. Asia is pronounced ['a:sia] in Italian. - Friz Freleng
Isadore "Friz" Freleng (August 21, 1906 -May 26, 1995) was an animator, cartoonist, director, and producer best known for his work on the "Looney Tunes" and "Merrie Melodies" series of cartoons from Warner Bros. He introduced and/or developed several of the studio's biggest stars, including Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Tweety Bird, Sylvester the cat, Yosemite Sam (to whom he was said to bear more than a passing resemblance) and Speedy Gonzales. - John L'Ecuyer
John L'Ecuyer is a Canadian film and television director. L'Ecuyer was born in Montreal and studied at Ryerson University in Toronto. His first feature, "Curtis's Charm", an adaptation of a Jim Carroll story was released in 1995. His feature film credits include "St. Jude" (2000), and "Le goût des jeunes filles" (2004). He is executive producer of "The Limits", a debut feature film by director Ben Mazzotta (2007). - Budd Schulberg
Budd Schulberg was born in New York City, New York on March 27, 1914. His father, Benjamin P. Schulberg , a producer in the newly erected motion-picture industry, moved the family to Hollywood, California after WWI. By 1925, as general manager of Paramount Famous-Lasky studio, Benjamin P. Schulberg was one of the most powerful forces in the movie industry. Schulberg's mother, Adeline (Jaffe) Schulberg , aspired to raise him with traditional Jewish values. - Nicolas Winding Refn
Nicolas Winding Refn (born September 29, 1970) is a Danish filmmaker who currently resides in Copenhagen, Denmark. He came to the United States in 1981 and was educated at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1993. On one recent occasion, he also acted in a major movie, though this is a rare occurrence. He is famous for directing the praised Pusher-trilogy. - Mikhail Romm
Mikhail [Ilych] Romm was a Russian film director. He was born in Irkutsk. His father was a social democrat of Jewish descent who had been exiled there. He graduated from gymnasium in 1917 and entered the Moscow College for Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. He fought in the Red Army during the Russian civil war. In 1925 he finished the sculptural department of the "Highest Artistic-Technical Institute" and worked as a sculptor and translator. - Anders Morgenthaler
Anders Morgenthaler (born December 5, 1972) is a Danish comics artist, children's book author, and film director. - Lance Bangs
Lance Bangs (born September 4, 1972 in Sacramento, California) is a documentary filmmaker and music video director, who has created videos for Sonic Youth, Nirvana, Green Day, the Arcade Fire, the Shins, Belle & Sebastian, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, R.E.M., Mike Watt, Death Cab for Cutie, Kanye West, and Pavement. He directed the David Cross film Let America Laugh. As a commercial director he has worked with UPS and Volvo for several campaigns, … - Jimi Elion
Jimi Elion (born September 21, 1979 in Karlstad) is a filmmaker, writer, director, composer. - Brendan Bergen
Has/had a pet tarantula named Godzilla Loves the concepts of zombies, ninjas, robots and pirates, would like to at some point write a character which is a zombie ninja robot pirate. Became an ordained minister of the Universal Life Church of Modesto California to perform the wedding of 2 friends June 3, 2006. - Jon McClenahan
Animator, director, manager, instructor, consultant. Involved in animation production since 1980, specializing in tight project management and organization including proper utilization of art-talent resources, thus ensuring the best possible combination of "good, fast, and cheap." - Jill Golick
- Matt Laidlaw
- Lord Olivier
He could speak William Shakespeare's lines as naturally as if he were "actually thinking them", said English playwright Charles C. Bennett, who met Laurence Olivier in 1927. One of Olivier's earliest successes as a Shakespearean actor on the London stage came in 1935 when he played "Romeo" and "Mercutio" in alternate performances of "Romeo and Juliet" with John Gielgud. A young Englishwoman just beginning her career on the stage fell in love with Olivier's Romeo. In 1937, she was... - Guy Rundle
GUY RUNDLE is European editor of Arena magazine. - Marc Lougee
- Sanders Keel
- Stig Bergqvist
- Jonas Drehn
- Gerald Massimei
- Simon Brasse
- Brede Hovland
- Idse Grotenhuis
- Frank Molieri
- William Osco
Member of the family that owns the national chain of Osco Drug stores. - Rick Friedberg
Having directed award-winning TV commercials, music videos and documentaries, Mr. Friedberg turned to feature films and television. After Spy Hard (1996) and several development deals, he has been and is currently directing international TV commercials in France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Australia, Mexico and Venezuela. - Jerry Juhl
Jerry Juhl became the first full-time employee of Jim Henson Co. in 1961 after meeting Henson at a puppeteer's convention. The company coined the term "Muppet," a combination of the words marionette and puppet, and created a series of short skits parodying television news people. Juhl worked on Jim Henson's first television show, "Sam and Friends" (1955) as a puppeteer and later spent six years writing for "Sesame Street" (1969) after its 1969 premiere. He created scripts... - Arvi Liimatainen
Over twenty years experiance in film and television production Arvi is the past chair of the Banff Television Festival and a former Director of the National Screen Institute-Canada. Arvi loves to garden and beat the odds at the race track. - Nicolas Barbano
Nicolas Barbano is a Danish critic, journalist, producer and sometimes director specializing in genre films. Born in 1963, he started writing articles and reviews for a local newspaper at age 15, soon making a mark as Denmark's first film critic specializing in science fiction, horror and fantasy cinema. In 1994, while studying film and media at the University of Copenhagen (graduating at BA level), he also started researching adult cinema, then a poorly covered subject in serious film... - David Weisman
Born in upstate New York, after one viewing of La Dolce Vita David Weisman dropped out of Syracuse U's School of Fine Arts in the early 1960s to design film-posters in Rome -- where, by learning fluent Italian, he managed to meet Fellini, create the poster for Otto e mezzo (8 1/2) and work for Pasolini. The teenager's linguistic skill also enabled him to freely work as an artist in Québec, France, Holland, Israel, Germany, and Brazil. Back in New York, Weisman was discovered by Otto... - Helguera Bolio Mario
He studied cinematography in the University Center of Cinematografics Studies of the National University Autonoma de Mexico from 1976 to 1981. Performed in the CUEC as producer and director in films like Yaxcabá (1979), Fuego (1980), Cavafis (1981), Ponce and the guitar (1981) and as executive producer in Danzon para que lo baile El Muerto (1979). He works as producer for diverse productions for the TV. Professor of realization in different Universities in Yucatan, Mexico. He was... - Steve Purvis
Graduate of The University of Texas. - Carlos Bardasano
Carlos R. Bardasano is Executive Vice President of Entertainment of Telemundo (a division of NBC Universal)and reports to President Don Browne. Carlos R. Bardasano began his television career at Universal Studios in Los Angeles, working on NBC prime time sitcoms. He later held supervisory and executive positions at Paramount Pictures and Columbia Tristar International Television, also working on prime time projects. Bardasano was most recently Vice President of Programming Development of... - Glenn Robbins
Used to be a drama teacher before he went into television and movies.
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