- Powers Boothe
Powers Allen Boothe (born June 1, 1948) is an American television and film actor. He is known for his Emmy-winning 1980 portrayal of Jim Jones.
- Yakima Canutt
Yakima Canutt (November 29, 1896 - May 24, 1986) was an American actor and stuntman in Hollywood movies from the 1920s through the 1950s. He was born Enos Edward Canutt in the Snake River Hills, near Colfax, Washington. As a young man, he gained fame as a very successful rodeo rider. He got his nickname when he was caught fraternizing with several rival rodeo performers from Yakima, Washington. His friends never let him forget and the name stuck.
- Larry Manetti
Larry Manetti (born July 23, 1947 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American actor best known for his starring role as Orville "Rick" Wright on the long-running television show "Magnum P.I." which starred Tom Selleck as the title character.
- Ross Malinger
Ross Malinger (born July 7, 1984 in Redwood City, California) is an American actor who costarred with Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan in the 1993 romantic drama/comedy "Sleepless In Seattle". Malinger also starred in the 1997 comedy "Toothless" along with Kirstie Alley, portraying the second main character of the film, and played Adam Lippman, the Bar-Mitzvah boy who liked Elaine's Shicksappeal, on "Seinfeld" ("Serenity Now").
- Ed Evanko
Edward Evanko (born October 19, 1941 in Winnipeg, Manitoba) is a Canadian actor and singer who became a Ukrainian Catholic priest. Evanko trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School and sang with two opera companies in the 1970s - the English Opera Group and the Welsh National Opera Company. He has appeared in many evening and daytime television drama including "Ryan's Hope", "Chicago Hope", and "Third Rock from the Sun".
- Thayer David
Thayer David (born March 4 1927 in Medford, Massachusetts - July 17 1978 in New York City) was a film and television actor. Born David Thayer Hersey, he was best known for his works on the cult ABC serial "Dark Shadows" which aired from 1966-1971 and the movie "Rocky" in 1976. His most memorable film role was as Count Saknussem in the film Journey to the Center of the Earth.
- Brian Delate
Brian Delate is a American actor. Delate served in the Vietnam War before entering a career in acting. He is best known worldwide for portraying the father of Truman in the 1998 Jim Carrey film The Truman Show.
- Ron Vawter
Ron Vawter (December 9, 1948, Latham, New York - April 16, 1994) was a founding member of The Wooster Group after graduating from Siena College in Loudonville, New York. Vawter performed in most of the group's works until his death from complications due to AIDS in 1994 at the age of 45. In addition to his work with The Wooster Group, Vawter frequently appeared in films, including "Philadelphia", "The Silence of the Lambs" and "sex, lies, …
- George Chesboro-SG typo
Leading man in US action pictures of the silent era, then villain in hundreds of "B" westerns of the 30s through early 50s.
- Bud Osbourne
One of the finest teamsters in Hollywood screen history, Osborne handled the reins for horse-drawn coaches and wagons in countless westerns and historical photoplays from the early 20's through late 50's. And with his weathered, rumpled look, his Texas drawl and his nasal twang, he was often called upon to portray a seedy outlaw in any of those same westerns. Unlike most, if not all, movie cowboys, Osborne almost always wore the drawstring on his cowboy hat firmly cinched under his chin....
- John Lacy Cason
Best known as a stuntman and regarded by many of his colleagues as one of the toughest men in the business (although in The Three Stooges short Punchy Cowpunchers (1950) he was beaten up and knocked through a window by Christine McIntyre). Before entering the film business he was for a time a professional fighter.
- Jorge Lewis
Dashing, black-haired Mexican-born actor who had the handsome attractiveness of a Rudolph Valentino or a Ramon Novarro, but remained in the minor ranks throughout his career, primarily in westerns and intrigue. Although he appeared in hundreds of films over his long career, he is best remembered as Guy Williams' stately father in the Walt Disney "Zorro" (1957) series.
- John Forrest Knight
Got into show business on his musicianship, appearing on vaudeville and in stage musicals, and once even led his own band. He broke solidly into films after Mae West caught his act and put him in a couple of her vehicles -- She Done Him Wrong (1933) and My Little Chickadee (1940). Provided sidekick comedy relief in scores of late 30s and 40s "B" westerns opposite sagebrush stars Tex Ritter and Johnny Mack Brown.
- Raymond William Hatton
The son of a physician, Raymond Hatton entered films in 1909, eventually appearing in almost 500 other pictures. In early silents he formed a comedy team with big, burly Wallace Beery. He was best known as the tobacco-chewing, rip-snorting Rusty Joslin in the Three Mesquiteers series. He was also in the Rough Riders series and appeared as Johnny Mack Brown's sidekick as well. His last Western was, fittingly, Requiem for a Gunfighter (1965).
- George Chesebro
- Carl Matthews
- Tom Tyler
Popular American star of silent and early sound Westerns and serials. Raised in Michigan, he went through a number of strenuous jobs (sailor, boxer lumberjack, coal miner, etc.) before landing in Los Angeles and getting work as a movie extra and stuntman. His good looks and athletic physique (he was a champion weight-lifter) led to an offer to play the lead in a series of silent Westerns, which he filmed under the stage name Bill Burns. In 1925, FBO signed him and changed his name to Tom...
- Pate Lucid
Son of Francis J. and Minnie Harvey Lucid. His real name is Pate Lucid; he took the name "Russell Hayden" in honor of his friend, cameraman Russell Harlan. Hayden, along with fellow cowboy actor Dick Curtis, helped develop Pioneertown, a western movie set location in Southern California that was used for many film and TV westerns.
- Jeff Haberstat
Jeff Habberstad has been working in the film business for over 20 years. Starting as a stuntman specializing in aerial work, Jeff quickly made a name for himself, winning the award for "Best Aerial Stunt" in the first ever Stunt Awards back in 1985. Jeff has gone on to receive 4 Emmy nominations, winning the Emmy in 2003 for an action sequence he directed for the popular "feature-looking" TV series, "Alias" (2001). Before starting in the film business, Jeff attended college in...
- Ray Jones
- Jean-Claude Van Varenbergh
When Jean-Claude Van Damme became an international film star, there was some debate as to his ring accomplishments. Former multiple World Kickboxing Champion Don "The Dragon" Wilson even offered Jean-Claude a "$100,000" bounty match to get into the ring and fight him. Van Damme brushed off the "challenge" as a publicity stunt. But, the truth of the matter was that Jean-Claude Van Damme had indeed had a kick-boxing career, which turned out to be very successful on the European scene....
- Gilbert B Coombs
- Vic Diaz
Vic Diaz reigns supreme as the jolly evil fat man of Filipino exploitation cinema. With his broad, mirthful grin, beady dark brown eyes, trim black goatee and mustache, swarthy complexion, thinning hair, protuberant sagging belly, and smooth, oily baritone voice, Diaz was a steady, scuzzy, often sinister and always charismatic presence in an alarmingly large volume of horror films and delectably down'n'dirty 70s drive-in features alike. He has been often described as the Filipino...
- Raymond Barry
Raymond J. Barry was born in New York, and attended Brown University, where he was a star athlete in football, basketball, and track. While there, he earned his degree in Philosophy and as a senior, was cast in the stage production of "Picnic," where he played a football player. He then entered the Yale Drama School and after completing, acted in the Broadway play "The Leaf People." He has appeared in over 100 plays and has starred in such films as Dead Man Walking (1995), Sudden Death...
- Don Stroud
He's the son of Vaudeville great, Clarence Stroud, of the Stroud Twins and singer Ann McCormack, who toured the world with Frank Sinatra. Don grew up on the beach in Honolulu, Hawaii, where his stepfather, Paul Livermore, and his mother, Ann, owned and operated the popular "Embers Steak House" and nightclub where Ann performed nightly. Don thrived on the beach in Waikiki under the watchful eyes of such mentors as Blackout, Mud, Buckshot, Rabbit and Steamboat. He learned much from these...
- Jimmy Martin
He was lead vocalist and guitarist for the Blue Grass Boys from 1949 to 1954, and later formed his own band, the Sunny Mountain Boys. He performed several times at the Opry, but never achieved his dream of becoming a regular cast member, allegedly because of his temperamental behavior. He was born on a hog farm, and hunted and sold 'possum skins to buy his first guitar. At 21, he was fired from a factory job for singing at work. He talked his way backstage at the Grand Ole Opry in...
- Jess Barker
Leading man in Hollywood "B" films of the 40s and 50s. Was involved in a bitter custody battle with Susan Hayward for their twin boys.
- Dorian M Harewood
According to Eric Monte (writer of "Cooley High"), Dorian was cast as Cochise on ABC's TV version of "Cooley High." After a total retool of the series, it became "What's Happening" and Dorian was out. Appeared in Glitter (2001) and "Glitter" (1984) and Sparkle (1976).
- Cliff Taylor
Father of June Carr (aka June Ormond).
- Jaime Tirelli
Is the husband of Millie Tirelli and the father of Gina and Ariana Tirelli.
- William Joseph Raymond
Has been cast in the few films made by Vermont indie filmmaker Jay Craven.
- Freddie Waugh
- Rohn Thomas
When not working on a film, he teaches Acting for the Camera workshops at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio.
- John Hatley
- Conrad Poe
Son of Fernando Poe and Patricia Mijares, and half-brother of Elizabeth Poe, Fernando Poe Jr., Andy Poe, and Freddie Poe.
- Paul Steigerwald
Replaced Mike Lange as Fox Sports Net's Pittsburgh Penguins TV play-by-play announcer. Five weeks later, Lange signed on to replace Steigerwald as the team's radio play-by-play announcer. (29 June 2006).
- Glenn Alan Gardner
Member of Screen Actors Guild
- Brian Hutchison
Brian Hutchison made his debut with the New York Philaharmonic in April 2003 in the roles of the Messenger and the Priest, in the concert staging of Berlioz's opera Beatrice and Benedict.
- Tom Saccio
- Kenneth Campbell