- Gordon Willis
Gordon Willis (born May 28, 1931 in Queens, New York, United States) is a highly respected Hollywood cinematographer best known for his work on the "The Godfather" series, and on Woody Allen's "Annie Hall" and "Manhattan". Willis is famed for his penchant at photographing in extremely dark conditions, an approach which earned him the nickname "The Prince of Darkness", a moniker attributed to him by his friend Conrad Hall. - Michael V. Gazzo
Michael Vincente Gazzo (born April 5, 1923 in Hillside, New Jersey; died February 14) is a noted Broadway playwright who later in life became a prominent American film and television actor. He was a member of the Actors Studio, (and would later go on to train such actors as Henry Silva and Tony Sirico) and was author of the notable Broadway play on drug addiction "A Hatful of Rain", … - Danny Aiello
Daniel Louis Aiello, Jr. is an Italian-American actor who has appeared in numerous motion pictures, including "Once Upon a Time in America", "Ruby", "The Godfather: Part II", "Hudson Hawk", "The Purple Rose of Cairo", "Moonstruck", "Léon: The Professional", "Two Days in the Valley", and "Dinner Rush". He is perhaps most famous for his role in the 1989 Spike Lee film "Do the Right Thing". - Harry Dean Stanton
Harry Dean Stanton (born July 14, 1926) is an American character actor. Stanton was born in West Irvine, Kentucky to Ersel and Sheridan Harry Stanton, who divorced when Stanton was in high school; they later re-married. He had two younger brothers, Archie and Ralph. Stanton attended the University of Kentucky in Lexington, Kentucky, where he studied journalism and radio arts. He also studied at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena, California. - Walter Murch
Walter Scott Murch (born July 12, 1943) is an Academy Award-winning film editor/sound mixer. He went to The Collegiate School, a private preparatory school in Manhattan, from 1949 to 1961. He then attended Johns Hopkins University from 1961 to 1965, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in Liberal Arts. While at Hopkins, he met future director/screenwriter Matthew Robbins and cinematographer Caleb Deschanel, with whom he staged a number of happenings. - Gastone Moschin
Gastone Moschin (born June 8 1929) is an Italian actor. Born in San Giovanni Lupatoto (Veneto) he began his career in the 1950s as theatre actor, first with the Stable Theater in Genoa and then with the Piccolo Teatro in Milan. In the same period Moschin also began to play in feature films, such as "La rivale" (1955) and "L'audace colpo dei soliti ignoti" (1959). In 1965 he was featured in [[Pietro Germi's "Signori e signore". - Frank Sivero
Frank Sivero (born Francesco LaGiudice on January 6, 1952 in Agrigento, Sicily, Italy) is a character actor, famous for playing the roles of Genco Abbandando in Mario Puzo's and Francis Ford Coppola's "The Godfather: Part II" and Franky Carbone in Martin Scorsese's "Goodfellas". - Troy Donahue
Troy Donahue was an American actor, known for being a teen idol. Merle Johnson Jr. was initially a journalism student at Columbia University before he decided to become an actor in Hollywood, where he was represented by Rock Hudson's agent, Henry Willson. According to Robert Hofler's 2005 biography, "The Man Who Invented Rock Hudson: The Pretty Boys and Dirty Deals of Henry Willson", Willson tried out the name Troy on Rory Calhoun and James Darren, … - Roman Coppola
Roman Coppola (born 22 April 1965 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France) is an American film director and music video director. He attended New York University's film school. He is the son of 5-time Academy Award winning director, producer, and writer Francis Ford Coppola and Eleanor Coppola, brother of Academy Award winning film director Sofia Coppola and the late Gian-Carlo Coppola, first cousin to actor Nicolas Cage. - Carmine Caridi
Carmine Caridi (born January 23, 1934 in New York City) is an American television and film actor. He has appeared in a wide variety of roles over the past 30 years, most notably playing Albert Volpe in "The Godfather Part III" and Carmine Rosato in "The Godfather Part II". He is the only actor to play two different roles in the Godfather films. He also played Detective Vince Gotelli in the television series "NYPD Blue" between 1993-1999. - John Aprea
John Aprea (born March 4, 1941) is an American actor, known for his role as "Young Sal Tessio" in "The Godfather: Part II" (1974) and on television as "Lucas Castigliano" on the soap opera "Another World", from 1989 to 1992. As of 2006, he is currently filming a new soap opera in Southern California called, "The Heiress", which can be found on The Internet Movie Data Base. He also played the father of John Stamos's character, Jesse Katsopolis, … - Amerigo Tot
Amerigo Tot was a Hungarian sculptor and occasional actor. He was born in Fehérvárcsurgó, Hungary and moved to Rome, where he lived for the rest of his life. He studied in Budapest under Ferenc Helbing and György Leszkovszky from 1926 until 1928, and under László Moholy-Nagy at the Bauhaus in Germany until 1933. As the Nazis came to power he moved to Rome and worked sculpting memorials on a stipend from the Roman Hungarian Academy, … - Peter Donat
Peter Donat (born Pierre Collingwood Donat on 20 January 1928) is a Canadian/American actor known for his roles in American television. - Julie Gregg
Julie Gregg (born Niagara Falls, January 24, 1944) is an American actress. She is best known for playing Sandra Corleone in "The Godfather". Gregg got her first role playing Debbie on McHale's Navy in 1964. She subsequently became a Broadway actress and singer. She played the role of Sandra Corleone in "The Godfather", and reprised her role in "The Godfather Part II", but the scene was subsequently cut. - William Bowers
William Bowers (Las Cruces, 1916 - Woodland Hills, California, 1987) was a reporter in Long Beach, California before becoming a screenwriter and specializing in writing comedy westerns and also turned out several thrillers. His first credited screenplay was "My Favorite Spy" in 1942. His career noticeably picked up after his Oscar nomination for the gritty Gregory Peck Western "The Gunfighter" in 1950, … - Frank Campanella
Frank Campanella (March 12 1919 - December 30 2006) was an American character actor. Campanella was born in New York City, the son of Sicilian immigrants Mary O. and Philip Campanella, a musician. He was the brother of actor Joseph Campanella and spoke mostly Italian growing up; this proved useful during World War II, when he worked as a civilian translator for the U.S. government. Campanella attended Manhattan College, where he studied drama. - Nick Tosches
Nick Tosches (born 1949) is an American writer, music journalist, novelist, biographer and poet. After different jobs, he started writing with music magazines, including "Creem" and "Fusion". His second book, "Hellfire", published in 1982, a biography of Jerry Lee Lewis, established him as a significant writer on the music scene. His subsequent biographies have covered the lives of Dean Martin, Michele Sindona, Sonny Liston, … - Donald McKelvy
Get this FREE MySpace layout and more at. - Nathan
If you look at the rest of the information in this area you might get an idea. The only thing that I'm gonna add is my view on love. There's an old joke that says it all... "Love is like a Poker game: It starts off with a Pair. He's got to have Jack or better. He shows Diamonds. She Flushes. They wind up with a Fullhouse. Sometimes with a Joker in the middle." Telling people that you have a Learning Disability makes them run from you. - Cody Hopkins
Here, on this Myspace webpage, you can receive my commentary and opinions on news and headlines I receive about movies. My sources are Premiere magazine, JoBlo's website (http://www.joblo.com), and the Internet Movie Database (http://www.imdb.com). You can also expect reviews of movies that I receive from my Netflix account and hopefully, I'll eventually have interviews with all different types of people and the interviews won't necessarily be about film. - Chris Smith
Gay male living in Chicago. I adopted a Boston Terrier in May and named him Johnny Damon after my favorite Sox player. If for some reason Damon goes to another ballpark, and there is a good chance, then my dog's name will change to Johnny Carson! - Gregory Krug
I am unpopular. - Kalyn
Hi all, I am Kalyn, a twenty-two year old female from a huge family. I love poetry and writing in my journal. Above all of that I love reading books of all sorts and hanging out with my boyfriend, and friends. I am interested in events planning and I aspire to be a Public Relations Specialist. I am creative, humorous, intelligent, sensitive, honest, and religious. - Baby Marie
Baby Marie Osborne (born November 5, 1911 as Helen Alice Myres, Denver, Colorado) was the first major child star of silent films and American films. She was usually billed as Baby Marie Osborne, but was often billed simply Baby Marie. Osborne made her film debut at age three in 1914's "Kidnapped in New York". By age five she was starring in films, including her most famous movie, 1916's "Little Mary Sunshine", … - Carmine Coppola
Carmine Coppola (June 11, 1910 - April 26, 1991) was an Oscar-winning, Golden Globe-winning and Bafta Award-nominated American composer, editor, musical director, and songwriter. Coppola was a composer and conductor who contributed to many of the musical scores in "The Godfather, Part II" and "Apocalypse Now". - G. D. Spradlin
Gervais Duan Spradlin (born August 31 1920 in Daylight Township, Garvin County, Oklahoma, USA) is an American character actor. He often plays devious Southern types. He is credited in over 70 television and film productions, and has performed alongside such notable actors as Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, Johnny Depp, Robert Duvall, Michael Douglas, Danny Devito, Sean Connery, Gene Hackman, Jack Palance, Martin Sheen, Christopher Walken, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Nick Nolte, … - Fred Roos
Fred Roos (May 22, 1934, Santa Monica, California) is a noted American film producer. Beginning in television as a casting director for The Andy Griffith Show, Roos went on to produce most of Francis Ford Coppola's films subsequent to "The Godfather", including "Apocalypse Now" and the forthcoming "Youth Without Youth". Roos won the Oscar for Best Film for producing "The Godfather, Part II". - Talia Shire
Talia Shire (born April 25, 1946), is an Academy Award-nominated American actress. Her name is in honor of her country of origin (Italia). Born Talia Rose Coppola in Lake Success, New York; she is the sister of director and producer Francis Ford Coppola and the niece of composer and conductor Anton Coppola. She was married to composer David Shire, with whom she had a son, Matthew Orlando Shire. - Dominic Chianese
Dominic Chianese (pronounced Key-ah-nes-e) (born February 24, 1931 in Bronx, New York) is an American actor and performer. He is perhaps best known for his role as Corrado Soprano on the HBO TV series, "The Sopranos", a role that netted him two Emmy Award nominations. Chianese is a graduate of the Bronx High School of Science. He worked as a bricklayer with his father and attended night school during the 1950s, … - Carmen Argenziano
Carmen Argenziano (* 27 October 1943 in Sharon, Pennsylvania) is an American character actor best known for his recurring role as Jacob Carter in the television series "Stargate SG-1". Argenziano is often cast as authoritarian, overbearing authority figures. His credits include: *"CSI: NY" - "Raising Shane" (29 November, … - Edward Guthmann
Former John F. Kennedy aide. When White House counsel John Dean handed over President Richard Nixon's "Enemies List" to the Watergate committee in June 1973, Guthman's name was among the 20 on the list. - Carl Skelton
- Bruno Perria
- Tammy Newell
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