- Robert Vaughn
Robert Francis Vaughn (born November 22, 1932) is an American actor noted for stage, film and television work, and best known as suave spy Napoleon Solo in the popular 1960s TV series "The Man from U.N.C.L.E." and his villainous performance as Ross Webster in "Superman III" although he continues to be a popular television actor into the 21st century. - David McCallum
David Keith McCallum, Jr. (born September 19, 1933) is a prolific Scottish actor and the son of concertmaster violinist David McCallum, Sr.. He is best known for his role as Illya Kuryakin, a Russian-born secret agent, on the popular 1960s television series "The Man from U.N.C.L.E.". - Leo G. Carroll
Leo G. Carroll (October 25 1892-October 16 1972) was an English character actor, best known for his roles in several Hitchcock films and "The Man from U.N.C.L.E.". He was born in Weedon, Buckinghamshire to a wealthy Catholic family, who named him after the reigning pope Leo XIII. Carroll made his stage debut in 1912, and played in London and Broadway until he moved to Hollywood in 1934 to start a career in film. - Lalo Schifrin
Lalo Schifrin is a true Renaissance man. As a pianist, composer and conductor, he is equally at home conducting a symphony orchestra, performing at an international jazz festival, scoring a film or television show, or creating works for the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, the London Philharmonic and even The Sultan of Oman. - Gerald Fried
Gerald Fried (born February 13, 1928) is an American musician, well known for his compositions in film and television. Born and raised in the Bronx, New York City, Fried attended Juilliard School of Music. After moving to Los Angeles he began composing and arranging music for shows such as The Man from U.N.C.L.E., working with Robert Drasnin, and also Star Trek, where he composed the famous musical underscore (now known as "Star Trek fight music") for the episode Amok Time. - Barbara Feldon
Barbara Feldon (born Barbara Hall on March 12, 1932 in the city of Butler, Pennsylvania) is an American actress, game show panelist of the 1960s and model, who is best known as Don Adams's working partner and future wife Agent 99, on the successful 1960s sitcom, "Get Smart". She graduated from Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie Mellon University) in 1955 with a Bachelor of Arts in drama, … - Robert Culp
Robert Martin Culp (born August 16, 1930 in Oakland, California), and a 1947 graduate of Berkeley High School, is an American actor, best known for his work on television. Culp came to national attention with his first role on film as the lead star in the 1957 western television series "Trackdown." After that series ended in 1959, … - Robert Drasnin
Robert Drasnin (born 17 November 1927) is a composer and clarinet player. - James Doohan
James Montgomery Doohan (March 3, 1920 - July 20, 2005) was a Canadian character and voice actor best known for his role as Montgomery "Scotty" Scott in the television and film series "Star Trek". Doohan's characterization of the Scottish Chief Engineer of the Starship "Enterprise" was one of the most recognizable elements in the "Star Trek" franchise. He also made several contributions behind the scenes for the "Star Trek" franchise. - Joseph Sargent
Joseph Sargent (born 22 July 1925, Jersey City, New Jersey) is an American film director. He has directed many television movies, but his best known feature film works are probably "MacArthur", "Nightmares" and "Jaws: The Revenge". He has won four Emmy Awards. Sargent began his career as an actor. He switched to directing in the mid 1950s, … - Noel Harrison
Noel Harrison (born London, England 29 January 1934) is an English actor and singer. He is best known for:- *A recurring role as Mark Slate in The Man from U.N.C.L.E., and, in that role, as the co-star of Stefanie Powers (April Dancer) in The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. *For singing "The Windmills of Your Mind", the theme tune from the film "The Thomas Crown Affair", which won the Academy Award for best song in 1968, and was also a Top Ten hit in the UK Singles Chart. - Walter Scharf
Walter Scharf (1 August 1910 - 24 February 2003) was an American film composer. Born in New York, he was the son of Yiddish theatre comic Bessie Zwerling. While in his 20s, he was one of the orchestrators for George Gershwin's Broadway musical "Girl Crazy", became singer Helen Morgan's accompanist, and later worked as pianist and arranger for singer Rudy Vallee. He began working in Hollywood in 1933, arranging for Al Jolson at Warner Bros., … - Boris Sagal
Boris Sagal (October 18, 1917 - May 22, 1981) was an American television and film director. Born in Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine, Sagal emigrated to the United States where he attended the Yale School of Drama. Probably best known for directing the cult classic film "The Omega Man", Sagal had a long and relatively undistinguished career in Hollywood as a television director. His many TV credits include episodes of "The Twilight Zone", … - David McDaniel
David Edward McDaniel (June 16, 1939 - November 1, 1977) was a US science fiction author, who also wrote spy fiction, including several novels based upon the television series "The Man from U.N.C.L.E.". - Richard Anderson
Richard Anderson, born Richard Norman Anderson (born August 8, 1926 in Long Branch, New Jersey, USA) is an actor in film and television. In the 1970s, he is probably best known for his role as Lee Majors's and Lindsay Wagner's boss, Oscar Goldman in both "The Six Million Dollar Man" and "The Bionic Woman" TV series and their 3 subsequent made for TV movies. - Michael Avallone
Michael Avallone (born in New York City, October 27, 1924, died 1999) was a prolific American author of mystery and secret agent fiction, as well as many novels based upon various television series and films. His lifetime output is known to have exceeded 1,000 works, including novels, short stories, and articles, published under his own name or numerous pseudonyms. Avallone published his first novel, "The Tall Dolores", in 1953 introducing the character of "Ed Noon", … - Ray Austin
Ray Austin (December 5 1932-) is a British television director. He has worked on episodes as a director for some 50 different television series between 1968 and 1998. He started his career as a stunt man and stunt coordinator between 1965 and 1967 most notably for 50 episodes of "The Avengers" in 1965, but became gradually involved as a director for TV then film. Perhaps due to his background as a stuntman, … - Fritz Weaver
Fritz Weaver (born January 19, 1926) is a Tony Award-winning American actor and voice actor. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Weaver attended Peabody High School. He served in Civilian Public Service as a conscientious objector during World War II, breaking into acting in the early 1950s. His first television role came in 1956 on an episode of "The United States Steel Hour". He would continue to appear on television during the next four decades, … - Roger C. Carmel
Roger Charles Carmel (September 27, 1932-November 11, 1986) was an American character actor. Of his hundreds of roles, he is best remembered for playing the flamboyant and hapless criminal Harry Mudd on the original "Star Trek". Other memorable roles include the accountant Doug Wesley on "The Dick Van Dyke Show" and Colonel Gumm on "Batman". He also appeared in roles on "I Spy, Hogan's Heroes, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., The Munsters, … - Chad Everett
Chad Everett (born June 11, 1936) is an American actor who has appeared in over 40 films and television series but is probably best known for his role as Dr. Joe Gannon in the 1970s television drama " Medical Center". - Gary Lockwood
Gary Lockwood (born John Gary Yusolfsky on February 21, 1937 in Van Nuys, California) is an American actor who is probably best known for his role as astronaut Dr. Frank Poole in "2001: A Space Odyssey" (1968). A very familiar face to movie and television audiences for nearly fifty years, Lockwood was a movie stuntman and stand-in for Anthony Perkins prior to his film acting debut in an uncredited bit role in 1959's "Warlock". - Jud Taylor
Judson (Jud) Taylor (born February 25, 1940) is an American actor and television director, who sometimes also used the name Alan Smithee. Taylor is perhaps best known for his directorial work on 1960s television classics such as "Star Trek", "The Man from U.N.C.L.E.", and "Mannix". He also performed as an actor in small parts on shows such as "The Fugitive" and "Gunsmoke" before taking up directing. - Warren Stevens
Warren Stevens (born November 2, 1919) is an American stage, screen, and television actor. Born in Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania, Stevens began his acting career after serving in the U.S. Air Force in World War II. He trained at The Actor's Studio in New York, received notice on Broadway, and thereafter was offered a Hollywood contract at 20th Century Fox. His first credited movie role was a bit part in "The Frogmen" in 1951. - Jay North
Jay North (born August 3, 1951 in Hollywood, California, USA) is an actor best remembered for his lead role in the TV series "Dennis the Menace". Chosen for the role by creator Hank Ketcham himself, http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0636020/bio North appeared in some 146 episodes of the weekly half-hour comedy. He later appeared in several movies as a teen and as a young adult. He also starred in the television series "Maya", … - Fred J. Koenekamp
"Fred J. Koenekamp" (born November 11, 1922) is a U.S. cinematographer. He is the son of cinematographer Hans F. Koenekamp. He worked in television and feature films from the 1960s. He was nominated for an Oscar for "Patton" (1970). - Les Roberts
Les Roberts began his career as a contemporary American mystery novelist after twenty-four years in Hollywood, having written and/or produced more than 2500 half-hours of network and syndicated television. He was the first producer and head writer of "The Hollywood Squares", and has written for "The Lucy Show", "The Andy Griffith Show", "The Jackie Gleason Show" and "The Man from U.N.C.L.E.", among others. - John Banner
John Banner (January 28, 1910, (Vienna) - January 28, 1973, (Vienna)) was a Jewish Austrian actor. Ironically, he is best known for his role as a World War II German soldier, the comedic Sgt. Hans Schultz on the television situation comedy "Hogan's Heroes". On this show, he had this famous saying "I know nothing! Nothing!" Banner was born in Vienna, Austria. - King Moody
King Moody (AKA Robert King Moody) was an American actor, best known for playing Ronald McDonald in commercials in the 1970s. He also played Shtarker in the television series Get Smart, spaceship captain in Teenagers From Outer Space and other roles in some 40 movies and television episodes including Bonanza, Chips, Combat, The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Dragnet and Sea Hunt. He was born on 6 December 1929 in New York City. Moody died 7 February 2001 in Tarzana, California. - Nancy Kovack
Nancy Kovack (b. March 11 1935, Flint, Michigan) is an American actress. - John Dunning
John D. Dunning (May 5 1916 - February 25 1991) was an American film editor who worked on several large-scale Hollywood movies from 1947 to 1970. He first garnered attention when the low-budget war film "Battleground" became a sleeper hit in 1949, earning critical praise and several Oscar nominations, including one for Best Film Editing. Dunning worked on the remake of "Show Boat" (1951); Joseph L. Mankiewicz's "Julius Caesar", … - Herschel Daugherty
Herschel Daugherty (born October 27, 1910 in Indiana; died March 5, 1993 in Encinitas, California), was an American actor and director during the 1950s to mid 1970s. He has directed various episodes of popular television shows such as "Gunsmoke" (1955), "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" (1955), "Wagon Train" (1957), "Rawhide" (1959), "Bonanza" (1959), "The Man from U.N.C.L.E." (1964), "Star Trek" (1966), … - Lawrence Montaigne
Lawrence Montaigne (b. February 26, 1931 in Brooklyn, New York) is an American actor, writer, dancer, and occasional stuntman. As an actor, he is best known for his appearances on many 1960s-era television shows. Born in New York, but raised in Rome, Italy, Montaigne speaks several languages, a skill he used to his advantage in securing roles in international productions. - Phyllis Newman
Phyllis Newman (born March 19 1933) is a Tony Award-winning American actress and singer. Born in Jersey City, New Jersey, Newman made her Broadway debut in "Wish You Were Here" in 1952. Additional theatre credits include "Bells Are Ringing", "The Apple Tree", "On the Town", "The Prisoner of Second Avenue", "Awake and Sing!", "Broadway Bound", and "Subways Are For Sleeping", … - Stuart Nisbet
Stuart Nisbet (born 1934) is an American character actor. He guest-starred on the television shows "Murder, She Wrote", "L.A. Law", "Little House on the Prairie", "Quincy M.E.", "Three's Company", "McMillan & Wife", "Emergency!", "The Rockford Files", "Kolchak: The Night Stalker", "Happy Days", "Adam-12", "Columbo", "Cannon", "Mannix", "Night Gallery", "Bonanza", … - Kam Tong
Kam Tong was a Chinese American actor best known for his role as Hey Boy on the television series "Have Gun — Will Travel". He appeared in many movies, often as an uncredited oriental, Chinese, Japanese, or Filipino. He appeared in many television shows including "The Man from U.N.C.L.E.", "The Time Tunnel", and "I Spy". - Marian McCargo
Marian McCargo Bell was a former tennis champ who later found success in film and television. Born in Pittsburgh, McCargo attended Boston's West Hills College before winning the Wightman Cup. She defeated Mo Connelly at Forest Hills in 1950, then later won the State Senior Tennis Championship in doubles. In 1951, she married Richard Cantrell Moses, who later became an advertising executive in Los Angeles. They had four sons. - Berry Kroeger
Berry Kroeger (October 16, 1912 - January 4, 1991) was an American film, television, and stage actor. Born in San Antonio, Texas, Kroeger got his acting start on radio as an announcer and actor, playing for a time The Falcon and The Shadow. He was discovered by filmmaker William Wellman while performing on Broadway and began appearing in films in 1948. Kroeger specialized in playing slimy bad guys in films like "Act of Violence" (1948) and "Gun Crazy" (1949). - Narda Onyx
Narda Onyx (born 1934) is an Estonian-born naturalized American film and television actress. Narda Onyx, at the age of eleven, escaped with her family through Soviet lines, and deceived her would-be German captors near the end of World War II. After making their way to Allied-occupied Bonn, they were able to find their way to America. Onyx appeared in dozens of supporting roles on television and in motion pictures during the 1950s and 1960s. - A. A. Wyn
Aaron A. Wyn (May 22, 1898 - November 3, 1967) (born Aaron Weinstein) was an American publisher. He began editing pulp magazines in 1926, forming "A.A. Wyn Magazine Publishers" in the 1930s and branching out into book publishing in 1945. He founded Ace Books, which specialized in genre paperback books, in 1952. Wyn was famous for paying his authors as little as he could get away with, … - Ray Girardin
Ray Girardin (born January 23 in Wakefield, Massachusetts) is an American actor. He is best known for portraying Howie Dawson on "General Hospital" from 1968 to 1974. Other television appearances include "Law & Order", "Cosby", "L.A. Law", "Murder, She Wrote" (as Lt. Casey), "St. Elsewhere", "Hill Street Blues", "Dallas", "Newhart", "Benson", "Happy Days", "Barney Miller" (as Vince Licori), …
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