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  1. Douglas Fairbanks

    Douglas Fairbanks (May 23, 1883 - December 12, 1939) was an American actor, screenwriter, director and producer, who became noted for his swashbuckling roles in silent movies such as "The Mark of Zorro" (1920), "The Three Musketeers" (1921), "Robin Hood" (1922), "The Thief of Bagdad" (1924) and "The Black Pirate" (1926).

  2. Oliver Reed

    Robert Oliver Reed (February 13, 1938 - May 2, 1999) was an English actor known for his macho image on and off screen. His major films include "Oliver!", "Women in Love", "The Devils", "The Three Musketeers", "Tommy," "Castaway", "Lion of the Desert", and "Gladiator".

  3. Alexandre Dumas, Père

    Alexandre Dumas, père, born Dumas Davy de la Pailleterie was a French writer, best known for his numerous historical novels of high adventure which have made him one of the most widely read French authors in the world. Many of his novels, including "The Count of Monte Cristo", "The Three Musketeers", and "The Man in the Iron Mask" were serialized, and he also wrote plays and magazine articles and was a prolific correspondent.

  4. Stephen Herek

    Stephen R. Herek (born 10 November 1958, San Antonio, Texas) is an American film director. Herek attended the University of Texas at Austin. His film director's career took off in 1986 with Critters followed by Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure where he worked with Keanu Reeves in 1989. He directed The Mighty Ducks in 1992, The Three Musketeers in 1993, Mr. Holland's Opus in 1995 and 101 Dalmatians in 1996. Herek also directed the 2001 movie "Rock Star", …

  5. George Sidney

    George Sidney (October 4 1916 - May 5 2002) was a prolific American film director, who directed many notable films, mostly for the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio. He was born in Long Island City, New York. Sidney got his start as an assistant at MGM until being assigned to direct the "Our Gang" comedies, which MGM had just acquired from Hal Roach, in 1938. Sidney, then age 21, was the youngest "Our Gang" senior director ever, …

  6. Gabrielle Anwar

    Gabrielle Anwar (born February 4, 1970) is an English actress, known for her roles in the 1990s films "The Three Musketeers" and "Body Snatchers". She also appeared as fashion-conscious graphic designer Sam Black in the second series of the hugely popular Children's ITV series "Press Gang".

  7. Fred Niblo

    Fred Niblo (born January 6, 1874 - died November 11, 1948) was an American pioneer film actor, director and producer. He was born Frederick Liedtke in York, Nebraska to a French mother and a father who had served as a captain in the American Civil War and was wounded at the Battle of Gettysburg. Using the stage name, Fred Niblo, Liedtke began his show business career performing in vaudeville and in live theater.

  8. Jean-Pierre Cassel

    Jean-Pierre Cassel was a French actor, born in Paris. The son of a doctor father and opera singer mother, Cassel was discovered by Gene Kelly as he tap danced on stage, and later cast in the 1957 film "The Happy Road". Then Cassel gained fame in the late 1950s as a hero in comedies by Philippe de Broca. During the 1960s and 1970s he worked with Claude Chabrol ("La Rupture"), Luis Buñuel (as Stéphane Audran's husband in "Le charme discret de la bourgeoisie"), …

  9. Auguste Maquet

    Auguste Maquet was a French author, best known as the chief collaborator of French novelist Alexandre Dumas, père, co-writing such works as "The Count of Monte Cristo" and "The Three Musketeers".

  10. Adolphe Menjou

    Adolphe Jean Menjou (February 18, 1890 - October 29, 1963) was an American actor. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania of French and Irish descent, he was raised Roman Catholic, and attended the Culver Military Academy and graduated from Cornell University with a degree in engineering. Attracted to the vaudeville stage, he made his movie debut in 1916 in "The Blue Envelope Mystery". During World War I, he served as a captain in the ambulance service.

  11. Simon Ward

    Simon Ward (born London, October 19, 1941) is an English stage and film actor. The son of a car dealer, Ward had a pretty fair idea of what he wanted to do with his life from an early age. He was educated at Alleyn's School, London, the home of the National Youth Theatre, which he joined at age 13 and stayed with for eight years. After attending the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, he worked in repertory in Northampton, Birmingham, …

  12. Marguerite de la Motte

    Marguerite De La Motte (occasionally credited as 'Marguerite de LaMotte' and 'Marguerite de la Motte') (June 22, 1902 - March 10, 1950) was an American film actress, most notably of the silent film era.

  13. George Siegmann

    George Siegmann (February 8, 1882, New York City - June 22, 1928, Hollywood, California) was an American actor in the silent film era. His more notable roles include the guard in the 1927 film "The Cat and the Canary", Porthos in "The Three Musketeers" (1921), Bill Sikes in "Oliver Twist" (1922), and Dr. Hardqucinnone in "The Man Who Laughs" (1928).

  14. Ilya Salkind

    Ilya Salkind (born Ilya Juan Salkind Dominguez, July 27, 1947 in Mexico City) grew up in the world of motion pictures. At the age of one, Ilya was photographed sitting on the lap of Zsa Zsa Gabor. His grandfather, Michael Salkind, was one of the pioneers of silent films and produced "Joyless Street" (1925), featuring then-relatively-unknown Greta Garbo in her first major role.

  15. Jim Weiss

    Jim Weiss is a children's' storyteller who has released many audio cassettes and CDs. Examples of his retellings of stories include various works of Shakespeare, The Three Musketeers, and Sherlock Holmes. Most of his work was released by Greathall Productions.

  16. Patricia Medina

    Patricia Medina (19 July 1920-) is an English-born actress. Born in Liverpool, England, she married the actor Richard Greene in 1941. They divorced in 1952. Medina married the actor Joseph Cotten in 1960. Medina's most notable films are "The Three Musketeers" (1948), "Abbott and Costello in the Foreign Legion" (1950), "Francis" (1950), and "Mr. Arkadin" (1955). She and her husband Joseph Cotten starred together on tour in several plays, …

  17. Heather Angel

    Heather Grace Angel (February 9, 1909 - December 13, 1986) was a British actress.

  18. Moroni Olsen

    Moroni Olsen was an American actor. Olsen was born in Ogden, Utah to Mormon parents who named him after the prophet Moroni. After having worked on Broadway he made his film debut in a 1935 adaptation of "The Three Musketeers". Moroni Olsen died from a heart attack at the age of 65.

  19. William Hobbs

    William Hobbs (born 1939 in Hampstead, London) is a choreographer of staged fights. He has arranged some of the most notable scenes of cinematic fencing from the 1960s to the 2000s, …

  20. John Felton

    John Felton (c. 1595 to 28 October 1628) was a lieutenant in the English army who stabbed George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham to death in Portsmouth on 23 August 1628. Felton had been wounded in the duke's disastrously managed military expedition of 1627 against the French at La Rochelle and, furthermore, he had held a personal grudge against his victim who, he believed, had corruptly withheld some of his pay and deprived him advancement.

  21. Chuck Wagner

    Chuck Wagner (born June 20,1958 in Nashville, Tennessee, USA) is an American actor. He is best known for his role in the short-lived science fiction 1983 TV series "Automan" as the title character. He also starred on the soap opera "General Hospital" as Randall Thompson in 1987. Chuck has made guest appearances on numerous TV shows, including "The Dukes of Hazzard", "Dynasty", "Matlock", and "As the World Turns".

  22. Michael Gothard

    Michael lan Gothard (June 24, 1939 - December 2, 1992 (suicide) was an English actor, usually best remembered for the television series "Arthur of the Britons". After appearances in the films "Herostratus" (1967) and "Up the Junction" (1968), Gothard acquired a female following after taking a villainous role as Mordaunt in the BBC's adaptation of "Twenty Years After" ("Further Adventures of the Musketeers").

  23. Douglass Dumbrille

    Douglass Dumbrille was an actor and one of the Canadian pioneers in early Hollywood. Dumbrille was born in Hamilton, Ontario. As a young man, he worked as a bank clerk in his home town of Hamilton while at the same time pursuing an interest in acting. He eventually left banking to work with a stock company that led him to Chicago, Illinois and to a job there with another stock company that toured across the United States.

  24. Henri Diamant-Berger

    Henri Diamant-Berger was a French screenwriter, film director and producer. Born in Paris, France to a Jewish family, he studied to be a lawyer but was drawn to the motion picture business. He began his career in the cinema in 1916 as a silent film screenwriter but within a few years was behind the camera, directing. In addition to writing screenplays, during the period of 1916 to 1919 he also published and edited a film magazine and books about the movies.

  25. Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras

    Gatien de Courtilz de Sandras was a French novelist and memorialist who wrote semi-fictional "memoirs" (in the first person) of historical figures from the recent past (such as the marquis de Montbrun and M. de Rochefort). His memoir-novels-such as "Mémoires de M.L.C.D.R." (1687), "Mémoires de M. d'Artagnan" (1700), "Mémoires de M. de B." (1711)-describe the social and political world of Richelieu and Mazarin without gallant clichés (spies, kidnappings, …

  26. George Evans

    George Evans (February 5, 1920- June 22, 2001) was an American cartoonist and illustrator who worked in both comic books and comic strips. His lifelong fascination with airplanes and the pioneers of early aviation was a constant theme in his art and stories. Born in Harwood, Pennsylvania, Evans studied art from a correspondence course. He was still in his teens when he made his first sales, both illustrations and writing, to pulp magazines.

  27. Mikhail Boyarsky

    Mikhail Sergeevich Boyarsky (b. December 26, 1949 in Leningrad) is a Russian actor and singer, currently living in the city of Saint Petersburg. He is most known and loved for the role of d'Artagnan in a Russian version of The Three Musketeers (1978) and its sequels (1992, 1993). He was also a popular singer of the 1980s and completed several tours. He played the big bad wolf in the 1976 movie Ma-ma.

  28. Mylène Demongeot

    Mylène Demongeot is a French actress. She gained fame and adulation for her portrayal of Abigail Williams in the French-German movie "Les Sorcières de Salem" (1957). The blonde Actress has played in adventures like Milady de Winter in "The three Musketeers" and in Comedys like the "Fantômas"-Adventures directed by André Hunebelle. In USA she has co-starred to David Niven in Otto Premingers "Bonjour Tristesse".

  29. Edward Brayshaw

    Edward Brayshaw was a British actor. His television roles include the part of Rochefort in the 1966 miniseries "The Three Musketeers" and 1967's "The Further Adventures of the Three Musketeers". He is probably most recognised for playing Harold Meaker in "Rentaghost". He appeared twice in "Doctor Who": first as Léon Colbert in 1964's "The Reign of Terror", and second as the War Chief, …

  30. Veniamin Smekhov

    Veniamin Borisovich Smekhov (b. August 10, 1940 in Moscow) is a Russian actor. Smekhov has long worked in the Moscow Taganka Theatre where his roles included Woland in a stage adaptation of Mikhail Bulgakov's "The Master and Margarita". In film, he is most known and loved for the role of Athos in a Russian version of The Three Musketeers (1978) and its sequels (1992, 1993). He also has written children poetry, scripts, memoirs and humour.

  31. Louis F. Gottschalk

    Louis Ferdinand Gottschalk was an American composer born in St. Louis, Missouri. The son of a Missouri governor, also named Louis, and grand-nephew of composer Louis Moreau Gottschalk, his first notable work in music was as conductor of the U.S. premiere of Franz Lehár's "The Merry Widow". He was a pioneer of original film music, largely due to his work with independent filmmaker L. Frank Baum, for whom he composed the musical, "The Tik-Tok Man of Oz", …

  32. Mark Bramble

    Mark Bramble (born December 7 1950) is a Broadway director and scriptwriter. Bramble began his theatrical career as an assistant on "Mack and Mabel" in 1974. He turned to writing in 1979 with the book for "The Grand Tour", and the following year wrote the books for "42nd Street" and "Barnum", earning Tony Award nominations for both.

  33. Paul Féval, Fils

    Paul Auguste Jean Nicolas Féval (1860-1933) was a French adventure novelist, like his father Paul Féval, père. He was the third of eight children and the eldest son of Paul Féval, who was 42 years old and at the height of his success when Paul Féval fils was born.. Paul Féval fils became famous for writing sequels and prequels to his father's popular swashbuckler novel "Le Bossu" [The Hunchback] (1857), …

  34. Lewis Waller

    Lewis Waller (November 3 1860 - November 1 1915) was an English actor and theatre manager (real name: William Waller Lewis), born in Spain. His father was a civil engineer. He first appeared on the London stage in 1883, at Tooles, and for some years added to his reputation as a capable actor in London and the provinces.

  35. Paddy Crean

    Patrick "Paddy" Crean was a professional actor and theatrical fight director who was one of the most influential figures in the art of modern stage combat. Crean, who had a background in competitive fencing, began choreographing fights in 1932 when he was working in his native England as an actor in "The Legends of Don Juan".

  36. Kurt Huang

    Click Yes if you like :-)

  37. Kurt

    Click Yes if you like :-)

  38. Brett Flowers

    Guitarist, songwriter, creator of BFE (Brett Flowers Element), (http://www.myspace.com/brettflowerselement) my rock band with Rod Jansen and Billy Pixley, that serves as my personal sonic soap-box from which I rip, rant and rave about all those things that I think demand to be ripped, ranted and raved about.

  39. Christina

    Hmmm... Where should I start??? My name's ~Christina~ I'm a 21 year old singer/starlet!!! I am a waitress at Chili's in Encino (WOOT) I also go to school full time at Los Angeles Valley College. I'm probably one of the biggest Fag Hags this side of the Rio Grande. I'm Half black(Dad's side) and Half white (Mom's side)... but you really cant tell.

  40. Warren Turnbull

    Arrgh! Hoist yar Jolly Roger and prepare to walk the plank!

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