- Barbra Streisand
Barbra Joan Streisand (born April 24, 1942) is an Academy Award-winning American singer, theatre and film actress, composer, liberal political activist, film producer and director. She has won Oscars for Best Actress and Best Original Song as well as multiple Emmy Awards, Grammy Awards, Golden Globe Awards. Streisand has ranked as the best selling female album artist of all-time in the United States, according to the RIAA, for over thirty years. - William A. Wellman
William Augustus Wellman was an American movie director. Wellman's father was a New England Brahmin of English-Welsh-Scottish and Irish descent. His mother, much beloved by the great director, was an Irish immigrant named Cecilia McCarthy. Before his career in films, Wellman served in World War I in the French Foreign Legion as an ambulance driver. He later served in the Lafayette Escadrille. Wellman was hired in 1927 to direct "Wings", … - Lionel Stander
Lionel Jay Stander was an American character actor in movies, radio, theater and television. Lionel Stander was born in The Bronx, New York, to Russian Jewish immigrants, the first of three children. His acting career began in 1928, as Cop and First Fairy in "Him" by e.e. cummings at the Provincetown Playhouse. He claimed that he got the role because he shot craps with some of the company. He appeared in a string of short-lived plays through the early 1930s, … - Tommy Noonan
Tommy Noonan (born Thomas Noon) (29 April 1922 - 24 April 1968) was a comedy genre film performer, screenwriter and producer. He acted in a number of 'A' and 'B' pictures from the 1940s through the 1960s, and he is fondly remembered as "Danny McGuire" in "A Star Is Born", and as "Gus Esmond", "Lorelei"'s boyfriend, in "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes". - Sally Kirkland
Sally Kirkland Jr. (born October 31, 1944) is an American actress. Born in New York City, she is the goddaughter of the late actress Shelley Winters. She was named for fashion editor Sally Kirkland, her mother, who was a fashion editor at "Vogue" and "LIFE" magazines. Kirkland was a student of Lee Strasberg and a member of the Andy Warhol coterie. - John Gregory Dunne
John Gregory Dunne (25 May 1932 - 30 December 2003) was an American novelist, screenwriter and literary critic. He was born in Hartford, Connecticut, and was a younger brother of author Dominick Dunne. He suffered from a severe stutter and took up writing to express himself. Eventually he learned to speak normally by observing others. He graduated from Princeton University in 1954 and worked as a journalist for "Time" magazine. - Carole Landis
Carole Landis, born Frances Lillian Mary Ridste, was an American film actress. - Sidney Luft
Sidney Luft was the third husband of iconic American singer/actress Judy Garland. He is credited with keeping the brilliant, but tormented and difficult Garland working and with setting up a deal with Warner Brothers to bankroll his wife's comeback film, a 1954 musical remake of "A Star Is Born" plus future projects. Sid Luft's name is on the film's credits as producer. Although it won an Oscar nomination for Garland, box office receipts proved disappointing. - Peggy Wood
Peggy Wood, born Margaret Wood, was an American actress of stage, film and television. Born in Brooklyn, New York, Wood spent nearly fifty years on the stage, beginning in the chorus and becoming known as a Broadway singer and star. She made her stage debut in 1910 in the chorus of "Naughty Marietta." In 1917, in "Maytime", she introduced the song ‘Will You Remember’. - Roger Kellaway
Roger Kellaway (born November 1, 1939) is an American composer, arranger, and pianist. Born in Waban, Massachusetts, he is an alumnus of the New England Conservatory. Kellaway has composed commissioned works for orchestra, chamber ensemble, and jazz big band, as well as for film, TV, ballet and stage productions. As a composer/arranger, he has received two prestigious honors - a 1976 Oscar nomination for Best Adaptation Score for the film "A Star Is Born", … - Willis Bouchey
Willis Bouchey was an American character actor who appeared in almost 150 films and television shows. He is perhaps best known for his appearances in "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance", "The Big Heat", "No Name on the Bullet", and "Suddenly". He also made uncredited appearances in "From Here to Eternity", "How the West Was Won", "Them!", and "A Star is Born". - Frank Fay
Frank Fay (November 17, 1897 - September 25, 1961) was a movie and stage actor, most famous for playing 'Elwood P. Dowd' (whose friend is an invisible 6-foot rabbit) in the play "Harvey" by the American playwright Mary Coyle Chase on Broadway. James Stewart would play the role in the film version. Born Francis Anthony Donner in San Francisco, California to Irish Catholic parents. - Art Munson
Art Munson is an American recording artist, musician. He has also been involved as a song writer and record producer. Munson began his musical career playing with Dick Dale and the Deltones and later began touring with the Righteous Brothers and Paul Williams. Munson has been seen with artists such as John Lennon, Barbra Streisand, Cher, Billy Joel, The Righteous Bros, Paul Williams, Kris Kristofferson, Vonda Shepard, Brenda Russell, David Sanborn, and Bill Medley. - Timothy Farrell
Timothy Farrell, (born June 26, 1922, died May 9, 1989) real name Timothy Sperl, was an American film actor that may be best known for his roles in the Edward D. Wood, Jr. films "Jail Bait", "The Violent Years", and "Glen or Glenda". In the latter film, he plays a doctor who patiently explains to a police detective that there is no shame or scandal in crossdressing, … - Frank R. Pierson
Frank R. Pierson (born 12 May 1925) is an American screenwriter and film director. Born in Chappaqua, New York, Pierson attended Harvard. He got his break in Hollywood when he penned a script for the television series "Naked City" in 1958. He went on to write or co-write several notable films, including the "Cat Ballou". He helped write "Cool Hand Luke" and "Dog Day Afternoon", which were both nominated for Academy Awards, … - Antonia
Come stai? My name is Antonia. I love music & learning more about a variety of things in life. I'm a professional musician-singer-songwriter-writer-actress. I am all about my friends, family & my pets - they are all very important to me. I'm blessed to have many great things in my life...I don't take things for granted. - Jennifer King
You're Marilyn Monroe! - Debbie Pietz
glitter-graphics.com. - Kali
- Jon Wojciechowski
I am a hospital administrator - who moved to Maine in 2004 from my native New York. I share my life and my home with a gorgeous young blonde: my eight year-old yellow-lab, Hudson. I love this piece from "Wicked". - Sandie Rogers
What is there to say about me? I'm in a class by myself. I think you can agree, if you know me!!!! I'm definately my own person. They broke the mold, you know, all that jazz. I love to laugh, have a pretty good sense of humor and enjoy a fun time. I love my family and have a very fulfilling life. I have many friends and enjoy each and every one of them. - Serena Lee
I guess if I had to say the most important thing I've learned in life? It would be, that I don't need to find "purpose" or "fulfillment"in another, true "inner peace" comes from within ourselves. I'm still searching to find all the "right" answers, but I know God will reveal HIS purpose for my life, in HIS perfect timing. - Sue
I live in a nice little cozy area in beautiful Northeast Florida with my "Critters". my dog "Maggie", my cat "Razzy" and my cockatiel "Tweety". I also have the priviledge of my youngest daughter and my youngest grandson living with me. - Joyce Wesley
- Dot
- Kenneth Ascher
Kenneth Ascher (born October 26, 1944, Washington, D.C.), also known as "Ken" or "Kenny" Ascher, is an American musician (keyboards), songwriter and musical arranger. Ascher's work through the years has included keyboard parts and string arrangements on John Lennon's album "Walls and Bridges" and Yoko Ono's "A Story", lyrics to several tunes from Barbra Streisand's remake of "A Star Is Born" (where he also served as music coordinator), … - Lisa Townsend
I believe in the power of positive thinking. I love the arts, I love creating art and what art creates within me. I love to laugh. A sense of humor is the most important thing in the world next to a loving and grateful heart. If you have all three, you have everything. I am married to a man who is so perfect, he humbles me. - Dawn Johnson
Hey Yall and Yee Haw!!! Yes I am a 46 year old Single Red Neck Woman.. - Harry Roselmack
Harry Roselmack, born March 20, 1973 in Tours, is a French radio and TV journalist. Harry Roselmack is gratuated in History (DEUG) and Journalist (DUT). He began to work for a local radio station, during this period. Than, he wrote some sport's papers for a regional news paper La Nouvelle République du Centre-Ouest. Roselmack has worked with Radio France, in 2000 (France Bleu, France Info) before joining Canal+. - Richard Amsel
Richard Amsel was an American illustrator and graphic designer. Amsel’s career started while he was a student at the Philadelphia College of Art. Though barely in his twenties, his proposed poster art for the Barbra Streisand musical "Hello Dolly" was selected by 20th Century Fox for the film’s campaign after a nationwide artists’ talent search. Amsel quickly emerged as one of the leading movie poster artists of the 1970’s, … - Susan Richardson
Susan Richardson (born March 11, 1952 in Coatesville, Pennsylvania) is an American actress, best known for her role as Susan Bradford on the television series "Eight is Enough", which she played from 1977 to 1981. Richardson first started acting in plays in high school. She graduated from Coatesville Area Senior High School in 1970, and moved to Hollywood in 1971. In the six years between moving to the West Coast and being cast on "Eight is Enough", … - Jose Melis
José Melis was born José Melis Guiu. Melis studied at the Havana Conservatory of Music and a Cuban government scholarship enabled him to continue his education in Paris. When he was 16, he arrived in America, graduated from the Juilliard School of Music and worked as a lounge pianist. During World War II, while he was serving as the musical director for the USO's New York City branch of the USO, he met Jack Paar, and the two remained friends for years. - Junko Sakurada
(born April 14, 1958) is a former singer and actress from the city of Akita, Akita Prefecture, Japan. In 1972, Junko appeared on the Nippon Television audition program "A Star is Born" and won the competition. She made her singing debut in 1973. Together with her contemporaries Momoe Yamaguchi and Masako Mori, she was one of a trio of girls in the third year of middle school to win the competition. - Jack Cathcart
- Robert Dumas
- Elizabeth Arden
- Bobby Shew
- Anson Stevenson
- Dean Hagen
- Uncle Rudy
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