- Anthony Perkins
Anthony Perkins (April 4, 1932 - September 12, 1992) was an Academy Award-nominated American stage and screen actor known for his role as Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho". - Heidi Fleiss
Heidi Lynne Fleiss (born December 30 1965), known as the "Hollywood Madam", is a former American madam. She was convicted in connection with her prostitution ring with charges including pandering and tax evasion. Her ring had numerous famous and wealthy clients. She was sentenced to 37 months in prison for tax evasion, (pandering charges were dropped) but served just 21. Her father, Doctor Paul M. Fleiss is a famous Intactivist (one who opposes circumcision). - Justine Bateman
Justine Bateman (born February 19, 1966, in Rye, New York) is an American actress, born to Kent (a film producer) and Victoria (a Maltese-English flight attendant) Bateman. She attended Taft High School in Woodland Hills, California, and graduated in 1984. She played the role of superficial Mallory Keaton on the television sitcom "Family Ties" from 1982 to 1989. - Frank Whaley
Frank Whaley (born Frank Joseph Whaley on July 20, 1963) is an American film and television actor known for his roles in independent films. Frank Whaley was born in Syracuse, New York. He has two sisters and an older brother named Robert Whaley. His father, Robert Whaley, Sr., died in the 1990s of health problems related to alcoholism. Frank and his brother, Robert, founded the NY-based band, The Niagaras. - Tobin Bell
Tobin Bell (born August 7 1942) is an American film and television actor. Bell was born in Queens, New York and raised in Weymouth, Massachusetts. His mother, Eileen Bell, is an English-born actress. - Billy Campbell
William O. Campbell (born July 7, 1959 in Charlottesville, Virginia) is an actor who is well known for his starring role in the television series "Once and Again" as well as his role as a gay gynecologist, Dr. Jon Philip Fielding (credited as "William Campbell") in all three of the television mini-series adaptations of Armistead Maupin's novels of the same title "Tales of the City", "More Tales of the City", … - William Russ
William Russ (born October 20, 1950 in Portsmouth, Virginia) is an American actor. He has appeared in many made-for-TV movies. 'Rusty' Russ attended the University of Michigan, where he was a member of the Michigan Cheer team (which was all male at the time). Russ' best known role is probably that as Alan Matthews, Cory Matthews's father on the sitcom "Boy Meets World". - Joseph Stefano
Joseph Stefano (5 May 1922 - 25 August 2006) was an American screenwriter. Originally a composer of pop music in the 1940s, Stefano began writing movie scripts in the late 1950s, beginning with Martin Ritt's "The Black Orchid" (1958). In 1960, Stefano was tapped by Alfred Hitchcock to adapt Robert Bloch's pulp novel "Psycho" for the screen. His work was recognized by the Mystery Writers of America when he was given a 1961 Edgar Award, … - Randee Heller
Randee Heller (born in Brooklyn, New York) is an American television and film actress. Her most notable roles were in the film "The Karate Kid" and its sequels, as Daniel Larusso's mother, and on the 1970s serial sitcom "Soap" as Jodie Dallas' roommate Alice, one of the first lesbian characters in television history. She also had a starring role as Carol in the 1979 made-for-TV movie "Can You Hear the Laughter? The Story of Freddie Prinze". - Chris Gerolmo
Chris Gerolmo is an American writer, director, and singer best known for writing the screenplay for the film "Mississippi Burning" and co-creating the FX Networks military drama series "Over There". He also wrote and directed the acclaimed made-for-TV movie "Citizen X", about the Ukrainian serial killer Andrei Chikatilo. - Jackie Presser
Jackie Presser (August 6 1926-July 9 1988) was an American labor leader and president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters from 1983 until his death in 1988. He was closely connected to organized crime, and allegedly became president of the Teamsters based on the approval and support of the Cleveland mafia. From 1972 until his death, he was also an informant for the Federal Bureau of Investigation concerning mafia influence in the Teamsters union. - Steve Tisch
Steven "Steve" Tisch is the chairman, executive vice president, and co-owner of the New York Giants, as well as a movie and television producer. He is the son of former Giants co-owner Bob Tisch. Tisch was born born February 2, 1949 in Lakewood, New Jersey. He attended Tufts University, during which he began his filmaking career. During his youth, Tisch created a number of small movies with backing by Columbia Pictures. - Robert MacNaughton
Robert MacNaughton is an American actor, best known for his role as Elliott's brother Michael in Steven Spielberg's "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial", for which he won an 1983 Young Artist Award as Best Young Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture. Following roles in "I Am the Cheese" and a few made-for-TV movies, … - Vince Vieluf
Because he did not have an exemplary grade in school, he became the president of his Senior Class at Lake Forest High School (1988) because he knew that if he were the president, he would speak at graduation. If he had to speak at graduation, then the school would have to let him graduate. - Emma Chambers
Emma G Chambers (born March 11, 1964) is an English actress from Westcliff-on-Sea, Essex. Chambers trained at the Webber Douglas Academy in the 1980s, where she was a classmate of Ross Kemp Best known for playing Alice in "The Vicar of Dibley", Chambers has also worked as a voice performer in the animated made-for-TV movie "The Wind in the Willows" (1995) and in "Little Robots" (2003). - Sherri Finkbine
Sherri Finkbine (born as Sherri Chessan, b. 1932) is an American television actress. Finkbine was known as Miss Sherri on the local Phoenix, Arizona version of the franchised children's show, "Romper Room". In 1962, when Finkbine was pregnant with her fifth child, she had been taking Thalidomide, a drug which if taken by a pregnant woman causes the fetus(es) within her to become deformed while in utero. - Angie Milliken
Angie Milliken is an Australian actress. Milliken first became noticed when she starred in the 1991 made-for-tv movie "Act of Necessity" for which she was nominated for an Australian Film Institute (AFI) award. Throughout the 1990s, Milliken starred as Jo Moody in a series of telemovies with Robert Taylor, called "The Feds", and in 1999 starred in "Paperback Hero", as well as guest starring on "Farscape" and "Stingers". - Robert D. Keppel
Robert D. Keppel (born 1944) is a former Seattle, Washington police detective most known for his work tracking serial killers Ted Bundy and Gary Ridgway, also known as the Green River Killer. Keppel first encountered the "Ted Murders" just one week after beginning work as a homicide detective. He investigated Bundy and his crimes extensively, and continued an erstwhile correspondence with him from the time of his initial imprisonment to his execution in 1989, … - Martin Klebba
Martin Klebba (born June 23, 1969 in Troy, Michigan) is an American actor and stunt performer. Klebba has dwarfism and is 4'1" tall. He grew up in Troy, Michigan, graduating from Athens High School. Klebba has had a recurring guest role in the television show "Scrubs" as Randall. He was cast in "Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl", and its sequels; "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest", … - Bernard Lefkowitz
Bernard Lefkowitz, a native of New York City, was an author, sociologist, journalist, and investigative reporter. A reporter and assistant editor at the New York Post, Lefkowitz worked for the Peace Corps before becoming an author. Of Lefkowitz's books, which include "The Victims", "Break-time: Living Without Work in a Nine-to-Five World", and "Tough Change:Growing Up on Your Own in America", … - Laurie Coleman
Laurie Coleman (born Laurie Casserly December 13, 1956) is the wife of Republican U.S. Senator Norm Coleman of Minnesota. She is an aspiring actor, model, and mother of two children, Jacob and Sarah Coleman. The Colemans had two other children, who died in infancy due to Zellweger syndrome, a rare genetic disease. Coleman is Roman Catholic and her mother, Lois Casserly, was a leading pro-life activist in Minnesota. Her husband is Jewish. - Kimberlee Autry
Kimberlee Autry is an American actress best known for her appearance in the made-for-TV movie "The Legend of Jake Kincaid". - Solveig Hoogesteijn
Solveig Hoogesteijn, born August 3, 1946 in Sweden is a European Motion picture writer, producer and director. She wrote, produced and directed "Santera (1994)"; "Macu, la Mujer del Policía (1987)" ("Macu, the Policeman's Woman)"; "Alemania Puede Ser Muy Bella, a Veces (1982)"; "Manoa - Flucht aus der Zeit (1980)". The latter film was a made-for-TV movie.) Hoogesteijn also co-wrote, produced, … - Julian McMahon
Julian Dana William McMahon (born 27 July 1968) is a Golden Globe- nominated Australian actor and former fashion model. - M. C. Gainey
Mike Connor Gainey (born June 15, 1948) is an American film and television character actor whose distinctive mustache, 6'2½" frame, and threatening visage often land him supporting roles as Southern/Southwestern types, thugs, and criminals. Since the early 1980s he has been in over 50 movies and made for TV movies, including "Breakdown", "Two Idiots in Hollywood", "Con Air", "Terminator 3", "Sideways", … - David Tom
David Tom (born March 23, 1978 in Hinsdale, Illinois) is an Emmy-winning American actor. In 1993, Tom was nominated for two Young Artist Awards for his roles in "Stepfather III" and "Stay Tuned". In 1994, he was again nominated for "Outstanding Youth Ensemble in a Motion Picture" for "Swing Kids", alongside co-stars Robert Sean Leonard, Christian Bale and Frank Whaley. He previously played Billy Abbott on the CBS soap opera, … - Debbie Macomber
Debbie Macomber (born October 22, 1948 in Yakima, Washington) is a best-selling American author of over 150 romance novels and contemporary women's fiction. Over sixty million copies of her books are in print throughout the world, and one, "This Matter of Marriage", became a made-for-tv-movie in 1998. Macomber was the inaugural winner of the fan-voted Quill Award for romance in 2005 and has been awarded a Romance Writers of America RITA Award. - Jenny Sullivan
Jenny Sullivan (born 1947) is an American actress who has starred in films and on television. She has starred in some made for TV movies, her best known role is in the 1983 NBC hit mini series "V" as the reporter Kristine Walsh. In 1984, she reprised her role as Kristine Walsh in the hit sequel "V: The Final Battle". Her first feature film was in the 1968 movie "The Angry Breed". - Aimee Osbourne
Aimee Rachel Osbourne (born September 2 1983 in London, England), is a singer, actress, and columnist. She is the fourth child of rock legend Ozzy Osbourne and the first child to Ozzy's second wife Sharon. Unlike her siblings Jack and Kelly, she chose not to appear on her family's MTV reality show, "The Osbournes". She has three half siblings; Elliot, Jessica and Louis from Ozzy's first wife Thelma Riley; an adopted brother, …
|
| |