1. Howard Davies

    Howard Davies (born 1945) is a noted Welsh director, best known for his theatre work. He is currently associated drector of the National Theatre and was previously associate director of the Almeida and the Royal Shakespeare Company. He has been nominated for three Tony awards: "Les Liaisons Dangereuses" (1987), "The Iceman Cometh" (1999) and "Private Lives" (2002).

  2. Bradford Dillman

    Bradford Dillman (born April 14, 1930 in San Francisco, California) is a retired American film and television actor. Born to Dean and Josephine Dillman, he graduated from Yale University with a B.A. in English Literature. Following this he served with the U.S. Marines in Korea (1951-1953) before focusing on acting as a profession. Studying with the Actor's Studio, he spent several seasons apprenticing with the Sharon, …

  3. Clarke Peters

    Clarke Peters was born Peter Clarke April 7 1952) is an American actor, singer, and writer. Clarke Peters grew up in Englewood, NJ and graduated from Dwight Morrow High School in 1970. Born in New York City, Peters earned a Tony Award nomination for Best Book of a Musical for writing the revue "Five Guys Named Moe". As an actor, he has appeared on Broadway in "The Iceman Cometh" (1999), which won him the Theatre World Award, …

  4. Katie Finneran

    Katie Finneran (born January 22, 1971 in Chicago, Illinois) is an Tony Award-winning American film, stage, and television actress. Raised in Miami, Florida, Finneran attended Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh for one year before moving to New York City at age 19 to study acting with Uta Hagen.

  5. Skipp Sudduth

    Robert Lee Sudduth IV (b. August 23 1956), generally known by his stage name Skipp Sudduth, is an American theater, film, and TV actor. Sudduth is best known for his role in the movie "Ronin" and his lead in the TV drama "Third Watch". Born in Wareham, Massachusetts, the son of an engineer and a nurse, Sudduth attended George Washington High School in Danville, Virginia, graduating in 1976.

  6. Robert Edmond Jones

    Robert Edmund Jones was an American scenic designer. Jones is credited with incorporating the new stagecraft into the American drama. Jones’s designs sought to integrate the scenic elements into the storytelling instead of having them stand separate and indifferent from the play’s action. His visual style, often referred to as simplified realism, combined bold vivid use of color and simple, yet dramatic, lighting.

  7. Donald Moffat

    Donald Moffat (born December 26, 1930) is a Plymouth, Devon, English-born American actor. He has been in many motion pictures, including several big budget American films, usually in debonair but villainous roles. He has appeared on television in "The West Wing" and "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman". He has also appeared in many Broadway plays, including several stage classics, such as "The Cherry Orchard", "Much Ado About Nothing", …

  8. Thomas Quinn Curtiss

    Thomas Quinn Curtiss was a writer, and film and theater critic. The son of Roy A. Curtiss and Ethel Quinn graduated from the Browning School in New York in 1933. He went on to study film and theater in Vienna and in Moscow, where he was a student of film director Sergei Eisenstein. In summer 1937, he met writer Klaus Mann in Budapest and followed him through Europe. Their homosexual relationship lasted for several years, but eventually "Tomski", …

  9. David Margulies

    David Margulies is an American actor. Born in Brooklyn, New York, Margulies graduated from City College of New York. Immediately afterward, he made his stage debut in the off-Broadway play "Golden 6" (1958). His first Broadway appearance was in the 1973 revival of "The Iceman Cometh". Margulies' extensive film credits include "The Front", "All That Jazz", "Dressed to Kill", "9½ Weeks", "Ghostbusters", …

  10. Conrad Bain

    Conrad Stafford Bain (born February 4, 1923) is a Canadian-American actor. Born in Lethbridge, Alberta, Bain studied at the Banff School of Fine Arts before serving in the Canadian Army during World War II. He then studied in New York at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, where his classmates included actor Charles Durning and comedian Don Rickles; he became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1946 then he graduated in 1948.

  11. Frederick Treves

    Frederick William Treves is an English character actor with an extensive repertoire. He specialises in avuncular military and titled types. He was born on 29 March 1925 in Margate, Kent, England. He trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. His over a hundred television credits include roles in "The Cazalets", "The Jewel in the Crown", "A Dance to the Music of Time", "The Politician's Wife", "To Play the King", …