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  1. Sarah Michelle Gellar

    Sarah Michelle Gellar (born April 14, 1977) is a Golden Globe-nominated, Daytime Emmy Award-winning American actress. She is probably best known as Buffy Summers in the acclaimed television series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer". She has since become known as a film actress, having starred in the family film "Scooby-Doo" (2002) and the sequel "Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed" (2004), the romantic comedy "Simply Irresistible", …

  2. Charles Perrault

    Charles Perrault was a French author who laid foundations for a new literary genre, the fairy tale, and whose best known tales include "Le Petit Chaperon rouge" ("Little Red Riding Hood"), "La Belle au bois dormant" ("Sleeping Beauty"), "Le Chat botté" ("Puss in Boots"), "Cendrillon" ("Cinderella"), "Barbe Bleue" ("Bluebeard"), "Le Petit Poucet" ("Hop o' My Thumb"), …

  3. Tom Keifer

    Carl Thomas Keifer was born in Springfield, Pennsylvania, on January 26, 1961. He is best known for being the vocalist and guitarist for the band Cinderella. Tom grew up in a musical family and began playing guitar at a young age. By the time he reached his teens, Tom discovered rock bands such as Led Zeppelin, the Rolling Stones, and Bad Company. Tom was interested to know what kind of music influenced these bands, …

  4. Clyde Geronimi

    Clyde "Gerry" Geronimi (June 12 1901 - April 24 1989) was an Italian-American animation director. He is best known for his work at Walt Disney Studio. Geronimi was born in Italy, immigrating to the United States as a young child. Geronimi's earliest work in the animation field was for the J.R. Bray Studios, where he worked with Walter Lantz. Geronimi left Bray in 1931 to join Walt Disney Studio, where he remained for the rest of his career.

  5. Marc Davis

    Marc Fraser Davis was a prominent artist and animator for Walt Disney Studios. He was one of Disney's Nine Old Men, the famed core animators of Disney animated films. Some of the animated characters Davis mainly designed and animated are Thumper from "Bambi" (1942), Brer Rabbit from "Song of the South" (1946), "Cinderella" (1950), Alice of "Alice in Wonderland" (1951), Tinker Bell in "Peter Pan" (1953), …

  6. Ollie Johnston

    Oliver Martin Johnston, Jr. (born on October 31,1912 in Palo Alto, California) is a pioneer in the field of motion picture animation. He was one of Disney's Nine Old Men, and the last living member. His work was recognized with the National Medal of Arts in 2005. He was a directing animator at Walt Disney Studios from 1935-1978. He contributed to many films including "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Fantasia, …

  7. Bill Peet

    Bill Peet (January 29, 1915 - May 11, 2002) was a children's book illustrator and a story writer for Disney Studios. He joined Disney in 1937 and worked on "The Jungle Book", "Song of the South", "Cinderella", "One Hundred and One Dalmatians", "The Sword in the Stone", "Goliath II", "Sleeping Beauty", "Peter Pan", "Alice in Wonderland", "Dumbo", "Pinocchio", "Fantasia", …

  8. Frank Thomas

    Franklin Thomas was one of Walt Disney's team of animators known as the Nine Old Men. He graduated from Stanford University - where he worked on campus humor magazine the Stanford Chaparral with Ollie Johnston -- then later attended Chouinard Art Institute, then joined The Walt Disney Company on September 24, 1934 as employee number 224. There he animated dozens of feature films and shorts, and also was a member of the Dixieland band Firehouse Five Plus Two, …

  9. Fred Coury

    Fred Coury (born October 20, 1966 in Johnson City, New York) is best known as the drummer for the glam metal band Cinderella. Coury lists Neil Peart, Peter Criss, Bobby Blotzer, Tommy Lee and Tommy Aldridge as his drumming inspirations.

  10. Lesley Ann Warren

    Lesley Ann Warren (born August 16, 1946), is a Golden Globe Award-winning, Oscar nominated American stage, film and television actress and singer. Warren was born in New York City to a Jewish family whose surname was originally "Woronoff". The 5-foot-8 inch actress began her career as a ballet dancer, training at the School of American Ballet. She entered the Actors Studio at the age of seventeen - reputedly the youngest applicant ever to be accepted.

  11. Eric Brittingham

    Eric Brittingham (born May 8, 1960 in Nashville, Tennessee) is a bassist most famous for playing in the band Cinderella. He also has a side band with Cinderella bandmate Jeff LaBar called Naked Beggars. Eric's wife, Inga Brittingham is the lead sing of Naked Beggars. According to on-line heavy metal news site Blabbermouth.net, Mr. Brittingham suffered what was called a "mild heart attack" in mid-December 2006.

  12. Eleanor Audley

    Eleanor Audley (born November 19 1905, in New York City, New York, died November 25 1991 in North Hollywood, California) was an actress and familiar voice in radio, film, television, and animation. Beginning as a radio actress, she worked extensively in the 1940s and 1950s in Hollywood on such shows as "Escape", "Suspense," and the radio versions of "My Favorite Husband" (as mother-in-law Mrs.

  13. Frederick Ashton

    Sir Frederick William Mallandaine Ashton began his career as a dancer but is largely remembered as a choreographer. Ashton was born at Guayaquil in Ecuador, in the artistic neighbourhood called Las Peñas, the original founding site of the city. When he was 13 he witnessed a life-changing event when he attended a performance by the legendary Anna Pavlova in the Municipal Theater in Lima, Peru. He was so impressed that from that day on he knew he would become a dancer.

  14. Jeff Labar

    Jeff LaBar born March 18, 1963, in Darby, Pennsylvania. he's the guitarist most famous for playing in the band Cinderella, in which he replaced original guitarist Michael Shermick, also known as Michael-Kelly Smith. Jeff also has a side band with Cinderella bandmate Eric Brittingham called Naked Beggars. During Cinderella's temporary break-up in the mid-1990s, LaBar supported himself by running a pizza shop with his brother and by doing assorted construction jobs.

  15. Ward Kimball

    Ward Walrath Kimball (March 4, 1914 - July 8, 2002) was an Academy Award-winning animator for the Walt Disney Studios. He was one of Walt Disney's team of animators known as Disney's Nine Old Men. While Kimball was a brilliant draftsman, he preferred to work on comical characters rather than complicated human designs. Animating came easily to him and he was constantly looking to do things differently. Because of this, Walt Disney called Ward a genius in the book, …

  16. Murray Head

    Murray Seafield Saint George Head (born March 5, 1946) is a British actor and singer. He was born in London to Seafield Head, a documentary-maker, and Helen Shingler, an actress. His younger brother is "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" star Anthony Head. Head began acting and writing songs as a child, and by the mid-1960s he had a London recording contract.

  17. Eric Larson

    Eric Larson (September 3, 1905 - October 25, 1988) was an animator for the Walt Disney Studios starting in 1933 and was one of the "Disney's Nine Old Men." Larson worked on such films as "Snow White", "Fantasia", "Bambi", "Cinderella", "Alice in Wonderland", "Peter Pan", "Lady and the Tramp", "Sleeping Beauty", "101 Dalmatians", and "The Jungle Book".

  18. Mack David

    Mack David (July 5, 1912 - December 30, 1993) was an American lyricist and songwriter, best known for his work in film and television in the 1960s, particularly his work on the Disney films "Cinderella" and "Alice in Wonderland". Mack David is the older brother of American lyricist and songwriter, Hal David. Mack David died in 1993 in his Rancho Mirage, California home and his remains are buried at the Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles, …

  19. Hee Chul

    Kim Hee Chul (김희철), or simply Hee Chul (희철), is an actor and a member of Korean boy band Super Junior. His nickname is Cinderella (신데렐라) and fans often refer to him as Heenim (희님). Likewise, Hee Chul calls his fans "Petals"

  20. Jerry Livingston

    Jerry Livingston (born March 25, 1909 in Denver, Colorado, died on July 1, 1987) was an American songwriter. From 1940s to the 1960s he had written songs for numerous films and television series, including "Cinderella" (1950), "Bronco" (1958), 77 Sunset Strip (TV series, 1958), and Hawaiian Eye (TV series, 1959). He worked on Tin Pan Alley and co-wrote with Mack David the theme song to "Casper the Friendly Ghost".

  21. June Foray

    June Foray (born September 18, 1917) is an American voice actress who has worked for most of the studios which produced animated films since the 1940s. Foray was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, where her voice was first broadcast in a local radio drama when she was 12 years of age; by age 15 she was doing regular radio voice work. Two years later she moved to Los Angeles, California, and soon became a popular voice actress on radio there, …

  22. Cindy

    Cinderella, though more commonly just called Cindy, was a male bottle-nosed dolphin that made international headlines for an unofficial marriage to a woman.

  23. Mark Warner

    Mark Warner is a Nashville Tennessee session guitarist, published songwriter and music producer who has contributed to many Rock and Pop music recordings. Warner has received public music industry acknowledgement for his songwriting contributions. In 2001 he won the Paramount Music Summer Songwriting Contest. He was then recognized for his lyrical accomplishments in the October 2001 edition of "ASCAP Playback Magazine".

  24. Betty Lou Gerson

    Betty Lou Gerson (April 20, 1914 - January 12, 1999) was an American actress, predominantly in radio, but also in film and television, and as a voice actress. Born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Gerson grew up in Birmingham, Alabama and later migrated to Chicago. She began her acting career in radio drama in 1935, while still in her 20s, and became a mainstay of soap operas during this period, …

  25. Jean Stapleton

    Jean Stapleton (born Jeanne Murray on January 19, 1923 in New York City) is an American actress of stage, television and film. She is best known for her portrayal of Edith Bunker, the long-suffering, yet devoted wife of Archie Bunker (played by Carroll O'Connor) and mother of Gloria Bunker Stivic (played by Sally Struthers), …

  26. Brandy

    Brandy Rayana Norwood (born February 11 1979), known professionally as Brandy, is an American actress and Grammy Award-winning R&B and pop singer, songwriter, and record producer. Discovered by Atlantic Records when she was a member of a youth singing group, she released her self-titled debut album in 1994 at the age of fifteen. Following a major success with "The Boy Is Mine," a duet with singer Monica, …

  27. Lucille Bliss

    Lucille Bliss (born March 31, 1916 in New York City) is an American actress and voice artist. She has appeared in films and on television shows, including "Smurfs" as Smurfette, Nickelodeon's "Invader ZIM" (Ms. Bitters) and "Walt Disney's Cinderella" (Anastasia).

  28. Jai Lewis

    Jai Lamar Lewis (born February 13, 1983) is an American athlete. He grew up in Aberdeen, Maryland and was best known for his career in college basketball at George Mason University. A power forward, Lewis was the primary inside force for the Patriots during their "Cinderella" run to the 2006 Final Four.

  29. Lamar Butler

    Lamar Edward Butler, Jr. (born December 21, 1983) is a former American college basketball player who was a starting guard for the Patriots of George Mason University during the Patriots' surprising run to the Final Four. During George Mason's captivating run through the NCAA tournament, Butler became a symbol of Cinderella and the tournament collectively with his tenacious heart and infectious smile and was featured on the cover of the March 27, 2006 Sports Illustrated.

  30. Ben Stevenson

    Ben Stevenson, O.B.E., is a native of Portsmouth, England, along with being a former ballet dancer with Britain's Royal Ballet and English National Ballet, co-director of National Ballet in Washington, D.C. (1971-1975), artistic director of Houston Ballet (1976-2003), and current artistic director of Texas Ballet Theater (2003-present). Steveson is most noted for his choreography for the "La Esmeralda Pas de Deux" (1982), …

  31. Brian Blessed

    Brian Blessed is an English actor, who came to fame as PC 'Fancy' Smith in the BBC TV police drama series "Z Cars". He is a highly charismatic man with a booming voice, great beard and robust build ideal for the bushy bearded, often humorous men in Shakespearean and medieval dramas. The son of a miner, Blessed was born in the ex-mining town of Mexborough and grew up in the nearby town of Goldthorpe, South Yorkshire. He trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.

  32. Ted Sears

    Ted Sears (March 13, 1900 - August 22, 1958) was an American animator during The Golden Age of American animation. Sears worked for the Fleischer Studios in the late-1920s and early-1930s, and later became a storyboard artist at the Walt Disney studio. At Disney, Sears did significant story work on many Disney features, such as "Pinocchio", "Cinderella", and "Alice in Wonderland".

  33. Edie McClurg

    Edie McClurg (born July 23, 1951, in Kansas City, Missouri) is an American actress. McClurg is known for a number of roles, including Principal Rooney's incompetent secretary Grace in "Ferris Bueller's Day Off", Lucille Tarlek on "WKRP in Cincinnati", next-door neighbor Patti Poole on "The Hogan Family", next-door neighbor Bonnie Brindle on "Small Wonder", the car-rental agent whom Steve Martin berates in "Planes, Trains & Automobiles", …

  34. Howard Lindsay

    Howard Lindsay (March 29, 1889 - February 11, 1968) was a Broadway producer, playwright, librettist, director and actor. Born in Waterford, New York, he is best known for his writing work as part of the collaboration of Lindsay and Crouse, and for his performance, with his wife Dorothy Stickney, in the long-running play "Life with Father". The 1957 Rodgers and Hammerstein television musical, "Cinderella", recently revived by PBS, …

  35. Kara Monaco

    Kara Monaco (born February 26, 1983 in Lakeland, Florida) is an American model. She was chosen as Playmate of the Month by "Playboy" magazine in June, 2005. She appeared on the cover of the June 2006 issue of "Playboy" as the Playmate of the Year 2006, the first PMOY in three years to do so (the most recent being Dalene Kurtis in 2002). She is the first Miss June ever to become PMOY. She received $100,000, a car, and a sports motorbike for being named as PMOY.

  36. Galina Ulanova

    Galina Sergeyevna Ulánova (8 January 1910 (O.S. 26 December 1909) - 21 March, 1998) has the reputation of the greatest Soviet ballerina. Her flat in Moscow is designated a national museum, and there are monuments to her in Saint Petersburg and Stockholm. Ulanova studied in Petrograd under Agrippina Vaganova and her own mother, a ballerina of the Imperial Russian Ballet. When she joined the Mariinsky Theatre in 1928, the press found in her "much of Semyonova's style, grace, …

  37. Kaye Ballard

    Kaye Ballard, also credited as "Kay Ballard", born Catherine Gloria Balotta on November 20, 1925, in Cleveland, Ohio, to an Italian immigrant father, is an actress who has appeared on Broadway and on television. From 1967 to 1969, she co-starred in the NBC sitcom, "The Mothers-in-Law", with Eve Arden. In 2005, she appeared in a road company production of "Nunsense", which was written by Dan Goggin.

  38. Bobbie Eakes

    Bobbie Diane Eakes (born July 25, 1961 in Warner Robins, Georgia) is an Emmy Award-nominated American actress. Before she started acting, she was Miss Georgia 1982, and studied at the University of Georgia. She received bit roles on nighttime television series, such as "Cheers", before becoming successful in the soap opera genre. She is most known for her role as Macy Alexander on the soap opera "The Bold and the Beautiful", …

  39. Christopher Gable

    Christopher Gable (born March 13, 1940 in London - died October 25, 1998 in Yorkshire) was an English dancer and actor. Gable studied at the Royal Ballet School, becoming a soloist in 1959 with the Royal Ballet. He continued as a principal with Covent Garden Ballet, but was troubled by arthritis and left in 1967 to pursue a career in acting. Christopher Gable's ballet roles included that of Mercury in Jacques Offenbach's comic operetta, "Orpheus in the Underworld", …

  40. Sidney Lowe

    Sidney Lowe (born January 21 1960 in Washington, D.C.) is a current college basketball head coach at North Carolina State University, former NBA basketball player and coach.

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