- Bill Murray
William James "Bill" Murray (b. September 21, 1950) is an Academy Award-nominated, Emmy-winning and Golden Globe-winning American comedian and actor. He is perhaps most famous for his work in "Saturday Night Live", as well as for his comedic roles in films such as "Stripes", "Groundhog Day", "Caddyshack", "Ghostbusters" and "Rushmore", among many others. He has gained further acclaim for recent dramatic roles, …
- Rick Moranis
Frederick Alan "Rick" Moranis (born April 18, 1953) is a Canadian actor, comedian and musician best known for his comedy work on "SCTV" and in film appearances such as "Ghostbusters", "Little Shop of Horrors", "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids", "Spaceballs", and "My Blue Heaven". He is known in the movie business as "Slick Rick" due to his ability to play the lovable dork to perfection in every movie.
- Harold Ramis
I'm a Capricorn who enjoys listening to music, long walks on the beach, and watching the sunset.
- Ray Parker Jr.
Ray Erskine Parker Jr. (born on May 1, 1954 in Detroit) is an American guitarist, songwriter, producer and recording artist best known for writing the theme song to the motion picture "Ghostbusters".
- Ivan Reitman
Ivan Reitman is a Slovakian-born, Canadian-raised jewish film actor, producer, and director. He is most remembered for directing and producing a string of comedies, mostly in the 1980s and 1990s. Reitman worked on a number of films after graduating from McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. He produced two films for director David Cronenberg with "Shivers/They Came from Within/The Parasite Murders" (1974) and "Rabid" (1976).
- Elmer Bernstein
Elmer Bernstein (pronounced "Bern-steen") (April 4, 1922 - August 18, 2004) was an Academy and two-time Golden Globe award winning American film score composer. Bernstein was born in New York City. During his childhood he performed professionally as a dancer and an actor and won several prizes for his painting. He gravitated toward music by his own choice at the age of twelve, at which time he was given a scholarship in piano by Henriette Michelson, …
- Ernie Hudson
Ernie Hudson (born December 17 1945) is an American actor. He is known for his roles as Winston Zeddemore in the "Ghostbusters" film series, and as Sergeant Albrecht in the cult movie The Crow.
- Bobby Brown
Robert Berisford "Bobby" Brown (born February 5, 1969) is an American Grammy Award-winning R&B singer, songwriter, and dancer. Brown began his career with the popular boy band New Edition in 1980 but was later ousted from the group due to behavioral problems. He embarked on a solo career in 1986 and had a string of Top 10 Billboard hits. Brown is the ex-husband of R&B singer Whitney Houston and the star of his own reality show, "Being Bobby Brown" on Bravo.
- Annie Potts
Annie Potts (born October 28, 1952) is an American television and film actress. She is probably best known for playing the role of Janine Melnitz in the "Ghostbusters" films and for the television sitcom "Designing Women", but has had a wide variety of prominent roles in both television and film. Other notable roles include Mary Elizabeth (O'Brien) Sims on the Lifetime Television show "Any Day Now", …
- William Atherton
William Atherton (born July 30, 1947) is an American film, theatre and television actor. Although Atherton has played many roles over the years, he is perhaps best known for his ability to play smarmy, spiteful authority figures in films like "Ghostbusters" and "Real Genius". Atherton was born William Atherton Knight II in Orange, Connecticut to Myrtle (Robison) and Robert Atherton Knight.
- 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", …
- Slavitza Jovan
Slavitza Jovan was an actor known for her appearance in Ghostbusters. When she was hired for Ghostbusters she was known as a supermodel. Her voice in Ghostbusters was dubbed by the late Paddi Edwards. Also starred in House on Haunted Hill.
- Joe Medjuck
Joseph Medjuck (born February 17, 1943 in Fredericton, New Brunswick) is a Canadian-born film producer in Hollywood. He is a graduate of McGill University, and the University of Toronto where he also taught for twelve years. At the request of friend and fellow Canadian Ivan Reitman, he moved to Los Angeles in 1981 to work as associate producer on the film "Stripes". In 1986, he served as executive producer for the first time on "Legal Eagles", …
- Jennifer Runyon
Jennifer Runyon (born April 1, 1960) is an American actress. She is known for guest appearances or secondary characters in various sitcoms and dramas, as well as a couple of made-for-TV movies. Among her roles are Sally Frame on "Another World" (1981-1983), Gwendolyn Pierce on "Charles in Charge" (1984-1985), and replacing Susan Olsen as Cindy Brady in "A Very Brady Christmas" (1988).
- Jordan Charney
Jordan Charney (born April 1, 1937) is an American character actor. Many of his earliest roles were on daytime, with appearances in numerous soaps. He played Sam Lucas, a former convict who became a lawyer, in both "Another World" and its spin-off "Somerset", playing the role from 1967 to 1974. He also appeared as Lt. Vince Wolek #2 on "One Life to Live" (1975-1977). Other roles were on "Love of Life" and "All My Children".
- Richard Edlund
Richard Edlund (born December 6 1940, Fargo, North Dakota) is a multi-Academy Award-winning US special effects photographer. After first joining the Navy, he developed an interest in experimental film and enrolled in film school in California in the late 60s.
- László Kovács
László Kovács is a cinematographer, most famous for his award-winning work on "Easy Rider" and "Five Easy Pieces", but the recipient of many other awards. Kovács studied cinema in Budapest between 1952 and 1956, and together with Vilmos Zsigmond, a fellow student, he filmed the 1956 Hungarian Revolution on black and white 35mm film as it developed day by day. After smuggling the 30,000 feet of film to the West in November of that year however, …
- Bernie Brillstein
Bernie Brillstein (b. April 26, 1931, in New York City, New York) is a film and television producer and executive producer. A nephew of the pioneering radio comic Jack Pearl, Brillstein had an early start in show business in the mailroom at the William Morris Agency (WMA) in New York. He worked his way up to talent agent and by the 1960s he was a manager-producer of television programming for the company.
- Sheldon Kahn
Sheldon Kahn is a BAFTA Award winning film editor and producer. He was jointly awarded the BAFTA Award for Best Editing, with Lynzee Klingman and Richard Chew, for their work on "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest".
- John Rothman
John Rothman (June 3, 1949 -) is an American film, television, and stage actor born in Baltimore, Maryland. Rothman portrayed Union General John F. Reynolds in "Gettysburg" (1993). He has appeared on such shows as "Guiding Light", "Law & Order" and "Arrested Development". Rothman also appeared in such comedic movies as "Ghostbusters" (1984), "Big" (1988), "Jingle All the Way" (1996), "Say It Isn't So" (2001), …
- Joe Franklin
Joseph Fortgang (born March 9 1926) is an American radio and television personality who uses the stage name Joe Franklin. From New York City Franklin hosted the first television talk show. The show began in 1950 on WJZ-TV (later WABC-TV) and moved to WOR-TV (later WWOR-TV) from 1962 to 1993. Known as "the king of nostalgia", Franklin's highly-rated show focused on old-time show business personalities.
- Michael C. Gross
Michael C. Gross is an American artist and film producer. He is best known for his work as Art Director for "National Lampoon". He was hired in 1970, and his work first appeared in the "nostalgia" issue. He left the magazine in 1974 and formed Pellegrini, Kaestle, & Gross, Inc., which contributed to the magazine on special projects throughout the rest of the 1970s. After that, he served as a producer and executive producer for several films, …
- Cam de Leon
Cam de Leon (born in Modesto, California in 1961) is an American artist who specialises in surreal darkly fantastic imagery. He created some of the band Tool's early artwork, as well as working as a digital illustrator, doing concept and visual development and character design for the feature animation industry. He worked as a digital illustrator for movies such as "Ghostbusters", "Hook", "The Sum of All Fears" and "The Cat in the Hat".
- Jonathan Schneck
Jonathan Schneck is a guitarist, banjo player, and bell player for the Christian rock band Relient K, and he is the most recent to join. He joined the band in January 2005, shortly after the release of their fourth full-length album "Mmhmm". Schneck is the band's youngest member.
- Jean Kasem
Jean Thompson Kasem (born 1954 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire) is an American actress. She is best known for playing Loretta Tortelli, the dim-witted wife of Nick Tortelli (Dan Hedaya) on "Cheers" and the short-lived spinoff "The Tortellis". She also had a brief appearance in "Ghostbusters" as one of Louis Tulley's party guests. She has been married to Casey Kasem since 1980 and they have one child together, Liberty Irene Kasem (born May 31 1990).
- Lynn Willis
Lynn Willis is a wargame and role-playing game designer who has done work for Metagaming Concepts, Game Designers' Workshop, and Chaosium. Willis began by designing science fiction wargames for Metagaming, starting with the classic Godsfire in 1976. He also designed the microgames Olympica (1978) and Holy War (1979). Chaosium published Lords of the Middle Sea (1978), while GDW published Bloodtree Rebellion (1979).
- Robbie Buchanan
Robbie Buchanan is a Canadian keyboardist and songwriter. Buchanan began playing the piano at the age of 6. He acquired his first paying gig as a pianist at the age of 12 playing 6 nights a week in Dawson City, Yukon Territory. While still a teenager, Buchanan joined a band called Soul Unlimited, at the suggestion of friend Tom Baird. In the years that followed, Buchanan eventually moved to Los Angeles, California to write music with Carl Graves.
- Frances E. Nealy
Frances E. Nealy (October 14, 1918 - May 23, 1997) was an American actress. She starred on Harold Robbins' "79 Park Avenue". Nealy was born in San Diego and died in Hollywood, California.
- Terri Hardin
Terri Hardin (b. 1957, Pasadena, California) is a Muppet puppeter, actress and stand-up comedienne. A child of a mixed marriage during an era where such marriages were frowned upon (and even illegal in certain areas of the United States), Hardin learned to appreciate art at an early age from her Caucasian mother, a talented painter who worked in watercolors. As a grade school student, Hardin immersed herself in both art and drama, …
- Tony Terran
Anthony Terran or Tony Terran (b. May 30 1926, Buffalo, New York) is an American trumpet player and session musician. Regarded as one of the most versatile trumpet players in the music business, Terran had an impact on the Los Angeles music scene for more than four decades as a specialist of many musical styles. He performed and recorded with many artists such as Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee, Perry Como, Linda Ronstadt, …
- Joe Cuttone
Joe Cuttone is an actor who made in appearance in 2 movies with Dan Aykroyd as the main character. He played Lloyd in "The Blues Brothers". He is also suspected as the actor who played a bum in a deleted scene in the movie "Ghostbusters". Reason for the deleted scene speculation is because he has a very recognizable voice along with distinctly poor fidelity in his vocal cords.
- Roger Grimsby
Roger Grimsby (September 23, 1928 - June 23, 1995) was an American news anchor and actor. A graduate of St. Olaf College in Minnesota, Grimsby started his anchoring career on KGO-TV in San Francisco in the early 1960s. He then moved to New York City's WABC-TV in 1968, where he served as co-anchor on Eyewitness News alongside Tom Dunn from 1968 through 1970, and Bill Beutel from 1970 on. Grimsby was fired from WABC-TV on April 16, …
- Brad Fregger
Brad Fregger (born May 31 1940 in Billings, Montana) is an American entrepreneur, author and former game producer publisher, and book publisher. Fregger was the producer of Activision's video game "Ghostbusters computer games "Hacker", the Atari", and the Commodore 64 versions of "Pitfall II" and "Shanghai" (the first commercial version of Brodie Lockard's "Mahjong solitaire"), …
- John McCrory
John McCrory is a celebrated Scottish music teacher, conductor and music theorist. He specialises in the teaching of non-jazz music: he confessed to Caber Enterprises, "I'm not a jazzer." He is an acclaimed saxophonist, and arranger of music - recent arrangements include the arrangement of Ray Parker Jnr's Ghostbusters theme for saxophone quartet, a collaboration with two talented, young musicians: Andrew McFadzen and Arthur Ramage.
- Daniel Inouye
Daniel Inouye is the eldest son of Japanese immigrants who worked on the Hawaiian sugar plantations where Daniel was born and raised. He lived in what he described as a Japanese-American ghetto. He went to the local Hawaiian school, at which the student body was 90% ethnic Japanese. As a young boy, Daniel accidentally fell and broke his left arm in a terrible compound fracture. The local doctor, an Ear, Nose and Throat specialist, set the arm. It mended, but not well.
- Bernie Brillstein
One half of the production team, "Brillstein-Grey Productions". His partner is Brad Grey.
- West Texas Ghostbusters
- Michael Elian
The first initial A. stands for Assaf - a common Israeli name. Received a Bachelor's Degree in Literature with a concentration in Drama Studies from Purchase College in New York. (Class of 1998). Attended Great Neck South High School in New York. (Class of 1994). Speaks fluent Hebrew.
- Jeff Doiron
Graduated from East Lyme High School in East Lyme, Connecticut. [June 2004] Graduated from Vancouver Film School. [October 2005]
- Graham Tallman
Graham received his BA in Film at the University of British Columbia and his Masters in Film Directing at the American Film Institute. His two short films Lollipops and Codename: Simon have enjoyed success at such prestigious festivals as the Toronto International Film Festival, garnered numerous international awards, and played regularly on the IFC, CBC, and WTN TV networks. In 2004 Graham adapted the comic book Courtney Crumin and the Night Things for Fox 2000 and New Regency.