David Hedison
(Actor)
.. Bill Harvey
Born:
May 20, 1927
Trivia:
Born Albert Hedison, David Hedison billed himself as Al Hedison when he signed his 20th Century-Fox contract in 1958. He was still Al when he starred in his best-known film, The Fly, as the unfortunate researcher who ends up as lunch for a slavering spider ("Hellllp meeeeee"). By 1959, he was David Hedison, both as leading man of the 17-episode TV series Five Fingers and as romantic lead of still another fantasy film, The Lost World (1960). In 1964, Hedison worked off his Fox contract in the role of Captain Lee Crane in the weekly TVer Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (1964-67). The most amusing episode of that Irwin Allen production was a 1963 entry which utilized generous stock footage from Lost World, with Hedison "out of uniform" so that he could match shots of himself lensed three years earlier. In the last three decades, David Hedison has co-starred in numerous made-for-TV movies, and has been seen on two television soap operas: the daytime Another World and the nighttime The Colbys.
Suzanne Lloyd
(Actor)
.. Doris Harvey
Sue Lloyd
(Actor)
.. Luella
Born:
January 01, 1939
Trivia:
Voluptuous blonde British leading lady Sue Lloyd made her entree into films in 1963. Lloyd was particularly in the many espionage films of the sixties, notably as Michael Caine's vis-a-vis in The Ipcress File. She also appeared on the weekly TV spy yarn The Baron, as sexy secret agent Cordelia Winfield. She also essayed the role of Vanessa in The Stud and The Bitch, two steamy 1979 films based on novels by Jackie Collins. Sue Lloyd remained active in films into the 1990s.
Jean St. Clair
(Actor)
.. Miss Hill
John Woodnutt
(Actor)
.. Head Porter
Julian Holloway
(Actor)
.. Smith - Waiter
Peter Fontaine
(Actor)
.. John - Hotel Clerk
Sean Barry-Weske
(Actor)
.. Dancer
Pauline Chamberlain
(Actor)
.. Lady in Hotel Bar
Marian Collins
(Actor)
.. Restaurant Patron
Harold Coyne
(Actor)
.. Spectator at flag-salute ceremony
Shirley Eaton
(Actor)
.. Airline Passenger
Born:
January 13, 1937
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia:
Brassy blonde leading lady Shirley Eaton could be labelled the British equivalent of such American "blonde bombshells" as Barbara Nichols, Joyce Jameson and Joi Lansing. From her first film appearance in 1954 onward, Eaton excelled in roles calling for equal parts comic know-how and feminine pulchritude. Later in her career, Eaton essayed a number of straight dramatic roles. Shirley Eaton is best known for her brief assignment as the unfortunate gold-painted girl in the 1964 James Bond caper Goldfinger, though it was necessary to hire a voice actress to dub over Shirley's provincial speech patterns.
Roy Everson
(Actor)
.. Airline Passenger
Alex Graham
(Actor)
.. Waiter
Leonard Llewellyn
(Actor)
.. Airline Passenger
Martin Lyder
(Actor)
.. Restaurant Waiter
Gerald Paris
(Actor)
.. Casino Patron
Pat Ryan
(Actor)
.. Dancer
Harold Sanderson
(Actor)
.. Man in Hotel Bar