Lori Cardille
(Actor)
.. Sahra
Terry Alexander
(Actor)
.. John
Born:
March 11, 1923
Died:
May 28, 2009
Trivia:
British actor Terence Alexander made his debut in provincial repertory at age 16. A film actor since 1950, Alexander has specialized in slightly dissipated aristocrats. He was, for example, ideally suited for the role of shabby but proud ex-military officer Rupert Rutland-Smith in The League of Gentlemen. Alexander has also proven to be an apt foil for the broad comedy antics of Norman Wisdom in On the Beat (1962) and the Carry on Gang. In the 1980s, Terence Alexander enjoyed a measure of TV popularity as one of the co-stars of the long-running Bergerac.
Joseph Pilato
(Actor)
.. Rhodes
Jarlath Conroy
(Actor)
.. McDermott
Antone DiLeo Jr.
(Actor)
.. Miguel
Richard Liberty
(Actor)
.. Dr. Logan
Howard Sherman
(Actor)
.. Bub
Gary Howard Klar
(Actor)
.. Steel
Ralph Marrero
(Actor)
.. Rickles
John Amplas
(Actor)
.. Fisher
Phillip G. Kellams
(Actor)
.. Miller
Taso N. Stavrakis
(Actor)
.. Torrez
Gregory Nicotero
(Actor)
.. Johnson
Don Brockett
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Born:
January 30, 1930
Died:
May 02, 1995
Birthplace: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia:
Character actor Don Brockett seldom had more than bit parts in movies and yet still managed to stay gainfully employed in the motion picture and television industry. His film credits include Flashdance (1983), The Silence of the Lambs (1991), and Hoffa (1991). Brockett made his final film appearance in Houseguest (1995). Fans of the long-running PBS children's series Mister Rogers' Neighborhood will know that he spent 30 years on the show appearing as Chef Brockett. In addition to his acting career, Brockett was well-known in Pittsburg for writing, producing and directing musicals and industrial productions for local conventions and trade shows.
William Cameron
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Deborah Carter
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Winnie Flynn
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Debra Gordon
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Jeff Hogan
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Barbara Holmes
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
David Kindlon
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Bruce Kirkpatrick
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
William Andrew Laczko
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Susan Martinelli
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Kim Maxwell
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Barbara Russell
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Gene A. Saraceni
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
John Schwartz
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Mark Tierno
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Michael Trcic
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
John Vulich
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
R.H. Martin
(Actor)
.. Featured Zombie
Anthony DiLeo Jr.
(Actor)
.. Miguel
Sherman Howard
(Actor)
.. Bub le zombie
John D. Schwartz
(Actor)
.. Un zombie
Jarleth Conroy
(Actor)
.. McDermott
George A. Romero
(Actor)
.. Zombie with Scarf (uncredited)
Born:
February 04, 1940
Died:
July 16, 2017
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia:
American director George A. Romero was making films from the age of 14 -- like most teen movie enthusiasts, with an 8 mm camera. Matriculating into the industrial-film business in Pittsburgh, Romero accrued enough capital to make his first feature-length film in 1968, a graphically gruesome zombie picture entitled Night of the Living Dead. Barely making back its cost on its initial release, the movie received some welcome, if adverse, publicity when Reader's Digest devoted an article to it. The magazine was appalled at the scenes of cannibalism and similar horrors, going so far as to insist that a movement be started to have the picture banned. Naturally, this made the movie more popular than ever, much more so than if Reader's Digest had simply ignored it. And the subsequent profits of Night of the Living Dead enabled Romero to finance several more low-budget scare pictures before he broke into the mainstream with Dawn of the Dead in 1978, a semi-comic sequel to his first film. Day of the Dead (1985), the third of the Dead Trilogy, was more elaborate than his earlier productions, but also more disappointing. Still, Romero could point with pride to such films as Creepshow (1980), Martin (1978), and his weekly TV terror anthology Tales From the Darkside (1984-1986), which belied its tiny budget with excellent writing, first-rate actors (Barnard Hughes, Fritz Weaver, Jerry Stiller, Eddie Bracken, et al.) and bone-chilling makeup effects. Although remaining in the realm of B-movies by choice, Romero has exerted considerable influence on an entire school of higher-budget horror directors, notably John Carpenter, Wes Craven, and especially Brian De Palma. Romero is married to actress and long-time collaborator Christine Forrest.
Terence Alexander
(Actor)