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1-50 of 171
- Whitey Herzog was born on 9 November 1931 in New Athens, Illinois, USA. He was married to Mary Lou Sinn. He died on 15 April 2024 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Writer
- Producer
- Additional Crew
America's preeminent military historian, Stephen E. Ambrose is the author of numerous bestselling books about World War II, including D-Day, Citizen Soldiers and The Victors, plus biographies of Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon. He is the founder of the Eisenhower Center and President of the National D-Day Museum in New Orleans.- Charity Grace was born on 27 April 1884 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. She was an actress, known for Peter Gunn (1958), 77 Sunset Strip (1958) and Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955). She died on 28 November 1965 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Lynn Kellogg was born on 2 April 1943 in Appleton, Wisconsin, USA. She was an actress, known for Charro! (1969), Mission: Impossible (1966) and The Edge of Night (1956). She was married to John Lowell Simpers. She died on 12 November 2020 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.- Jackie Donahue was born on 20 June 1973 in Austin, Texas, USA. She died on 24 March 2005 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Ken Holtzman was born on 3 November 1945 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. He was married to Michelle Collins . He died on 14 April 2024 in St Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Don Garner was born on 24 October 1923 in Greeley, Colorado, USA. He was an actor, known for Danger Zone (1951), I Love Lucy (1951) and F.B.I. Girl (1951). He died on 12 May 2012 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Malik Sealy was born on 1 February 1970 in The Bronx, New York, USA. He was an actor, known for Eddie (1996), Diagnosis Murder (1993) and The Sentinel (1996). He was married to Lisa Sealy. He died on 20 May 2000 in St. Louis Park, Minnesota, USA.
- Actor
- Additional Crew
For over 30 years Lev Mailer has been a veteran actor, director, coach, and teacher in Hollywood in both film and television on and off camera beginning with the original Star Trek series. During that period he worked on stage productions both in Los Angeles and New York as an actor and director. He has been associated with producers and directors: Clint Eastwood, Robert Wise, Sydney Pollack, Alex Rose, James Goldstone, Tom Schulman, Bill Shatner, and Leonard Nimoy, as well as numerous casting directors and agents. As National Chair of the Screen Actors Guild Conservatory, he has participated in seminars with many other producers, directors, casting directors, and agents. He was on the faculty of the American Film Institute, as well as 5 other leading Los Angeles area colleges. Of his private teaching, the definitive "Film Actor's Complete Career Guide," listed Lev among the best "in the teaching of acting techniques for beginning, intermediate, and professional actors." He was honored to be on the same list as his own teacher, Sanford Meisner.- Max Palmer was born on 2 November 1927 in Randolph, Mississippi, USA. He was an actor, known for Stone (1974) and Killer Ape (1953). He was married to Betty Ingram. He died on 7 May 1984 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Tom Neal Jr. was born on 14 March 1957 in Palm Springs, Riverside County, USA. He was an actor, known for Detour (1992). He died on 24 August 2015 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Actor
- Writer
Craig Hawksley was born on 13 April 1952 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for The Express (2008), Meet Bill (2007) and King of the Hill (1993). He died on 30 December 2021 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.- Will B. Able was born on 21 November 1923 in Providence, Rhode Island, USA. He was an actor, known for Jack and the Beanstalk (1965), Aladdin (1967) and Play of the Week (1959). He was married to Graziella Able. He died on 18 November 1981 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA(undisclosed).
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Sharon Vaughn was born on 28 July 1938 in La Grange, Missouri, USA. She was an actress, known for Funny Girl (1968), Get Smart (1965) and Bewitched (1964). She was married to Byron Lapin . She died on 2 December 2023 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.- Rodney Winfield was born on 1 March 1939 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. He was an actor, known for Talkin' Dirty After Dark (1991), Dead Presidents (1995) and Disco 9000 (1977). He died on 9 February 2009 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- 1976 Rose Bowl star and All-American Defensive Tackle at UCLA, Frazier played one year in the NFL for the Kansas City Chiefs before becoming an actor.
Cliff Frazier was born in St. Louis, Missouri on November 23, 1952. He moved to Ballwin, Missouri for high school, and after becoming a defensive prep football star, he went on to play nose tackle at Fort Scott Community College. There, Frazier's outstanding play earned him accolades as a junior college All-American defensive lineman in 1972 and 1973. As a result, Frazier was recruited by new UCLA coach Dick Vermeil, and Frazier played defensive nose guard for the Bruins in the 1974-75 college seasons. Frazier was named to the first-team defense for the All-Pacific 8 and NCAA All-American teams in 1975.
Frazier was a Tri-Captain of UCLA's Rose Bowl team in 1975 college season. The underdog Bruins team (8-2-1) defeated the previously unbeaten and top-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes (11-0) in the Jan. 1, 1976 Rose Bowl, 23-10. Ohio State, coached by the legendary Woody Hayes, had the best-ranked defense in the NCAA, and the Buckeyes also had the Heisman Trophy winner in running back Archie Griffin. But Frazier and defensive teammates Manu Tuiasosopo and Dale Curry kept Griffin, fullback Pete Johnson and the rest of the Ohio State offense in check. Frazier led all defensive players with 13 solo tackles and one assist; no other Rose Bowl player participated in more than 9 tackles in the game.
Frazier's teammates at UCLA also included future NFL players Randy Cross, and running backs Wendell Tyler and Theotis Brown. Frazier was a second-round round pick of Kansas City Chiefs in the 1976 NFL Draft, the 41st player picked over all. Frazier did not appear in the 1976 NFL season, but played all 14 games for the Chiefs in 1977. After Dick Vermeil became the Philadelphia Eagles head coach, Vermeil arranged for a trade to acquire Frazier from Kansas City for the Eagles 5th round draft pick in the 1978 NFL draft. However, Frazier did not make the Eagles' roster, and went back to southern California to start an acting career. Soon thereafter Frazier made his screen debut as "Monroe," one of the linemen in the football classic, "North Dallas Forty."
Frazier was inducted into Fort Scott Community College's "Athletic Hall of Fame" in 1990.
On June 9, 2006 Frazier participated in UCLA's "Flashback Camp" in which over 100 former UCLA players and coaches, many of whom were associated with the 1976 Rose Bowl team, coached UCLA Bruin fans on the finer points of football. - Chuck Conners was born on 25 August 1939. He died on 1 March 2011 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Geraldine Liston was born on 25 January 1925 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. She is known for The American Angels: Baptism of Blood (1990), Unsolved Mysteries (1987) and ESPN SportsCentury (1999). She was married to Sonny Liston. She died on 8 April 2005 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Bill Grivna was born on 10 April 1943 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. He was an actor, known for Ride with the Devil (1999). He was married to Linda Kelsey. He died on 12 July 2022 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Phyllis Schlafly is best known as a leader of the American fundamentalist conservative movement. A bitter opponent of the ideas espoused by modern feminism, she led the fight, which was ultimately successful, against the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment in 1982. She founded the Eagle Forum, an organization for conservative women, and is a published author and commentator.
She was born into a poor family in Missouri, but was able to enter college earlier than most students, graduating from Washington University in St. Louis at age 19. She later received an M.A. in government from Harvard. She joined the Republican party and ran, unsuccessfully, for a Congressional seat in Illinois in 1952. She continued her work in conservative political circles, however, and attracted attention there in 1964 with her book "A Choice, Not An Echo", in which she put forth conservative presidential candidate Barry Goldwater as an alternative to what she called the "corruption and liberalism" of mainstream Republicans. In 1970 she made a second try at running for an Illinois Congressional seat, but was again unsuccessful. She came to national attention as the leader in the fight against the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, and is generally given credit for its eventual failure to become ratified by the required number of states. Although she was often accused of spreading false and misleading information about what the ERA would entail (she claimed it would mandate unisex bathrooms, require women to be drafted into the military and legalize same-sex marriages--none of which were correct), her arguments apparently were effective in persuading many women to vote against it, and it was ratified by only 30 states, five short of the number necessary. With this victory Schlafly declared herself a sworn enemy of feminism, and although she was derided by many of her opponents as divorced from reality (she once gave a speech at Swarthmore College where she stated that American women were "the most privileged race of creatures on the earth because they have the best kitchens and the nicest men"), she has remained a major force in the ultra-conservative movement and especially in the right wing of the Republican party and continues to speak and write books on such issues as judicial "activism" and to call for the reintroduction of the Strategic Defense Initiative (the much-ridiculed and dormant Reagan-era "Star Wars" space weaponization plan). - Sheila began to discover her passion and talents for writing, acting, directing and producing in high school. She was given the highest honors in Nevada's Junior Miss Contest mostly because of her monologue from Mourning Becomes Electra by Eugene O'Neill.
One of her first breaks was being selected to play Jane with James Caan as Tarzan in Don Adams' Screen Test (1975). This pilot brought her to the attention of the famous Francis Ford Coppola, Howard Koch, Art Carney, Jack Lemmon, and agent Jack Fields. With Fields as her agent, she attended many activist events with Ed Asner, Martin Sheen, Charles Durning, Meredith Baxter Burney, Dennis Weaver, and many others in the entertainment field to raise funds to help the less fortunate in society. Her friendship with Ed Asner has continued as she recently interviewed him for the pilot Fascinating People, she is producing and directing. She directed and produced To The Moon and Back I and II and The View From Space in a CD set and in DVD with her son, Adam Mitchell. (1984-2010). Sheila is currently creating The Adam Mitchell Foundation for his legacy to educate. She is developing The View From Space, a film project her son began before he tragically died. Both projects are in development as major motion pictures. John and Celia Milius have recently given this project high praise.
Happy Days, Baretta, The Cheap Detective, Won Ton Ton: The Dog Who Saved Hollywood, brought Sheilah to the attention of Eddie Foy III because the famous Art Carney recommended her as a "New and very talented young actress". Although they never met, Art Carney was clearly the kindest and generous actor.
Sheilah is dedicated to the arts, sciences, and communications. She has interviewed Jack Canfield, Raymond Francis and many others for the pilot Fascinating People she is producing, directing and hosting. - Actor
- Special Effects
- Additional Crew
Barron Winchester was born on 15 September 1932. He was an actor, known for A Pleasure Doing Business (1979), Delirium (1979) and The Big Brass Ring (1999). He was married to Theresa E. Jones. He died on 9 February 2002 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.- Stuart M. Kaminsky is a prolific author, born in Chicago in 1934 to Leo and Dorothy Kaminsky. He earned a BS in Journalism, and an MA in English from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and a PhD in Speech from Northwestern where he taught from 1973 until 1989. He was a professor and head of the film division for ten years until he moved to Florida State University in Sarasota in 1989 where he was founding director of the Graduate Conservatory in Film and Television Production. He left acadamia in 1994 to focus full-time on writing. Besides numerous mystery/suspense novels, he has written several film biographies, including those on Clint Eastwood, Gary Cooper, John Huston, and Don Siegel. He has also written textbooks on film and television writing. He has several screenwriting credits, including added dialoge for "Once Upon a Time in America." He was president of the Mystery Writers of America and has been nominated for six Edgar Allen Poe Awards. He won an Edgar in 1989 for his novel, "A Cold Red Sunrise."
- Bob Newkirk was born on 14 April 1936 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. He was an actor, known for Father Knows Best (1954), The Millionaire (1955) and The All Time Hits (1965). He was married to Diane Hurley. He died on 13 April 2005 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Bigbuckz Eloo was born on 22 May 2002. He was an actor, known for Bigbuckz Eloo x Bigbuckz Von: Bigbuckz Anthem (2020). He died on 29 July 2020 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Robert McFerrin was born on 19 March 1921 in Marianna, Arkansas, USA. He was an actor, known for Porgy and Bess (1959). He was married to Athena Ann Bush and Sara Elizabeth Copper. He died on 24 November 2006 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.- Lynne graduated in 1967 from Horton Watkins High School in Ladue, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis, Missouri, where she starred as Emily in "Our Town" and was a gifted pianist.
She trained as an actor at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City. Her classmates included Meryl Streep and Diane Keaton. She adopted Deerfield as her name because Hirschfeld, when translated from German to English, is Deerfield.
She married three times. Her first husband was Paul Mates, a Wall Street lawyer. In 1975, she married Bill Beutel, the late ABC news anchor. After they divorced, she married Michael Kelly who preceded her in death.
She returned to St. Louis in the mid-1980s. - Producer
- Actor
Academy Award winning producer, Mark L Rosen, has been developing, producing and distributing feature films as well as television shows worldwide for over 40 years. Mark's career, began in Los Angeles as a theatrical film buyer for Mann Theaters, overseeing the booking of the World's most famous theater Grauman's Chinese Theater. Mark ventured on to executive positions with American International Pictures, Bryanston Films, Group One International, Cannon Films, Powerhouse Films and many others, where he was responsible for the worldwide production or distribution of films being produced by those companies he worked for which were located in Hollywood, California, New York City, New York, London, England, Florence, Italy, Cannes, France or Tokyo, Japan. Mark, also known as "Travelin' Rose" to his entertainment associates and friends around the world still is involved in the development, packaging, production and/or distribution of feature films, documentaries, television shows, music concerts & specials and DVD programming and most recently digital programming for Internet streaming. Mark in 1997 was the second person in film history worldwide to release a film on DVD, the new frontier for mass consumption. Mark was asked once what he enjoyed the most during his 40 years in the entertainment industry, Mark said that he was extremely proud of Wall That Heals, The (1997) a television special on which he was the executive producer. It is about the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, our country's most treasured and visited monument in Washington, DC. The documentary tells the amazing story of how "The Wall" has helped to heal millions of Americans.- Burlesque dancer and stripper Kitty West was born Abbie Jewel Slawson on June 8, 1930 in Uniontown, Alabama. The second in a family of six children, West moved with her family to Shuqualak, Mississippi when she was a child. Since Kitty's family was poor, they had to travel throughout the area to pick cotton in order to keep themselves afloat. West left home at age sixteen and went to New Orleans, Louisiana, where she began dancing so she could make money to send back home to her family. Kitty established herself as a popular attraction at Bourbon Street's Casino Royale club with her alluring alter ego Evangeline the Oyster Girl, who emerged from an oyster shell wearing just a few strategically placed pearls like Venus rising forth from the sea while "Ebb Tide" played in the background. West remained a major headliner at Casino Royale for almost two decades before eventually retiring from burlesque in the mid-1960's and going on to become an active and generous mentor to New Orleans performers in the 1990's and 2000's. Kitty was married to former amateur boxer turned jockey Jerry West. Moreover, West also worked as a sales clerk at two hotels in eastern New Orleans as well as was a hair stylist who owned two beauty salons. Kitty died at age 89 on August 18, 2019 from cancer at her home in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. She was survived by her sons Gary and Robert, her brother Johnny Slawson, and two grandsons.
- Writer
- Producer
- Director
James Dean Schulte was born on 23 July 1957 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. He was a writer and producer, known for The Naked Eye (1995), Ghost Image (2007) and Apocalypse and the Beauty Queen (2005). He died on 17 January 2006 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.- Kate Chopin was born on 8 February 1850 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. She was a writer, known for American Playhouse (1980), Grand Isle (1991) and The End of August (1981). She was married to Oscar Chopin. She died on 22 August 1904 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Ken Boyer was born on 20 May 1931 in Liberty, Missouri, USA. He was an actor, known for Home Run Derby (1959), 1964 World Series (1964) and What's My Line? (1950). He died on 7 September 1982 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Director
- Writer
- Producer
Eames spent his childhood and youth in St. Louis, where he also attended high school. After graduating, he studied architecture at Washington University from 1925 to 1928. He then settled in New York. In 1936, Eames received a scholarship to the Cranbrook Academy of Arts in Michigan. He later took up a teaching position there. His colleagues included the well-known Italian painter and sculptor Harry Bertoia and the celebrated Finnish architect Eero Saarinen as well as the painter Ray Kaiser. In 1941, Charles Eames and Ray Kaiser (1916-1988) celebrated their wedding. In the same year they founded a joint design studio, which led to a successful professional collaboration from the 1940s to the 1970s, which made both of them one of the leading designers of the 20th century.
From 1941 to 1943 the first furniture designs were created together with Eero Saarinen. They also made arm and leg splints and stretchers out of plywood for the US Navy. To do this, they invented a new process to deform layered glued wood in three dimensions. In 1946, Eames took part in an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York with some experimental works using this production method, after which he received a job as a furniture designer at Herman Miller. Charles Eames developed progressive furniture design with rational design. In the same year he had his first solo exhibition at the "Museum of Modern Art" under the title "New Furniture by Charles Eames". Eames experimented with fiberglass as a material to make furniture.
In 1948 he presented a chair made of molded fiberglass, which later became the first piece of plastic furniture to go into large-scale production. Commercial series production offered the opportunity not only to produce designer objects economically and quickly, but also to copy them. Eames attracted international attention when he took part in the "Low-cost Furniture" competition at the Museum of Modern Art New York with his fiberglass chair. Eames won second prize with the innovative design. He gave new impetus to furniture design and construction, primarily through the use of fiberglass as a material. But his design designs in a timeless stylistic language also had a significant influence on the industry. Eames chairs are still in demand today.
In 1956, Miller created the legendary "Lounge Chair", which is now one of Eames' most popular works and stands for classic modernism like no other piece of furniture. It was presented to the public for the first time in March 1956. Pieces from the first series are now traded like works of art. Eames worked with his wife Ray on various projects in the fields of film, photography, industrial design, toys, exhibitions, books, architecture and fine art. The couple made over 85 films, including films about the painters Cézanne and Degas. The short film entitled "The Power of Ten", in German: "Zehn hoch", is considered one of the best. For the 1959 World's Fair they made the multiscreen film called "Insights into the USA", which made the couple known as filmmakers.
In addition to attractive designer furniture, the Eames couple also designed functional office furniture made of metal, plastic, molded wood, chrome and leather. In their work they combined quality with economy and aesthetics. Eames also applied these principles to architecture. He was interested in producing standard elements economically and with little material expenditure, with the aim of versatile and effective use. In this way, Charles and Ray Eames also built their own house from a steel and glass structure in Los Angeles. It is an example of an economical living space in an avant-garde style that combines industrially manufactured elements with handcrafted and handcrafted objects.
Charles Eames died on August 21, 1978 in St. Louis. His wife Ray Eames died exactly ten years later on August 21, 1988 in Los Angeles.- Stan Kann was born on 9 December 1924 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. He was an actor, known for The Two of Us (1981), Stan Kann: The Happiest Man in the World (2005) and Hee Haw (1969). He died on 29 September 2008 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Stanley Elkin was born on 11 May 1930 in Brooklyn, New York, USA. He was a writer, known for Alex & the Gypsy (1976), Circle of Fear (1972) and Howard Nemerov: Collected Sentences (1981). He died on 31 May 1995 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Actor
- Stunts
- Additional Crew
Dave Mungenast Sr. was born in St. Louis, Missouri on October 1st, 1934. His south St. Louis upbringing was influenced by motorcycles at an early age, and became his first opportunity for his own business in 1965. His motorcycle business opened the door for car dealerships and, somewhere along the way, he developed a friendship with Stan Barrett, a Hollywood stuntman and director. This friendship lured Dave away from his businesses to work on movies such as Airport '77 (1977), Hooper (1978), The Cannonball Run (1981), and Harry & Son (1984). Dave has been married to Barbara (McAboy) Mungenast, since 1959. He has three boys, David, Raymond, and Kurt.- Composer
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Fontella Bass is an American R&B and soul singer and songwriter best known for her 1965 hit, "Rescue Me."
Fontella Bass was born in St. Louis, Missouri. She was the daughter of gospel singer Martha Bass, who was a member of The Clara Ward Gospel Singers, and the older sister of R&B singer David Peaston. At an early age, Fontella showed great musical talent. At the age of five, she provided the piano accompaniment for her grandmother's singing at funeral services, she sang in her church's choir at six, and by the time she was nine, she had accompanied her mother on tours throughout the South and Southwest America. Bass continued touring with her mother until age of sixteen. As a teenager, Bass was attracted by more secular music. She began singing R&B songs at local contests and fairs while attending Soldan High School from which she graduated in 1958. At 17, she started her professional career working at the Showboat Club near Chain of Rocks, Missouri. With the support of Bob Lyons, the manager of St. Louis station, Bass recorded several songs released through Bobbin Records and produced by Ike Turner. She also recorded on Turner's labels Prann and Sonja. Two years later she quit the Milton band and moved to Chicago after a dispute with Oliver Sain. She auditioned for Chess Records, who immediately signed her as a recording artist. Her first works with the label were several duets with Bobby McClure. The song, "Rescue Me", shot up the charts in the fall and winter of 1965. After a month-long run at the top of the R&B charts, the song reached #4 on the US pop charts and #11 in the UK, and gave Chess its first million-selling single since Chuck Berry a decade earlier. It sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc.
During May 2000 Bass received a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame.- Juanita Wright was born on 17 July 1935 in Ohio, USA. She was an actress, known for WrestleMania VI (1990), Saturday Night's Main Event (1985) and WWF Superstars (1986). She died on 10 September 1996 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Actress
Jazan Winona Wallace was an actress. She was married to Gary Eugene Wallace Sr.. She died on 24 April 1980 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.- Lou Brock was born on 18 June 1939 in El Dorado, Arkansas, USA. He was married to Jacqueline Layne, Virginia Daniels and Katie Hay. He died on 6 September 2020 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Maury Travis was born on 25 October 1965 in the USA. He died on 10 June 2002 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Arline Blackburn was born on 6 May 1914 in New York City, New York, USA. She was an actress, known for Annabelle Lee (1921) and School Days (1921). She was married to John J. Trimble. She died on 17 December 1994 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Director
- Producer
Born to a Jewish immigrant family from Imperial Russia, Samuel R. Brodsky (also known as Samuel R. Bradley) started his career on vaudeville in Cleveland. As an actor, he worked under the tutelage of playwright and impresario Robert McLaughlin. From the theater, he moved into filmmaking and supervised the Plain Dealer Screen Magazine beginning in 1917. In 1919, he moved into directing features when he adapted one of McLaughlin's plays to the screen (The House Without Children (1919)). After the success of this film, he converted the Samuel Andrews mansion on Cleveland's Euclid Ave. into a motion picture studio, producing several features in the early 1920s, with McLaughlin serving as story supervisor. In 1922, Brodsky returned to work on the Plain Dealer Screen Magazine, which continued until 1924. He directed only one more feature (After Dark (1923)) in collaboration with The Plain Dealer and the Hippodrome Theater.- Composer
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Stanislaw Skrowaczewski was born on 3 October 1923 in Lwów, Lwowskie, Poland [now Lviv, Ukraine]. He was a composer, known for The Truman Show (1998), The Dark Knight Rises (2012) and Kariera (1955). He was married to Krystyna Jarosz. He died on 21 February 2017 in St. Louis Park, Minnesota, USA.- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Tim Drummond was born on 20 April 1940 in Bloomington, Illinois, USA. He is known for Streets of Fire (1984), 8 Million Ways to Die (1986) and Staying Together (1989). He died on 10 January 2015 in St. Louis County, Missouri, USA.- Dorothy Alita Dorr (sometimes spelled Dore) was born on October 12, 1897 in Kansas City, Missouri. She was the only child of Mary and Charles Dorr, a contractor. When she was nineteen she married Charles Judge Wilkinson and had a son named Walter. Soon after the family moved to Los Angeles, California. Dorothy made her film debut in the 1921 drama The Three Musketeers. Then she was chosen to be a "bathing girl" at Hal Roach's studio. She costarred with Harold Lloyd in Girl Shy and with Zasu Pitts in Legend Of Hollywood. Dorothy became one of Mack Sennett bathing beauties and had bit parts in the films Picking Peaches and His New Mamma.
Her final movie role as in the 1925 short Hollywouldn't. Meanwhile her son, Walter Wilkinson, became a successful child actor. He appeared in more than two dozen films including The Magic Garden and Honor Among Men. In 1929 Dorothy danced in the musical revue Broadway in Los Angeles. She spent the next several years performing in vaudeville. By 1940 she was divorced and retired from show business. She worked as a laundry supervisor and lived with her mother in Los Angeles. Dorothy died on February 1, 1962 at the age of sixty-four. - Jack Buck was born on 21 August 1924 in Holyoke, Massachusetts, USA. He was an actor, known for Arli$$ (1996), A Century of Success: 100 Years of Cardinals Glory (1992) and Relief Pitcher (1992). He was married to Carole Lynn Lintzenich and Alyce Marie Larson. He died on 18 June 2002 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Soundtrack
Louis Lambert was born on 25 December 1829 in Ballygar, Ireland, UK [now County Galway, Republic of Ireland]. He was married to Ellen J. O'Neill. He died on 24 September 1892 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.- Alysa Greenwade was born on 30 July 1967 in the USA. She died on 1 April 2001 in Washington Park, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Irvin Talbot was born on 27 January 1894 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. He is known for The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962), The Trap (1959) and Captain Caution (1940). He was married to Ethel. He died in December 1973 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.