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- Paxton Whitehead was born on 17 October, 1937 in Kent, England, UK. He trained at London's Webber-Douglas Academy of Dramatic Arts starting at the age of 17. After attending the academy for two years he went to work in stock companies starting with the "weekly rep", small touring companies that rehearsed and performed a new play each week. He made his professional debut in 1956, and within two years was signed by the Royal Shakespeare Company.
Whitehead produced with Doric Wilson, directed and starred in "And He Made A Her" (1961), a production at the off-off-Broadway venue Caffe Cino. He made his Broadway debut in "The Affair" (1962) after appearing in Canadian stage and TV productions. Dudley Moore, Alan Bennett, Peter Cook and Paxton Whitehead provided vocals on the track "Some Thoughts From Aboard" from the comedy album "Beyond The Fringe '64". He went on to appear with the American Shakespeare Company to direct in regional repertory.
Whitehead was the Artistic Director of the Shaw Festival, the second-largest repertory theatre in North America. The Shaw Festival at Niagara-on-the-Lake began as an amateur summer happening. It developed into a professional, international event, particularly under Paxton Whitehead, its dedicated artistic director from 1966 to 1977. Notable appearances there included Magnus in "The Apple Cart", Cusins in "Major Barbara", "The Philanderer", Sergius in "Arms and the Man", Lord Summerhays in "Misalliance", Fancourt Babberly in "Charley's Aunt", Tempest in the North American premiere of Alan Bennett's "Forty Years On" and Hector in "Heartbreak House" with Jessica Tandy and Tony Van Bridge, a role he repeated at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket, London with Rex Harrison and Diana Rigg. Whitehead was also the Artistic Director for The Vancouver Playhouse Theatre Company from 1971 to 1973.
Whitehead appeared opposite Carol Channing in "The Bed Before Yesterday" (1976) at the Robert Morris University, Colonial Theatre, Pennsylvania. He received an honourary degree in arts from Trent University in 1978. At the Williamstown Theatre Festival, Main Stage July 11 - July 15, 1978, Whitehead played Leo in "Design for Living". Suzanne Grossman and Paxton Whitehead translated and adapted the plays by Georges Feydeau "The Chemmy Circle" in 1979 and "A Flea in her Ear" in 1982.
Whitehead earned a Tony Award nomination for his appearance in "Camelot" during 1980. He has appeared in numerous Broadway productions including "My Fair Lady", opposite Richard Chamberlain, "The Harlequin Studies" with Bill Irwin, Noël Coward's "Suite in Two Keys", "A Little Hotel on the Side", "Lettice and Lovage" (playing an emotionally shut-down police investigator), "Artist Descending A Staircase", "Run For Your Wife", "The Crucifer of Blood", "Habeas Corpus", "Candida", "Beyond the Fringe" (1964), "The Affair" and "London Suite" (a comedy by Neil Simon). Whitehead appeared in "Noises Off" (September 22 - November 27, 1983) with Linda Thorson, his Marblehead Manor (1987) co-star.
He moved to California in 1980 to rear his children and has been a resident of Irvine, California for many years. The Shaw Festival of Canada debuted at the Annenberg Centre with "Charley's Aunt" starring Paxton Whitehead. Whitehead has also appeared in the Los Angeles productions of "Woman in Mind" with Helen Mirren, "The Rocky Horror Show", "Pirates of Penzance", "How the Other Half Loves" and "Beyond The Fringe", as well as duplicating some of his Broadway roles. Paxton Whitehead directed the Seattle Repertory Theatre production of "The Real Thing" in 1986. He was nominated for Best Lead Performance at the 1988-1989 20th Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Awards for "How the Other Half Loves".
Whitehead appeared in the June 1992 Tiffany Theatre production of "Woman in Mind". In 1996 Whitehead appeared in the Studio Arena Theatre production of "Springtime for Henry". From January 7 to February 15, 1997, Paxton Whitehead starred in Hugh Leonard's play "The Mask of Moriarty" at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey. Whitehead was the narrator for the February 1999 Tiffany Theater production of "The Rocky Horror Show".
In April 2000, Hayley Mills appeared with Whitehead in "Suite in 2 Keys", "Shadows of the Evening" and "A Song at Twilight". Whitehead played the celebrated British poet and Latin Professor A.E. Housman in "The Invention of Love" at Court Theatre, Chicago, Illinois (September 6 - October 21, 2000). On October 10, 2001, The UCLA Centre for the Performing Arts for 17th- & 18th-Century Studies sponsored "Lady Windermere's Fan" by Oscar Wilde, a staged reading by John Lithgow and friends with Lord Augustus Lorton played by Paxton Whitehead. In the Signature Theatre Company production of "The Harlequin Studies" (October 2003) featured Whitehead as Harlequin's master, Pantalone. Performances of Whitehead's are available on audio CDs of "The Doctor's Dilemma" (January 11, 2003), "Thank You, Jeeves" and "The Foreigner" (May 17, 2003) from L.A. Theatre Works.
Whitehead is an Associate Artist of the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego. His appearances there include "The Miser", "Richard III", "Sir Peter Teazle", "Sir Anthony Absolute" and "Benedick". In Costa Mesa he has been seen in "Heartbreak House", "How the Other Half Loves" and "The Circle". He has appeared as Lear in Manitoba and several Ray Cooney farces. He has recent regional credits that include "The Voysey Inheritance" (December 13, 2003), W. Somerset Maugham's "The Circle", A.E.H. in the Chicago production of Tom Stoppard's "The Invention of Love" and "Where's Charley?" (Williamstown Theatre Festival, June 19-30, 2002). Whitehead played Clive Champion-Cheney in "The Circle" by W. Somerset Maugham at South Coast Repertory. During the rehearsal of "The Circle" he played Malvolio in The Globe's "Twelfth Night". He appeared with John Lithgow, Melissa Errico, Roger Daltrey and Rosemary Harris and played Col. Pickering in a semi-staged production of Alan Jay Lerner and Enrique Loewe's Classic Musical "My Fair Lady" at the Hollywood Bowl on August 3, 2003. Paxton Whitehead headed the cast of The Huntington Theatre Company presentation of "What the Butler Saw" as Dr. Rance at the Boston University Theatre, March 5-April 4, 2004 for which he received the Norton Awards for Outstanding Actor, Large Company. He is co-author on the books "The Doctor's Dilemma" and "The Voysey Inheritance" published by L.A. Theatre Works. Whitehead appeared in "Don Juan in Hell" at 92nd Street Y on January 28, 2005. - Actress
- Soundtrack
Pamela Britton was born Armilda Jane Owen in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Her mother was Ethel Owen, a prominent stage, radio and early television actress. Pam first used Gloria Jane Owen as her stage name, but not wanting to trade on her mother's reputation, chose Pamela from a British book, and then Britton to emphasize its source. Her father, Raymond G. Owen, was a doctor who died prior to 1944. She had two sisters, Virginia Owen, an actress under contract to RKO Radio and Mary Owen, a social worker who lived in Fort Worth, Texas.
Pam attended State Teacher's Normal School and Holy Angels Academy in Milwaukee, had leads in her school class plays, and listed horseback riding, tennis and swimming as her favorite sports. In later years, she was an avid golfer. She was doing summer stock by age nine, and was offered a chance to be another Shirley Temple at age ten, but her mother squelched the idea, saying she wanted her to be an actress, not a child star. At age 15, her mother was on Broadway and Pam started to make the rounds, but found people unrealistically expected her to be as accomplished as her mother, and so she changed her name. Also, while her mother was a dramatic actress, Pam preferred comedy and singing. Discovered by band leader Don McGuire at a party, she was hired as his singer and toured with his band. She also sang at New York's Latin Quarter nightclub.
Her big break came when she was cast as Celeste Holm 's understudy in the Broadway company of Oklahoma! and also played Gertie. When the show went on tour, she took over Holm's role as Ado Annie. Touted by her New York agent, he got MGM executive Marvin Schenck to go see her when the show was in Chicago. Schenck was disappointed, not knowing he'd seen her understudy. But the agent got him to come back the next night and Schenck signed her immediately. She was cast as Frank Sinatra 's girlfriend in Anchors Aweigh (1945) but the film roles she was offered afterward weren't satisfying and she went on suspension to play Meg Brockie in Brigadoon on Broadway and on tour for three years.
She married Capt. Arthur Steel on April 8, 1943 after being set up on a blind date in Texas by Pam's sister, and she kept working while he served in Italy on the staff of Lt. General Mark Clark, and later went on in the Pacific Theater. They had a daughter, Katherine Lee, on September 8, 1946. Steel became an advertising executive after the war, and went on to manage the Gene Autry Hotels on the West Coast. Pam stuck close to her West Los Angeles home while Kathy was growing up, reprising her role in Brigadoon in the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera revival in 1954, in Annie Get Your Gun at the Santa Barbara Bowl and in Lunatics and Lovers at the Carthay Circle Theatre in Los Angeles. She replaced an ailing Janis Paige in Guys and Dolls with Dan Dailey, Shelley Berman and Constance Towers, on Broadway and on tour.
Britton co-starred in D.O.A. (1949) opposite Edmond O'Brien and Beverly Garland, and played Blondie Bumstead in the TV show based on the comic strip. But it's as ditzy landlady Lorelei Brown on the 1963 TV series My Favorite Martian (1963) that most people remember her. The show also brought her back to MGM, her original Hollywood studio. She made two forgettable films after the series, then returned to her real love, the musical stage. She also loved gardening and played the piano beautifully.
It was while performing on tour with Don Knotts in The Mind with The Dirty Man in Arlington Heights, Illinois that she began to have headaches. She went to a doctor and two weeks later, died suddenly from a brain tumor on June 17, 1974, leaving her mother Ethel Owen (who lived to be 103), her husband Art Steel and her daughter Kathy Steel Ferber. She had four grandsons. She is buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery, Burbank, California.- Kamala Devi was born on 8 October 1933 in Bombay, Bombay Presidency, British India. She was an actress, known for The Brass Bottle (1964), The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964) and Branded (1965). She was married to Maurie Beaumont, Wallace Guberman and Chuck Connors. She died on 29 November 2010 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
- Soundtrack
Helga Bullock was born on 12 February 1942 in Germany. She died on 4 April 2000 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.- Carroll Borland was born on 25 February 1914 in San Francisco, California, USA. She was an actress, known for Mark of the Vampire (1935), Biohazard (1985) and Scalps (1983). She was married to Vernon John Parten. She died on 3 February 1994 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
- Actor
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
B.J. Thomas was born on 7 August 1942 in Hugo, Oklahoma, USA. He was an actor, known for Forrest Gump (1994), Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre (2023) and Spider-Man 2 (2004). He was married to Gloria Richardson. He died on 29 May 2021 in Arlington, Texas, USA.- Barbara Townsend was born on 4 August 1913 in Oakland, California, USA. She was an actress, known for Hard to Kill (1990), AfterMASH (1983) and Remington Steele (1982). She was married to Dr. William Louis Wheeler Jr and John Shaffer III. She died on 29 January 2002 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
- As a veteran of the U.S. Navy, Rockwell applied burial in Arlington National Cemetery however, it was denied. After his assassination he was allowed to be buried in Culpeper National Cemetery in Culpeper, Virginia, however the pallbearers were denied access by the U.S. Army because they refused to remove their swastika armbands. His body was later cremated and his ashes are believed to reside with The New Order, a successor organization of the American Nazi Party headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
- Stanja Lowe was born on 5 September 1929 in Cleveland, Ohio, USA. She was an actress, known for The Man Without a Face (1993), Ben Casey (1961) and Mannix (1967). She was married to John Marley. She died on 4 December 2012 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
- Classic film-noir character actor best known for his roles in The Set-Up (1949), The St. Louis Bank Robbery (1959) and The Narrow Margin (1952), David Clarke made his Broadway debut in "Journeyman" in 1938, and subsequently appeared in "Abe Lincoln in Illinois" with Raymond Massey. He also played at the Biltmore Theatre in Los Angeles, where he caught the eye of agent Leland Hayward, leading to his first film role in Knockout (1941). Over the next five decades Clarke appeared in scores of films and TV shows (from the "Golden Age" of live dramas to more recent series), and was featured on Broadway in the original productions of "A View from the Bridge", "Orpheus Descending", "The Ballad of the Sad Cafe", "Inquest", and "The Visit" with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne.
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Robert H. Hensley has worked under two names -- Jericho Brown and Bob Henry.
Robert H. Hensley was born in Port Arthur, Texas in 1936. His father was John Coleman Hensley Sr, a Pharmacist who worked for Massingill Drug Corp. as a detail man in Southern Louisiana. His mother was a math teacher and taught Math in several large high schools. Both of his parents went to Baylor - His father to Baylor Pharmacy College and mother to Mary Hardin Baylor.
He started college at Louisiana College at Pineville. After playing football, basketball and running track at Lafayette High School, Robert went to Louisiana College on an athletic scholarship for 2.5 years.
He went to University of Louisiana at Lafayette for 1 year. Then he attended Baylor University for 2 quarters, and finally got my BS in Theology and Philosophy at Dallas Baptist University.
Robert was a recording artist and made records from 1957 to 1970.
He went into the ministry in November 1970, and started a half-way house, youth ministry, where he ministered to young hippy kids. Most of the youth were living on the streets of Hollywood, and strung out on every kind of drug.
In 1971, he came to Grand Prairie Texas, to sing and help with a big crusade, and stayed to start a ministry called the True Vine.
Robert married his wife (Pamela) in 1973. They have 5 children, and 6 grandchildren. All of his children have a call on their lives, and they sing, and preach and share the love of Jesus where ever they can.- Actress
- Soundtrack
Harriet Hoctor was born on 25 September 1905 in Hoosick Falls, New York, USA. She was an actress, known for Shall We Dance (1937), The Great Ziegfeld (1936) and Billy Rose's Casa Mañana Revue (1938). She died on 9 June 1977 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.- Barbara Olson was born on 27 December 1955 in Houston, Texas, USA. She was married to Ted Olson. She died on 11 September 2001 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
- Actor
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Lowell George was born on 13 April 1945 in Los Angeles, California, USA. He was an actor, known for X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014), The Abyss (1989) and The Rundown (2003). He was married to Elizabeth Price and Patty Price. He died on 29 June 1979 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.- Actress
- Soundtrack
Nikki McKibbin was born on 28 September 1978 in Grand Prairie, Texas, USA. She was an actress, known for American Idol (2002), The Scorned (2005) and Fear Factor (2001). She was married to Craig Michael Sadler and Joshua David Ozment. She died on 1 November 2020 in Arlington, Texas, USA.- Special Effects
- Visual Effects
- Actor
Thomas C. Rainone was born on 10 February 1963 in Arlington, Texas, USA. He was an actor, known for Honey, I Blew Up the Kid (1992), Wishmaster (1997) and The Ramones: Substitute (1994). He died on 28 November 2016 in Arlington, Texas, USA.- Gloria Eaton was born on 19 December 1932 in El Cajon, California, USA. She was an actress, known for Your Favorite Story (1953), Dangerous Assignment (1950) and Dragnet (1951). She was married to John Edward Williams and Lawrence Doyle Smith. She died on 7 April 2022 in Arlington, Texas, USA.
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Fely Franquelli was born on 11 November 1916 in Manila, Philippines. She was an actress, known for Back to Bataan (1945) and Cry 'Havoc' (1943). She was married to Howard J. Hutter. She died on 8 January 2002 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.- Wally Hooper Jr. was born on 13 March 1926 in Somerville, Massachusetts, USA. He was an actor, known for Night School (1981). He died on 20 May 2011 in Arlington, Massachusetts, USA.
- Eugene Fodor was born on 5 March 1950 in Denver, Colorado, USA. He was an actor, known for SCTV Network (1981), The Big Bang (1989) and Hee Haw (1969). He was married to Susan Davis and Sally Swedlund. He died on 26 February 2011 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
- Jhoon Rhee was born on 7 January 1932 in Asan, Korea. He was an actor, known for When Taekwondo Strikes (1973), The Curse of the Dragon (1993) and Death by Misadventure: The Mysterious Life of Bruce Lee (1993). He was married to Han Soon Hahm and Theresa Chun. He died on 30 April 2018 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
- Stunts
- Actor
- Director
Bryon Weiss was born on 12 February 1963 in Ohio, USA. He was an actor and director, known for The Amazing Spider-Man (2012), The Time Machine (2002) and Idiocracy (2006). He was married to Laura Weiss. He died on 1 March 2014 in Arlington, Texas, USA.- He received a bachelor of science degree in aeronautical engineering from Auburn University. He began his Naval career as an ensign in 1958 and received his wings in 1960. He flew A1H aircraft aboard the USS Saratoga, and later deployed aboard the USS Franklin D. Roosevelt where he flew the A3B aircraft.
- Raphael Hayes was born on 2 March 1915 in Manhattan, New York, USA. He was a writer, known for One Potato, Two Potato (1964), Suspense (1949) and Lights Out (1946). He died on 14 August 2010 in Arlington, Virginia, USA.
- Additional Crew
- Actor
- Production Manager
Lamar Fike was born on 11 November 1935 in Cleveland, Mississippi, USA. He was an actor and production manager, known for Elvis: That's the Way It Is (1970), Elvis: The Comeback Special (1968) and Elvis: The Final Hours (2018). He died on 21 January 2011 in Arlington, Texas, USA.