Bill Heintz was born in New Orleans, Louisiana where he co-founded the independent horror film company Terror Optics in 2001 with director Jason Matherne. He played lead roles and provided production design for the company's first two feature length films Attack Of The Cockface Killer and Stabbed In The Face. He went on to providing the musical score for their next two films Goregasm and Grimewave as well as penning the short films Peepshow Creep, Creepy Dean and Weirdos. On Terror Optics' fifth feature film, Silk Scream, Heintz wrote, co-produced, scored, acted and did production design. Over the years Heintz has played minor roles in such films as Terminator Genisys, Dracula 2000, G.I.Joe 2: Retaliation, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter and Django Unchained. He stays active in the New Orleans music scene with his bands The Pallbearers, The Unnaturals, The Bills and Dummy Dumpster. Heintz records and releases music under his independent record label Sheer Terror Records. In 2009 he founded the annual punk rock music festival Creepy Fest which takes place every July in New Orleans over the span of four nights. He often contributes artwork and writing to Antigravity Magazine, Paranoize Zine and Orgy Of The Weird comic book and has been designing live music playbills since 1995.
Bill Herenda is an actor, speaker, NBA contributor, and college basketball analyst. Based in Los Angeles, Bill has appeared in TV shows including SWAT on CBS as well as movies, music videos, and commercials. Bill previously served as the Sacramento Kings Insider on NBC Sports Bay Area, and the morning sports update anchor on KFBK, an iHeart radio station. Bill has worked as a college basketball analyst on national TV and radio broadcasts covering games from the Pac-12, Big Ten, Big 12, Mountain West, West Coast, and Big West conferences as well as postseason matchups in the NIT and appears on radio and TV across the US sharing his insight on the NBA. Born in Jersey City, NJ, Bill was a three-year letterman at St. Peter's Prep before his collegiate career at UMass Lowell.
Bill Hickey is an actor, known for Springtime in the Rockies (1937), Wild Horse (1931) and Sunset Range (1935).
Bill Hicks is known for Born to Race (1988).
Bill Hoag was born to Helen Hogg, a church secretary and William Hogg a manager of a lithograph company in New York City. His father graduated NYU University and both parents resided in Brooklyn. He attended and played football at Saint Francis Preparatory High School when it was still located on North Street in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. He continued his education at Saint Francis College where he began taking acting classes and performing with the college theatre group The Troupers. Upon graduation he began pursuing an acting career and soon was cast in the starring role of an Off Broadway comedy called Dungalore. His acting career spans over 40 years including theatre, TV and film. He portrays John Elder in the feature film First Reformed with Ethan Hawke and Amanda Seyfried written and directed by Paul Schrader.
Bill Hobbs is an actor and producer, known for The Wolf of Wall Street (2013), A Little Game (2014) and Danny Says (2015).
Bill Holden is an actor, known for La conjura de El Escorial (2008), Mar de plástico (2015) and Segundo asalto (2005).
Bill Holderman is a producer and writer, known for Book Club (2018), The Old Man & the Gun (2018) and A Walk in the Woods (2015).
Bill Holliday was born on October 1, 1933 in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for The Toy (1982), Tightrope (1984) and French Quarter Undercover (1985). He was married to Miz Mary. He died on November 13, 1984.
Bill is an actor, writer, SAG signatory producer, stand up comedian and entertainment host. His award-winning short film "Mother's Day Memories" was a 2021 Oscar contender. He hosts "Movie Peek with Bill Hoversten" on YouTube and the "But You're Not Funny!" podcast on YouTube and all audio platforms. Bill has done stand-up at legendary clubs like The Comedy Store and the Ice House, and red carpet announcing from the Shrine Auditorium and Pasadena Civic. Radio work includes 8 years of news broadcasting and a lead role in a scripted drama series, "Boylston Street," produced by WGBH and directed by the BBC's Vanessa Whitburn. Working from LAPD headquarters, he was a police beat reporter for regional wire service City News. He has written feature stories for the LA Times, Huffington Post, LA Business Journal, and other publications. His screenplay "The Secret War" has been a finalist in screenplay competitions including the Artemis Women in Action Film Festival, and co-finalist with Oscar nominee Jose Rivera in the Armenian Dramatic Arts Alliance contest, co-judged by Oscar-winner Steven Zaillian.