Geoffrey Molloy is known for Thanks for Sharing (2012) and Vinyl (2016).
Geoffrey Newland is a Scottish film, television and theatre actor. He is best know for Thomas Vinterberg's Kursk, Sony's Outlander, BBC1's Spooks and Starz Da Vinci's Demons. Geoffrey grew up in Hawick, Scotland. He graduated from the prestigious Bristol Old Vic Theatre School and advanced in the method at Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute (New York), he progressed his career with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), then filming Spooks (aka MI-5) for the BBC. Geoffrey has had vast and varied experience, appearing in film, with the RSC, BBC, ITV, Regent's Park Open Air Theatre and as a Carleton Hobbs BBC radio nominee. In addition to his acting Geoffrey attended boarding school aged 6 - 18, studied law at University where he qualified as a Barrister before traveling the world for over 2 years. He currently lives in Camden where he is the father of 3, twin daughters and a baby boy. Most recently Geoffrey filmed feature film Kursk with Colin Firth and Lea Seydoux, Sony's Outlander, a recurring roll for ITV and a number of guest leads for the BBC. He's been successfully cast in Ulrika Bengt's Nordic Noir Lola Upside Down and plays a comedic role in Philip John's award winning feature film Moon Dogs. Geoffrey is represented by D2 Management in LA Sandra Chalmers at Shepherd Management in London.
Geoffrey O'Connor is an Academy Award nominated producer, writer and director who is best known as being a principle creative force behind the BAFTA Award-winning BBC-2 series "Weird Weekends" with writer/ presenter Louis Theroux. Geoffrey developed the participant-journalist model for "Weird Weekends", directed the series pilot and was the show's Senior Producer for several seasons. He was an Emmy Award-winning producer on Michael Moore's series "TV Nation" and he was nominated for an Academy Award for his independent documentary film "At the Edge of Conquest." Mr. O'Connor spent a decade independently producing documentaries and news stories about human rights abuses and environmental destruction in the Brazilian Amazon. He chronicled those experiences in his nonfiction memoir "Amazon Journal: Dispatches from a Vanishing Frontier," which was a NY Times and LA Times "Notable Book of the Year" in 1997. His companion film "Amazon Journal" was nominated for a "Distinguished Documentary Award" by the IDA in 1998. Geoffrey continues to direct for the BBC where he has produced over a dozen programs with Louis Theroux including two films about the Christian hate group The Westboro Baptist Church; those include "Surviving The Most Hated Family" (2019) and "The Most Hated Family in America," (2007), which is Mr.Theroux's most widely watched film. Geoffrey is in development on three multi-part nonfiction series through his company Copious Pictures. He is a citizen of the U.S. and Ireland and he lives in New York.
As photographer, independent filmmaker and director Geoffrey Orthwein's work has been shown in film festivals across the US and Europe, museums, and broadcast television. He got his start in post-production, working as editor and colorist on independent films and documentaries with renowned underwater cinematographer Feodor Pitcairn including Ocean Voyagers, narrated by Meryl Streep. This work culminated in the custom, multi-screen film Ocean Odyssey, a permanent installation wrapping 270º around the Smithsonian Institution's Sant Ocean Hall, at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC. From there he went on to live production, where he toured the world as technical director for live shows for companies including Google, Salesforce, The Walt Disney Company, T-Mobile and Virgin. He directed the web series Sword & Laser, hosted by Veronica Belmont and Tom Merritt, for the award winning Geek & Sundry network. Geoffrey and Andrew have worked together for over twenty years, collaborating on scripts, short films and interactive projects. In the summer of 2013, over a three day weekend in a rented cottage in Los Feliz, California the idea for Bokeh was born. From there the pair took the concept to feature script, casting the following spring and completing principal photography in Iceland in the summer of 2014. While finishing the film they were invited to participate in the Independent Film Project's Narrative feature Lab in 2015. Bokeh premiered at the 2017 Santa Barbara International Film Festival. The film was acquired by Screen Media Films and released theatrically March 2017.
Geoffrey Owens was born on March 18, 1961 in Brooklyn, New York, USA. He is an actor and director, known for The Cosby Show (1984), The Paper (1994) and Fizzle (2020). He has been married to Josette Huber since 1995. They have one child.
Lugubrious-faced English actor Geoffrey Palmer was born in London, the son of a chartered accountant. After leaving school, he did his national service with the Royal Marines where he became a field training and small arms instructor. He then briefly tried his hand at accountancy before his girlfriend talked him into joining the local amateur dramatics society. Palmer started as an unpaid assistant stage manager at Croydon's Grand Theatre and afterwards spent several years touring in repertory. In 1955, he made the transition to television, at first as diverse straight supporting characters in popular early comedies like Bootsie and Snudge (1960) and The Army Game (1957), a series detailing the exploits and misadventures of a group of national service conscripts at a surplus ordnance depot. During much of the early and mid-60s, Palmer cut his teeth on prolific dramatic roles that came his way in seminal crime and mystery shows (The Saint (1962), The Avengers (1961), The Baron (1966), Z Cars (1962)), in which he often appeared as military types, politicians, or as legal or medical professionals. His personal credo was to never turn down a part. By the 70s, Palmer was becoming well-established as a supporting actor in British television. He made two appearances in Doctor Who (1963) in the early 1970s (most notably as the ill-fated Edward Masters, Permanent Under-Secretary to the Minister of Science, in "The Silurians"). From there, he went on to co-starring success as Leonard Rossiter's hapless brother-in-law in The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin (1976), Wendy Craig's perpetually aloof and gloomy husband in Butterflies (1978) and as Lionel Hardcastle in the hugely popular sitcom As Time Goes By (1992) (opposite Judi Dench). He also starred as Major Harry Kitchener Wellington Truscott in Fairly Secret Army (1984), playing a buffoonish, reactionary ex-army man attempting to shape a disparate bunch of characters into a secret paramilitary organisation. Smaller (but memorable) guest spots have included his sausage-loving doctor in Fawlty Towers: The Kipper and the Corpse (1979), the Foreign Secretary in Whoops Apocalypse (1982) and Field Marshal Haig in Blackadder Goes Forth (1989). Palmer appeared opposite Judi Dench again in the James Bond thriller Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) and in Mrs Brown (1997) as Queen Victoria's chief secretary Sir Henry Ponsonby. In 2007 he returned to Doctor Who as a guest star in the David Tennant era. An instantly recognisable actor with jowly features and a trademark deadpan expression, Palmer's stock-in-trade persona was of a world-weary, disenchanted, droll or sarcastic disposition. Conversely, in private life, he was said to be rather more lighthearted and humorous. He once declared "I'm not grumpy. I just look this way." Nonetheless, he was great value in the BBC series Grumpy Old Men (2003) as one of several middle-aged narrators complaining about assorted irritations in modern life. In addition to several audio books, Palmer also lent his familiar voice to radio and to Audi TV ads. In his spare time he was an avid fly fisherman and a longstanding member of the Garrick Club in London. Palmer was awarded in OBE in December 2004 for his services to drama.
Geoffrey Paschel is an actor, known for Duplicitous (2018), Marvelous and Vote (2020).
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Geoffrey Pomeroy is an actor and writer, known for Over the Hedge (2006), Monsters vs. Aliens (2009) and Better Call Saul (2015).
Geoffrey Pounsett is known for Grand Army (2020), It (2017) and Murdoch Mysteries (2008).