A charismatic performer who spent years on television looking for his big break, actor George Eads finally became a television star portraying forensic investigator Nick Stokes on the hit procedural "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" (CBS, 2000- ). Prior to that role, Eads eked out a living with roles on less-than-popular shows like "Strange Luck" (Fox, 1995-96) and Aaron Spelling's short-lived "Savannah" (The WB, 1996-97), before carving out a niche in TV movies like "The Ultimate Lie" (USA, 1996) and "Crowned and Dangerous" (ABC, 1997). He went on to score a few episodes of "ER" (NBC, 1994-2009) and had a regular role on the sitcom "Grapevine" (CBS, 2000), only to find himself out of work once more when that series was canceled after five episodes. But Eads segued right away into "CSI," where he was fortunate enough to have landed on a series that ran well into the next decade, turning him into a known commodity while allowing the actor the comfort of tackling outside roles as he chose. During his time on the show, Eads landed a number of guest spots and TV movies, but none as high-profile as his starring turn as the iconic 1970s daredevil, "Evel Knievel" (TNT, 2004). With his portrayal of Stokes, Eads was elevated from unknown to fan favorite after years of struggle.
Born Luigi Montefiori in 1942 near Genoa, Italy, the future actor provided artwork for various advertising agencies in Genoa before moving to Rome in 1966. Though he intended to further his art career, he became involved with a crowd of film people who urged him to put his good looks to advantage in the movies. Parts in Italian westerns soon followed, usually under the pseudonym "George Eastman". (He once reportedly missed out on a role in a Franco Nero western because his height made Franco Nero look too short.) Never quite "typed", the actor soon moved into other film genres playing good guys, bad guys, and good-bad guys. These parts often exploited his athletic physique by having him remove his shirt, perhaps most memorably in Lina Wertmüller's _Belle Starr (1968) where he suffered through a memorable torture scene involving a boot-spur. However, a few parts in English-language films, such as Charlton Heston's _Call of the Wild, The (1972)_ failed to significantly broaden his appeal. He also began to write or collaborate on scripts and in 1989 he directed his first movie: _DNA Formula Letale (1989)_. Details on his private life are sketchy but some sources indicate that he's the father of a daughter.
George E. Fernandez was first a writer, having written several Plays for theater performance but it was the success of Vietnam Trilogy at the Veterans Theater in Los Angeles, California which won the Drama-logue award for Best Actor to Richard Chaves for his performance in the Play. George then went to the University of Miami, School of Film and learned to hone his craft by becoming a screenwriter, then a producer. In 1984 He had the opportunity to raise some money and turned his award-winning play into a feature film titled, Cease Fire with Don Johnson, who was about to become a major celebrity through his next acting gig, Miami Vice and future Academy Award winner, Lisa Blount. Cease Fire went on to become a critical success and it was more of a success for the families of Vietnam Veterans who came to embrace the film as their own. George then wrote and produced, Shallow Grave, a teen murder mystery that was well received throughout Europe. George then wrote, Spanish Rose starring Michael Pare, Barbara Carrera and Michael Ironside. Through the 1990s he started to make an entry into the Television world, by creating and producing the European TV Series Pilots, Night Screams. He also created the Reality TV Pilots, Dinner At Eight and Best Line as well as the Spanish Pilot, LA CENA. Realizing that the Entertainment Economy is the new direction and power structure that has been developed for the new century, George took time out to return to school and receive a Master's of International Business Administration. For two years George taught screen writing and production classes at Florida State University Film School and the School of Communication where he taught Documentary Production. and at Tallahassee Community College. George has published three books in his time at FSU and is now working on a Horror Screenwriting Book for the Fall of 2006. George continues to write screenplays and develop programming for Television.
George Eldredge was born on September 10, 1898 in San Francisco, California, USA. He was an actor, known for Riders to the Stars (1954), Captain Video: Master of the Stratosphere (1951) and Crossroads (1955). He was married to Marjorie Joyce Roberta Pett, Irene Haisman and Phyllis Helen Harms. He died on March 12, 1977 in Los Angeles, California.
George Elliott is known for Total Dramarama (2018), Total Drama All Stars (2013) and My Babysitter's a Vampire (2011).
George Ernest was a child actor who appeared in more than 60 films from 1929 to 1942. He was born George Ruud Hjorth in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. His father was Danish and his mother Norwegian . The family moved to California when George was two years old, and his father ran a restaurant in Hollywood. At age 10, Ernest got his start in movies. Among his early roles were a few of the short films in the comedy series created by Hal Roach, known as The Little Rascals and later as Our Gang. Ernest was among the small number of child actors whose careers continued through their teen years. In a family comedy series by 20th Century Fox, he was Roger, a son of the Jones family. But as he reached manhood, three things happened that would change his career and life. As film roles were becoming more difficult to find, he became interested in camera work and began studying and following the camera crews. Then, World War II broke out. One of his last roles was in "Four Sons" of 1940. That war film was about a Czech family whose four sons take different paths after Germany invades Czechoslovakia in 1939. Shortly after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and the U.S. entered WW II, Ernest enlisted in the Army. He became a combat photographer in the Office of Strategic Services (OSS). He served in the photographic unit that was headed by Hollywood director, John Ford. Ernest filmed American forces fighting in North Africa, in the invasion of Sicily, and the Italian campaign. He parachuted behind enemy lines in France and Germany to take photos. One of those occasions was a few days before the Allied invasion of Normandy on D-Day. He moved through the French underground and hid along the German front. And, on June 6, 1944, he took photos of the American landings at Omaha Beach. After the war, Ernest entered the business field and later became an executive with the McDonnell Douglas aviation company. He died on June 25, 2009, in Whittier, California. He was 87 years old.
George Escher is known for Escher: Het oneindige zoeken (2018).
George Estregan was born on July 10, 1939 in Tondo, Manila, Philippines. He is known for Kid kaliwete (1978), Sa bulaklak ng apoy (1984) and Lumakad kang hubad... Sa mundong ibabaw (1980). He died on August 8, 1988 in Santa Mesa, Manila.
George Evans is known for Kimi (2022).