Harris Goldberg was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, November 17, 1972. He started doing stand-up at age sixteen. His older brother, Daniel Goldberg, wrote and produced such successful films as "Stripes" and "Meatballs." He went onto produce "Junior," "Road Trip" and the upcoming, "Old School" for Deamworks. Harris followed his brother to Los Angeles where he sold his first screenplay within a week and was then signed to William Morris the week after. Twenty-five studio films later he scored his biggest success with Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo (1999). His next film is the upcoming May release, The Master of Disguise (2002) starring Dana Carvey and produced by Adam Sandler. He also hosted the Montreal Comedy Festival in 1998. Harris went onto direct "Where's Angelo" starring Michael Madsen, Beverely D'Angelo and Robert Forster which premiered at "The Hollywood and Santa Barbara Film Festivals." Harris wrote the autobiographical "Numb," his directorial feature debut. Starring Matthew Perry, Mary Steenbergen, Kevin Pollak and Lynn Collins it recent premiered at The Tribeca Film Festival and winning Best Feature Audience Awards in Chicago and the Ojai Film Festival. He and Rob Schneider made a notable appearance on Conan O'Brien performing their "Blue Man Ass Group during the 5th anniversary show. Goldberg veered into television writing pilots for HBO, NBC, ABC, TNT, USA, He's about to start production on his next feature.
Harris Gordon is an actor, known for Red Lights (2012), Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (2006) and Anna (2013).
Harris Kendall is an actress and producer, known for The Wall (2022), 600 Millas (2015) and Days of Our Lives (1965).
Harris Kiiza is known for Your Christmas or Mine? (2022) and Judge Rinder (2014).
Harris Laskawy was born on 12 February 1943 in Bronx, New York City, New York, USA. He was an actor, known for The World According to Garp (1982), The Girl Next Door (2004) and The Glimmer Man (1996). He was previously married to Jennifer Reed. He died on 4 July 2010 in Valley Village, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Harris Markson is known for 9-1-1: Lone Star (2020), Modern Family (2009) and The Stalking Fields (2022).
Harris Shore was born Harold Leroy Cherashore on September 22, 1946 in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania near Valley Forge, USA. He is an actor, writer and director known for his work on Seinfeld (1991), The Trust (2021) Wings (1990) and The Korean War (1990). Shore takes his place in American Pop Video Culture as the original, live-action Mario of the Donkeykong commercials for ColecoVision, circa 1981. Early in his career in New York, he co-produced and starred in the sensational show group, "Four On The Town," which played to standing ovations throughout the Catskills and Poconos, before entertaining our troops in Vietnam and Thailand in the spring of 1972. He is an ordained cantor, proud single dad, and has sung "The Star Spangled Banner" in Dodger Stadium four times, 2016 - 2019.
Harris Soedarto is an actor, known for Seperti Hujan yang Jatuh ke Bumi (2020) and Akad (2022).
Harris Vaughan was born in South London, England on December 9th, 1980, where he was born and raised up to his early twenties when he moved to study in America on a football/Soccer scholarship. His final stop in America was spent working as an assistant producer for the Alice Cooper Radio Show in NY. Returning to London, he worked for Vice magazine, then moving into PR working for such clients as Madness, Fatboy Slim and Bestival. In 2009, after backpacking around South East Asia for 6 months he moved to Beijing, continuing to work in Football and music PR as well as modeling for the likes of Hermes, Dunhill, Gucci, Adidas & BMW. After some small commercials and TV work he was cast in his first feature-length film 'This is Sanlitun' by Icelandic director Robert Douglas in 2013 after previously working together. This was quickly followed by his second successive casting in "My Desk Mate" which is to start filming in late 2013. He then went to do Masters in Acting at Mountview in London and is now a full-time actor and screenwriter with several of his pilots and short films in pre-production.
Another one of those frustratingly nameless but omnipresent and talented faces of stage, film and TV, chameleon-like player Harris Yulin has avoided the severe stereotyping lost to many a prolific actor. Benign, balding and often bearded, Yulin off camera was a stark contrast to the tough, unsympathetic men he presented on camera. Born in Los Angeles in 1937, Yulin traveled extensively throughout Europe and Israel before deciding on an acting career. Attending UCLA, he studied acting with Jeff Corey before making his off-Broadway debut in "Next Time I'll Sing for You" in 1963. From there, Harris continued to forge a respectable name for himself in the classical arena, particularly in the works of Shakespeare. With credits including "A Midsummer Night's Dream" (1964), "Richard III" (1966) and "King John" (1967), he proved to be a stellar Hamlet in 1974, and subsequently played the role of Claudius to Kevin Kline's dour Dane in a 1986 production. Marking his Broadway debut in "Watch on the Rhine" in 1980, he impressed later that year alongside James Earl Jones in the contemporary drama "A Lesson from Aloes" (1980). His classical repertoire over the years has included "Uncle Vanya" (1981), "Hedda Gabler" (1981) and (2001), "The Doctor's Dilemma" (1982) "Tartuffe" (1984), "The Seagull" (1985), and a Broadway return with "The Visit" (1992). More recently, he won Drama Desk nominations for his superb work in "The Price" (1999) and "The Diary of Anne Frank" (2001). Keeping his base firmly in Los Angeles for most his career, he was one of the founders of the Los Angeles Classic Theater and has kept active on the regional theater scene over the years. A noted New York stage director, he helmed the off-Broadway productions "Baba Goya," "This Lime Tree Bower," and "The Trip to Bountiful". He is the the possessor of an intriguingly solemn, autocratic-looking mug, and his glowering intensity usually invites suspicion, scorn or skepticism... or all three. Yulin began appearing in films and TV in mid-life (1970), and a high percentage of his work earned standout notices, if not awards and outright stardom. He started impressively enough in Terry Southern's thoroughly bizarre film adaptation of John Barth's novel End of the Road (1970) amid a dream ensemble cast that included Stacy Keach, James Earl Jones, Dorothy Tristan, and James Coco. He then formed a strong acting bond with Keach, again playing best friend Wyatt Earp to Keach's Doc Holliday in an offbeat, revisionist version of their OK Corral story in 'Doc' (1971) that also co-starred Faye Dunaway. While strong supporting turns in The Midnight Man (1974), Night Moves (1975), Scarface (1983), Woody Allen's Another Woman (1988), Narrow Margin (1990), and Clear and Present Danger (1994) kept his name alive on the larger screen, his career found a stronger focus on TV. Over time, he played a number of flashy historical figures on the quality small screen, including Machine Gun Kelly (George Kelly), J. Edgar Hoover, Senator Joseph McCarthy, Israeli General Forman, Jesse James, George Marshall, Leonardo DaVinci and even the Bard himself. He could always be counted on to play a maniacal genius or the embodiment of white-collar corruption in a career piled with genuinely unsympathetic characters. His more mainstream filming has included lightweight comedies and horrors, such as Bad Dreams (1988), Ghostbusters II (1989), Multiplicity (1996) and Rush Hour 2 (2001), and the more familiar heavy drama, including the brutal urban tale Training Day (2001) starring Oscar-winner Denzel Washington, and the somber biopic Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus (2006) with Nicole Kidman. Though Yulin has been unable to find the one transcending role to catapult him to the very top of his character ranks, he continues to enjoy an enviable career broaching age 70. Fresher audiences might recognize him from episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993), Law & Order (1990), Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997), 24 (2001) and Frasier (1993), for which he earned a "guest" Emmy nomination. His late wife Gwen Welles, who succumbed to cancer at age 42 in 1993, was an actress of note (Robert Altman's Nashville (1975), in particular). A documentary chronicling his wife's illness and untimely death appeared at the 1998 Berlin Film Festival. Into the millennium, Harris has added sturdy support to such films as The Million Dollar Hotel (2000), Perfume (2001), Rush Hour 2 (2001), Training Day (2001), King of the Corner (2004), My Soul to Take (2010), The Family Fang (2015), Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer (2016) and Wanderland (2018). TV appearances included "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," "Mister Sterling," "Third Watch," "Law & Order," "Encourage," "Rubicon," "Pan Am," "Nikita," "Veep" and the revamped "Murphy Brown." Inclusive were offbeat recurring roles in 24 (2001), Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt (2015) and Ozark (2017).