A native of Ohio, Terry Ray, at the age of 18 co-starred with Patricia Heaton as a singing Chinese cook masquerading as a Native American. After graduating in Theatre Arts from the University of Cincinnati & Conservatory, Terry was an acting intern at Playhouse on the Square and performed in several regional theaters before settling in Los Angeles. In over 90 plays he as appeared with stars such as Dixie Carter, Elaine Stritch and Matthew Perry. A four day stint in 1987 on the game show Scrabble led to an unleashed Ray outing himself on national television. He received bags of fan mail. AfterElton has listed his appearance as number 3 on their top 10 list of Greatest Gay Moments in the History of Game Shows, right after Paul Lynde and Charles Nelson Reilly (who was Terry's cherished acting teacher), and movieline.com named Terry Ray as one of the 5 Weirdest Contestants in the history of game shows. (He was only one listed as weird in a good way). Terry's first professional writing job was the stage performance "Hollywood Goes Classical" at the venerable Dorothy Chandler Pavilion (DCP) starring Mickey Rooney, Michael York, Dean Jones, Rhonda Fleming and several other classic film stars. He wrote and starred in two more shows at the DCP--one co-starring Amanda Bynes and the other Hilary Duff. Terry co-wrote and starred in the short film Gaydar which appeared in over 120 film festivals around the world and won numerous awards, and was selected by the California Independent Film Festival as one of their top 20 short comedy films of all time. The film also inspired the popular Gaydar Gun toy, which Terry voices. For his next short film, "Cost Of Living" (a comedy about life after global warming), he won the Boston International Film Festival's Best Male Actor award. Terry Ray is the creator, writer and star of gay cable channel HERE! TV's first sitcom "From Here on OUT". The show also stars Juliet Mills, T.J. Hoban, Suzanne Whang and Julie Brown. Ray co-created/produced and wrote the new game show Modd Couples that airs on Hulu. He also co-wrote the TV movie "The Joneses: Unplugged" starring Mischa Barton, David Ogden Stiers and Markie Post. Ray co-writes and stars in the digital series, "My Sister Is So Gay" along side Loni Anderson (as his mother) Debra Wilson and Tilky Jones. He also wrote and co-stars with Dawn Wells (Mary Ann from "Gilligan's Island") in a series of spoofs of Dawn's classic sitcom called "She's Still on That Freakin' Island". He has a new series coming out soon called "TV Therapy" with guest stars such as Dawn Wells and Erin Murphy. Terry Ray's first work as a playwright, "Electricity", premiered in 2016 to rave reviews in Los Angeles and was held over for an 11 week run. In 2017 "Electricity" began playing as an immersive theatre experience inside a real hotel room in Palm Springs and is booked so far until July of 2019 for a record breaking 2 year run. Terry has also traveled with "Electricity" to Columbus, Ohio's Evolution Theatre with Ray performing in the role he originated to excellent reviews and press. He also toured the show to the Twin Cities where Lavender Magazine named "Electricity" as one of the 5 Best Out of Town Shows in Minneapolis for the 2018 year--along side "Hamilton", the nation tour of "The Humans" and Cirque du Soleil. For more info about "Electricity" go to www.Electricitytheplay.com
Terry Ray's first credit was on The Addams Policy (1998) which shot in Vancouver BC Canada. He has also appeared in Wrath of Grapes: The Don Cherry Story II (2012) and the Whistler Film Fest official selection Q and A (2014) Most recently he can be seen in The Brain Stem Aggrometer (2019) He is an Actra Award nominee for Most Outstanding Stunt Performance in the features Midnight Sun (2014) and Night Hunter (2018)
Terry Rhoads was born on December 31, 1951 in Phoenix, Arizona, USA. He was an actor, known for The Day After Tomorrow (2004), Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (1997) and Hitchcock (2012). He was married to Lise Simms and Deborah Renae Yetter. He died on October 11, 2013 in Encino, California, USA.
Terry Roderick is an actor and art director, known for In Circles (2016).
Terry Rogers is an actor and director, known for Escape from Pretoria (2020), Offside (2009) and Deck Dogz (2005).
Terry Root is known for Chasing Ice (2012), Earth 2100 (2009) and Too Hot Not to Handle (2006).
Terry Ross is a producer and director, known for Carving a Life (2017), One Good Day (2017) and The Last Resort (2014).
Terry Rue is known for Foosballers (2019).
Terry Ryan, raised in Mount Pearl, Newfoundland and Labrador, was a professional hockey player for 7 years - highlighted by appearing in 8 NHL games. He retired in 2007, released a best-selling book entitled "Tales of a First Round Nothing", and began a career in the arts. Ryan now works in the film industry and has appeared on several episodes of the hit CBC television program Republic of Doyle, playing small roles. He has also played himself in the OLN's "Road Hockey Rumble" (2008). He released his first book, "Tales of a First Round Nothing" in May 2014, and it was well received by critics. Ryan is now also trying his hand at stand up comedy and performed his second show to good reviews opening for Gerry Dee at the General Motors Centre in Oshawa, Ontario on April 22, 2016. In addition to playing "British Soldier #1" (Episode 1) - (the first on-screen casualty in the Netflix/Discovery Channel television series Frontier, starring Jason Momoa in the lead role), in 2017 Ryan also had small roles in Frontier Season 2, Little Dog (CBC), Caught (CBC), Schitt's Creek, and various short films. In 2018, he wrote and played the lead role in a short film called "A Stand In", played "Coyote" in Justin Oakey's A Fire In The Cold Season. In 2019, Ryan - who acted and did his own stunts - played the "Gunman" in Episode 11 of Hudson and Rex, and played hockey playing Newfoundlander "Teddy" on the hit Canadian television series Letterkenny (Season 8, Episode 1).
Terry Sands is known for The Ribald Tales of Robin Hood (1969).