FL Hollywood Hills by SpecialK by SpecialK
×
  1. SpecialK's Gallery
  2. Cemeteries
  3. Los Angeles Co
  4. FL Hollywood HillsFL Hollywood Hills
  5. Ackerman HarryAckerman Harry

Description:

Tags:

Item information:

Ackerman Harry (Harry Ackerman was a TV executive producer for Father Knows Best, Dennis the Menace, The Donna Reed Show, Hazel, Gidget, Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie, The Flying Nun, The Monkees, and The Partridge Family.)
Acosta Rodolph (Rodolpho Acosta acted first in Mexican movies, then in Hondo, One-eyed Jacks, Sons of Katie Elder, and many TV westerns usually as the bad guy.)
Adams Edie
Adrian Iris (Iris Adrian was in over 100 films including A Message to Garcia, Road to Zanzibar, Flamingo Road, Blue Hawaii, and The Odd Couple. Her last film was Herbie Goes Bananas.)
Ahn Philip (Actor Philip Ahn was most famous as the teacher on the TV series 'Kung Fu'.)
Akst Harry (Harry Akst was a songwriter who started out his career as a pianist in vaudeville accompanying singers such as Nora Bayes, Frank Fay and Al Jolson. He wrote Dinah, popularized by many singers. He's in the songwriter's hall of fame.)
Aldrich Robert (Director Robert Aldrich made 'Flight of the Phoenix', 'The Dirty Dozen', 'The Longest Yard', and 'The Frisco Kid' among others.)
Allen Irving (Irving Allen was a producer and director. He won an oscar 1948 for the short movie Climbing the Matterhorn, and was responsible for Dean Martin's Matt Helm series, The Silencers, Murderers' Row, The Ambushers,  and The Wrecking Crew.)
Alvarado Don (Jose Paige acted as Don Alvarado, a name given to him by studio head Jack Warner. Warner also convinced Don's wife to get a divorce, and later married her. Many years later Page managed his former wife's cattle ranch.)
Ames Leon (Actor  Leon Ames was best known for his fatherly roles in films and television including 'Colonel Gordon' in 'Mr. Ed'.)
Amsterdam Morey
Anderson Carl (Carl Anderson earned the 1936 Nobel prize in physics for discovering the positron.)
Anderson Earnest (Ernie Anderson was a disc jockey, and TV/radio announcer and voiceover artist. He is best known as Ghoulardi, a host of a late night horror movie presentation, and for his longtime role as the main voice of ABC.)
Andrews Lois (Lois Andrews was the lead character in Dixie Dugan, then appeared in minor films produced by husband George Jessel. She was later married to actor Steve Brodie. Born Lorraine Gourley - not sure where the grave name is from.)
Angarola Anthony (Anthony Angarola was an actor, though I could not find any information about him.)
Ansara Matthew (Matthew Ansara was an actor, including roles in 2 movies with his mother Barbara Eden. He suffered from clinical depression and died of a heroin OD.)
Ansara Michael (Michael Ansara was an actor, noted for playing Cochise on the TV series Broken Arrow (1956). He played the Klingon commander Kang on the original  Star Trek TV series, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, and Star Trek: Voyager (1995).  He also played Buck Rogers' evil adversary Kane on Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1979). He was once married to actress Barbara Eden.)
Arliss Dimitra (Arliss Dimitra acted in The Sting, Firefox, The Other Side of Midnite, It's My Party, and was the voice of Anastasia Hardy in the animated Spiderman series.)
Arvanitis Emmanuel (Emmanuel Arvanitis was a composer and symphony orchestra conductor.)
Ashley John (John Ashley was an actor, producer and singer. He was in Dragstrip Girl, Motorcycle Gang, the Beach Blanket series of movies, Hud, and TV's Beverly Hillbillies. He directed some of the A-Team.)
Assan Ibu (Ibu Assan was a dancer, known as The Pavlova of the Orient.)
Autry Gene (Gene Autry.was known as the 'Singing Cowboy'.)
Avalier Don (Don Avalier was an actor known for Playgirl (1954) - with his only credit. Other uncredited films included Road to Rio (1947) and The Spanish Main (1945). He played head waiters and maitre'd's in most of them.)
Avalos Luis (Luis Avalos was born in Havana, Cuba, and was an actor and director, known for The Electric Company (1971), The Ringer (2005), Jungle 2 Jungle (1997), and he played Principal Rivasl on Hangin' with Mr. Cooper  He established the Americas Theatre Arts Foundation in Los Angeles in 2000, and served as its artistic director.)
Avedon Doe (Doe Avedon was a model and actress. She married fashion photographer Richard Avedon in 1944. Avedon set about making his new wife a top model, including changing her name from Dorcas to Doe. She did not like modeling and began film acting, as Betty Harper, in 1949's Jigsaw. In 1954, she appeared as the stewardess in The High and the Mighty, starring John Wayne. After divorcing Avedon, she married actor Don Matthews, who later died in a car crash. She married director Don Siegel in 1957. She retired to raise their 4 adopted children. They divorced n 1975.  She returned to acting in John Cassavetes' Love Streams in 1984.)
Avery Tex (Tex Avery was an animator and director of cartoons including Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Droopy, Chilly Willy and Screwy Squirrel.)
Babbitt Art (Art Babbitt was an animator and director with over 80 awards, and created the Disney character Goofy.)
Bacon Lloyd (Lloyd Bacon began his directing career with Charlie Chaplin's Essanay Corporation, and he directed Knute Rockne All American starring Pat O'Brien and Ronald Reagan, and It Happens Every Spring with Ray Milland and Jean Peters.)
Baer Parley
Baker Buddy (Norman Baker was the musical director on Bob Hope's radio show, then scored the Disney films The Apple Dumpling Gang, The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again, The Shaggy D.A., The Million Dollar Duck, and The Fox and the Hound. He was nominated for an Oscar his score of Napoleon and Samantha.)
Bakley Bonny Lee (Bonny Lee Bakley was the wife of actor Robert Blake. He was found not guilty of her murder.)
Baldwin Bill (Bill Baldwin was an actor, and radio announcer. Many of his roles were as...the boxing announcer, reporter, or narrator.)
Baldwin William (William Baldwin acted in a long list of TV shows and movies, usually playing the announcer or newsman.)
Ball John (Author John Ball wrote a series of crime novels, most famous was In The Heat of The Night, which was made into a movie with Sidney Poitier as Virgil Tibbs.)
Ball Lucille Was (This used to be the location of Lucille Ball. She has since moved.)
Ballcourt Relief (A ritual ballgame from AD300-950.)
Barker Bob (Game-show host of The Price Is Right and Truth or Consequences Bob Barker is alive and well, but is planning ahead.)
Barris Harry (Harry Barris was a singer and songwriter. He was a member of the Rhythm Boys which included Al Rinker and Bing Crosby.  Barris appeared in 57 films, and was the uncle of game show host and producer Chuck Barris.)
Barry Don (Don 'Red' Barry was an actor who got his nickname after appearing as the first Red Ryder in the 1940 movie Adventures of Red Ryder.)
Barsi Judith (Judith Barsi appeared in many commercials, voiced the TV shows The Land Before Time and All Dogs Go To Heaven, and was in the movie Jaws 4. Her jealous and abusive father shot her and her mother.)
Bates Jeanne (Jeanne Bates  was a radio, film and TV actress. She had the lead role, and supplied the signature scream, on the radio mystery series Whodunit.  Her film debut in 1943 was in a Boston Blackie mystery, The Chance of a Lifetime. She played Bela Lugosi's first victim in The Return of the Vampire (1943), Diana Palmer in The Phantom (1943), and she had a minor role in Death of a Salesman (1951),  appeared in 1977 as Mrs. X in Eraserhead. Her last roles were small parts in Die Hard 2 (1990) and Mulholland Drive (2001). TV included Buckskin, Riverboat, Peter Gunn, Sheriff of Cochise, Sky King, Whirlybirds, and The Lone Ranger.)
Bau Gordon (Gordy Bau was a makeup artist then supervisor on Out of the Past,  Mr Blandings Builds His Dreamhouse, Strangers on a Train. A Streetcar Named Desire,  Mister Roberts, and Rebel Without A Cause.)
Beatty Clyde
Beaudoin Jeanette (Jeanette Beaudoin owned a celebrity-populated vacation resort, bar and restaturant on Harsen's Island, Michigan. In 1957, on the advice of friend and producer, Jack Rose, she and husband Al moved to Los Angeles to pursue acting. They joined the SEG and began acting as stand-ins and extras in films. She worked on the film, Hello Dolly and on television in Snoop Sisters.)
Beery L Noah (Actor Noah Berry played Jim Rockford''s father on the Rockford Files. Unfortunately he is located next to a trash can and near the curb.)
Beery Noah N (Actor Noah N Beery was the older brother of actor Wallace Beery and father of actor Noah Beery Jr. He never had as much fame as the others.)
Bellamy Ralph (Actor Ralph Bellamy mostly played supporting roles, and was nominated for an oscar in 1937 for The Awful Truth. Besides TV appearances, he was in the movies Trading Places and Pretty Woman.)
Benedict Richard (Richard Benedict was an Italian-born TV and film actor and director, from the 1940s to the 1960s, most notably Ace in the Hole, directed by Billy Wilder, and with Frank Sinatra in 1960's Ocean's Eleven.)
Bennet Spencer (Spencer Bennet was a director and producer, specializing in "B" westerns and serials, with reputation for finishing on time and under budget. He is best-known for Zorro's Black Whip (1944), Batman and Robin (1949) and The Atomic Submarine (1959). He entered the business as a stuntman, answering a newspaper ad to jump from the Palisades of the Hudson River. Sparred with Gene Tunney on the Mojave Desert site of The Fighting Marine (1926). He appears in the Perils of Pauline (1914).)
Bentley Artimus (Lamont Bentley was an actor and rapper. He was known for his role as Hakeem Campbell on Moesha and the series' spin-off The Parkers, and played Tupac Shakur in Too Legit: The MC Hammer Story.)
Bergen Frances (Frances Bergen was the wife of ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and the mother of actress Candice Bergen, and film and television editor Kris Bergen. She was "the Chesterfield Girl" and "the Ipana Girl" in magazines and on billboards. In the 50's she appeared in in Titanic, Her Twelve Men, and Interlude. On TV she was in The Millionaire, The Dick Powell Show, Barnaby Jones, MacGyver, and Murder She Wrote. Later films include American Gigolo, The Sting II, The Star Chamber, The Muppets Take Manhattan, Hollywood Wives, The Morning After, Made in America, and a major part in Eating. She appeared on two episodes of Murphy Brown, her daughter's hit show.)
Bergman Mary Kay (Mary Kay Bergman was a voice actress on South Park and the Snow White  books-on-tape. Her husband Dino Andrade designed her marker, and started a MKB fund to help with suicide prevention.)
berry fred (Fred Berry was an actor, known for his role as Freddie "Rerun" Stubbs on the mid-70s TV show What's Happening!! Berry was a member of the dance troupe The Lockers and they appeared on the third episode of Saturday Night Live in 1975. He also appeared on Soul Train, and was featured in a line dance segment. In 1985, he reprised his role as Rerun in the series What's Happening Now!! but was fired before the first season ended due to a salary dispute. Berry became a Baptist minister, and lost 100 lbs after being diagnosed with diabetes. Berry was married six times to four different women - twice each to the first two.)
Bivona Gus (Gus Bivona was a musician playing a range of clarinets, saxophones and flute at the height of the big band era. After WWII, he was a staff musician for the MGM Studio Orchestra, playing on countless soundtracks and sessions. He later became a well-known sidekick of pianist, composer, comedian, and television host Steve Allen.)
Bobo Willie (Willie Bobo was the stage name of William Correa, who was a percussionist in Latin jazz. He played with various bands including his own and with Carlos Santa, and on Bill Cosb'y variety show, Cos.)
Boggs Haskell (Haskell Boggs was a cinematographer on several movies including the Jerry Lewis films The Wackiest Ship in the Navy, and Cindefella. He was director of photography on TVs The Rebel, Little House on the Prairie, Bonanza, Highway to Heaven and others.)
Bosley Tom (Tom Bosley played mayor Fiorello La Guardia, a sheriff on 'Murder, She Wrote', 'Father Dowling', and Howard Cunningham (Mr C) on Happy Days.)
Bossick Bernard (Bernard Bossick wrote an episode for Kung Fu, wrote and directed Pistole, and composed and conducted music for Guerrilla Girl.)
Bradley Truman (Truman Bradley was an actor and narrator in radio, TV and film.  He began as a radio broadcaster, and moved into voice acting and narration. He was the host of the 1950s TV series Science Fiction Theatre.)
Brandenburg Chet (Chet Brandenburg was an actor, appearing uncredited in over 400 films between 1924 and 1963. They include The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Judgment at Nuremberg, The Spirit of St. Louis, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,  The War of the Worlds, The Red Badge of Courage, and The Asphalt Jungle.  TV included Gunsmoke, The Life and Times of Wyatt Earp, Outlaws, Bonanza and The Untouchables.)
Brian Mary (Louise Byrdie Dantzler, as Mary Brian, was an actress who made the transition from silent films to sound films. After a beauty contest, she was given an audition by Paramount  and cast as Wendy Darling in Peter Pan (1924).  She appeared in Varsity (1928), and   co-starred with Gary Cooper, Walter Huston and Richard Arlen in an early Western talkie, The Virginian (1929).  Other films included The Front Page (1931) , and top-billing in Shadows of Sing Sing (1933) and Navy Blues (1937). Her last film was Dragnet (1947), and she appeared as the mother on TV's Meet Corliss Archer (1954). She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. She was the wide of film editor George Tomasini.)
Brill Patti (Patti Brill was a minor actress, known for Girl Rush (1944), Sing Your Way Home (1945), Music in Manhattan (1944) and Hard Boiled Mahoney (1947). After World War II, she was involved with the caring of paraplegic war veterans, as was her second (of four) husbands (in 1950).)
Britton Pamela (Actress Pamela Britton did a lot of stage on Broadway, was in the movie DOA with Edmund O'Brien, and is best known as the landlady on My Favorite Martian.)
Broccoli Albert
Brooks Joe (Joe Brooks was an actor, probably best-known as Corporal Vanderbilt on TV's F-Troop.)
Brown Wally (Wally Brown was an actor and comedian. He was a regular cast member in I Married Joan, Cimarron City, and Daniel Boone on TV, and the Abbott and Costello radio show.)
Brown-McGavin Kathie (Kathie Browne acted in  Laramie, Star Trek, Gomer Pyle,  Bonanza, Gunsmoke, Perry Mason, Ironside, My Favorite Martian, The Wild Wild West, Fantasy Island, Rockford Files, Sea Hunt, and Kolchak: The Night Stalker (with husband Darren McGavin).)
Bruggeman George (George Bruggeman was an actor, entirely uncredited in 120 roles, including You Hit the Spot, The Graduate, Once Upon a Time, Of Human Bondage, and The Fighting SeaBees. He is also uncredited with stunts in 21 films. TV included 11 episodes of The Adventures of Jim Bowie, and 4 episodes of The Rifleman.)
Bruns Mona (Mona Bruns was an actress on the stage, films, radio, and TV, best known for her TV roles on Dr. Kildare, Little House on the Prairie, Green Acres and Bonanza.)
Buchanan Edgar (Edgar Buchanan was a dentist until he started acting at age 36. He is best remembered as Uncle Joe on 'Petticoat Junction'.)
Burke Solomon (Solomon Burke was an American preacher and singer, who shaped the sound of rhythm and blues as one of the founding fathers of soul music in the 1960s. He had a string of hits including "Cry to Me", "If You Need Me", "Got to Get You Off My Mind", "Down in the Valley" and "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love". Burke released 38 studio albums, and had 35 singles that charted in the US, including 26 that made the Billboard R&B charts. In 2001, Burke was inducted into the Rock and Roll HOF. His album Don't Give Up on Me won the Grammy for Best Contemporary Blues Album in 2003.)
Burks_Stephen (Stephen Burks was an actor in the films Garbo Talks (1984), Kiss of a Killer (1993) and Cocaine and Blue Eyes (1983), and TV included Tour of Duty, St. Elsewhere, Cheers, and a recurring role on Murphy Brown.)
Burley Frank (Fulton Burley sang tenor in the Disneyland Revue from 1962 until it disbanded in 1986. He then periodically toured and hosted live shows to promote theatrical reissues of such Disney films as Cinderella.)
Burley Frank (F Fulton Burley was the wisecracking Irish tenor,  and the star and MC for the Golden Horseshoe Revue at Disneyland for 25 years.)
Burnette Smiley (Actor Smiley Burnette often played Gene Autry's sidekick.)
Bushey Vince
Buss Jerry (Jerry Buss worked as a ditch digger. and railroad worker, then earned a doctorate in Chemistry, ventured into real estate in 1959, and in 1979 he purchased the Los Angeles Lakers basketball team. During his ownership, the team was champion  in 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1988, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2009 and 2010.)
buss jerry2
Callahan Robert (Robert Callahan wrote and asst-produced 1949's Daughter of the West (and was technical adviser). He wrote the novel Wife Wanted, which was made into a 1946 movie, and he was asst-producer on 1948's Blonde Ice.)
Camarata Tutti (Tutti Camarata  was a trumpet player for bands such as Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman and others. He became the lead trumpet and arranger for Jimmy Dorsey. He later was Music Director for Disneyland Records.)
Candoli Pete (Pete Candoli was an American swing and West Coast jazz trumpeter. He played with the big bands of Woody Herman, Stan Kenton, and many others, and worked extensively in the studios of the recording and TV industries.)
Cannell Derek
Cannell Stephen (Stephen J Cannell was the director, producer or writer of many TV shows including Adam-12, The Rockford Files, The Greatest American Hero, The A-Team, Wiseguy, 21 Jump Street, Silk Stalkings, and The Commish.)
Carfagno Edward (Edward Carfagno was a 3-time oscar-winning art director for The Bad and the Beautiful, Julius Caesar, and Ben-Hur, and was a US Olympic fencer in 1940.)
Carle Frankie (Frankie Carle was a pianist and bandleader with Horace Heidt, and later with his own band. His Sunrise Serenade hit No. 1 in the nation in 1938.)
Carleton Claire (Fred Sherman had 124 acting roles, including Adventures of Superman, the Mickey Rooney Show, the Roy Rogers Show, The Lineup, Wyatt Earp, Sugarfoot, Lassie, and The Rifleman. Claire Carleton acted in The Great Train Robbery, Lady of Burlesque, Mildred Pierce, Follow That Blonde, "A Double Life, Born Yesterday, The Buster Keaton Story, and By Love Possessed.)
Carradine David (David Carradine may be best-remembered as Kwai Chang Caine; from the 1970's TV series Kung Fu, and Bill in the movie Kill Bill. RIP, grasshopper.)
Carre Bartlett (Bartlett Carre was a production manager and assistant director. He worked on westerns, then science-fiction and horror. His last work was on Beach Party (1963). Other films include The Raven (1963), Pit and the Pendulum (1961),  Tales of Terror (1962), and Corregidor (1943). Acted, mostly uncredited, in 40 roles through the 30's.)
Carroll Dee (Dee Carroll acted in Bonanza, The Virginian, Petticoat Junction, and 80+ episodes of Days of Our Lives soap opera.)
Carroll Virginia (Virginia Carroll was a department store model, then acted in Roberta, A Tenderfoot Goes West, Silent Witness, G.I. Brides, and Violent Saturday. TV included Fireside Theatre, The Roy Rogers Show, Dragnet and Perry Mason.)
Ceroli Nick (Nick Ceroli was a drummer, joining Ray Anthony's band in the late 1950s. He later worked with Lionel Hampton, Terry Gibbs and Stan Kenton before joining Herb Alpert's Tijuana Brass in 1965. After 1970,  he toured with Steve Lawrence, Eydie Gorme and Vikki Carr. He appeared periodically on "The Tonight Show" and performed regularly with the Mort Lindsey orchestra on "The Merv Griffin Show.")
Chase Borden (Borden Chase, born Frank Fowler, went through an assortment of jobs, including driving for gangster Frankie Yale and working on the construction of New York's Holland Tunnel, before turning to writing, first short stories and novels, and later, screenplays. When 20th Century Fox produced Under Pressure (1935), his screen adaptation of his novel, Sandhog (based on his Holland Tunnel experience), he moved to Hollywood and changed his name to Borden Chase, allegedly getting his nominal inspiration from Borden Milk and Chase Manhattan Bank.)
Chase Borden (Chase provided the story for Anthony Mann's first film, Dr. Broadway (1942), and screenplays for Winchester '73, Bend of the River, and The Far Country. He earned an oscar nomination for Red River in 1948. Chase was an active member of the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals, an anti-Communist group during the years of the Hollywood blacklist. The Bordan Chase cocktail is named after him ( 3 Parts Scotch Whisky, 1 Part Vermouth, Sweet, 1 Dash Orange Bitters, 1 Dash Pastis).)
Checco Al (Al Checco appeared in films as Hotel (1967), The Party, Bullitt (1968), Angel in My Pocket (1969), Skin Game (1971), The Terminal Man (1974), Pete's Dragon (1977) and Zero to Sixty (1978). On TV, he played Leno LaBianca in Helter Skelter, and he was on The Phil Silvers Show, Mister Ed, Gomer Pyle: USMC, The Flying Nun, The FBI, Here’s Lucy, The Rockford Files, Highway to Heaven, Batman, the Munsters, and Scrubs, his final onscreen credit, in 2004.)
Chekhov Michael (Mikhail Aleksandrovich Chekhov was a Russian-American actor, director, and author. His acting technique has been used by actors such as Jack Nicholson, Clint Eastwood, Marilyn Monroe, and Yul Brynner. He was a nephew of the playwright Anton Chekhov. Though he was mostly a stage actor, he made notable appearances on film, memorably as the Freudian analyst in Alfred Hitchcock's Spellbound (1945), which earned an oscar nomination.)
Cheshire Harry (Harry Cheshire was an actor, frequently playing bankers, western townsmen, and occasionally outlaws. He is perhaps best known for his role as Judge "Fair and Square" Ben Wiley in the syndicated western TV series, Buffalo Bill, Jr. Other TV included The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show, Maverick, and 15 episodes of Lawman.)
Chevillat_Dick (Dick Chevillat has 22 screenwriting credits, including the Frank Sinatra Show, Make Room for Daddy, The Joey Bishop Show, 152 episodes of Green Acres, and Hello Larry. He also produced It's a Great Life, The Jim Backus Show,  and the TV movies The McGonigle, and Daddy's Girl.)
Chick Bobby (Bobby Chick was the heavyweight wrestling champ.)
Christopher Warren (Warren Christopher was Secretary of State for President Clinton, and previously during President Carter's term helped secure the release of American hostages in Iran.)
Clair Ethlyne (Ethlyne Clair starred in silent comedies, serials such as The Vanishing Rider (1928) and Queen of the Northwoods (1929), and was most popular in Westerns opposite cowboy stars such as Hoot Gibson. Unfortunately, her voice did not work well in talkies, which ended her career.)
Clampett Bob (Bob Clampett was an animator, producer, director, and puppeteer best known for his work on Looney Tunes cartoons, and particularly Beany and Cecil.)
Clarke Charles
Clarke Duncan Michael (Michael Clarke Duncan acted in  Armageddon, The Whole Nine Yards, The Scorpion King , Daredevil, and is most famous for his role in The Green Mile.)
Clarke Duncan Michael
Clarke Robert
Clothier William (William Clothier was a set painter, then cinematographer on Wings, The Sea Chase, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, and The Train Robbers. He also flew 17 missions on the Memphis Belle in WWII.)
Codee Ann (Ann Codee was a vaudeville, film, and TV actress of the 1920s through the 1960s. She performed in vaudeville with her husband, actor Frank Orth, in an act billed as "Codee & Orth." The two appeared together in a series of movie shorts between 1929 and 1931.)
CodyJr Bill (Bill Cody Jr. was a child actor, beginning at nine years old when he began a string of  four in films with his father who was a B-film Western actor. The Reckless Buckaroo in 1937 proved to be Bill Cody Sr's final starring role and the last time the father and son worked together. Bill Jr appeared in Destry Rides Again, and Two-Fisted Rangers. In 1942, Bill joined the US military and served in WWII. It is believed his wartime experiences affected him and afterward he only had an uncredited role in 1948's Fighter Squadron. He was profoundly depressed after the death of his wife of forty years, and committed suicide.)
Cohn Helen (Helen Cohn was a costume designer, and nicknamed 'Bobbie Nudie' by her husband, Nudie Cohn.They designed glittery suits and costumes from the 1940-1980s for Elvis, Roy Rogers, Hank Williams and Buck Owens.)
Cohn Nudie (Nuta Kotlyarenko, known professionally as Nudie Cohn, was an American tailor who designed decorative rhinestone-covered suits, known as "Nudie Suits", and other elaborate outfits for celebrities including Tex Williams, Porter Wagoner, Roy Rogers, John Wayne, and Elvis Presley. Cohn was equally famous for his garishly decorated automobiles, typically white Pontiac Bonneville convertibles, with silver-dollar-studded dashboards, pistol door handles and gearshifts, extended rear bumpers, and enormous longhorn steer horn hood ornaments. He famously wore mismatched boots to remind him of his humble beginnings.)
Cole Buddy (Edwin LeMar Cole, known as Buddy Cole, was a jazz pianist and orchestra leader. He played with a number of pop singers including Rosemary Clooney, Jill Corey, Johnnie Ray and The Four Lads. As the Buddy Cole Trio he recorded the album New Tricks with Bing Crosby.)
Cole Dennis (Actor Dennis Cole was in soap operas,  breaking out on the crime show Felony Squad. He was at one time married to Charlie's Angel actress Jaclyn Smith.)
Collins Ray (Actor Ray Collins played Lt Arthur Tragg on TV's Perry Mason.)
Colossal Head (The colossal head. The original was carved in basalt, dates from 300 BC-1500BC, and weighs over 2 tons.)
Compton Joyce (Joyce Compton started as a WAMPAS Baby Star in 1926, and subsequently acted in Imitation of Life, Magnificent Obsession, The Awful Truth, Mildred Pierce, and The Best Years of Our Lives.)
Conrad William (William Conrad may be best remembered as the detective "Cannon" TV. He was the larger half of "Jake and the Fat Man". He narrated some TV shows, and was marshal Matt Dillon on radio's Gunsmoke in the 50's.)
Convy Bert
Corday Rita (Rita Corday was an actress in 30 films during the 1940s and 1950s, which include 3 of "The Falcon..." movies, Gildersleeve on Broadway (1943), West of the Pecos (1945), The Truth About Murder (1946), The Exile (1947), Too Young to Kiss (1951), The Black Castle (1952), and her last, You for Me (1954). She married producer Harold Nebenzal and retired to raise a family.)
Couch William (William Couch was a stuntman/coordinator in The Green Berets, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Dirty Harry, Deliverance, Blazing Saddles, and Star Trek movies.)
Cowan Jerome (Jerome Cowan was a vaudeville headliner, then stage actor. His first film was being Beloved Enemy. He best roles were as Miles Archer, the doomed private eye partner of Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon, and Thomas Mara, the hapless district attorney who prosecutes Santa Claus in Miracle on 34th Street.)
Creed Roger (Roger Creed was a stuntman and coordinator from the 1940s thru 1980s. Films include Nocturne, Bad Day at Black Rock, Heart Like a Wheel, Batman Forever, Ghostbusters II, and Weekend at Bernie's.)
Crosby Gary (Gary Crosby was a singer and actor. He may have become better known for writing a revealing memoir of his father, entertainment legend Bing Crosby.)
Crothers Scatman (Actor Benjamin Scatman Crothers was in The Shining and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.)
Curley Pauline
Dale Virginia (Virginia Dale was Miss California and a Miss USA finalist in 1037. She danced as one of the Paxton Sisters, and acted most notably opposite Fred Astaire in Holiday Inn.)
Damiani Leo (Leo Damiani played violin in the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, and organized the Burbank Symphony Orchestra in 1944 and the Burbank Youth Symphony in 1948. He helped get the Starlight Amphitheater in Burbank built.)
Damon tory (Tory Damon was a cabaret singer and life-partner of Howard Greenfield, a successful pop/rock lyricist.)
Danielson George
Darby Ken (Kenneth Darby  was a composer, vocal arranger, lyricist, and conductor. He won oscars for film scores in  Porgy and Bess, The King and I, and Camelot, and a Grammy for Porgy and Bess.)
Darr Vondell (Vondell Darr was an actress, known for Scouts to the Rescue (1939), Sunrise (1927) and That Certain Age (1938). She was friends with Mickey Rooney and appeared in bit parts in a few of his films. She is unofficially considered the first child actress to ever talk in films, in 1928's On Trial. After retiring in 1941, she became a gourmet cook and painter.)
Dastigar Sabu (Actor Sabu Dastigir played the lead in 'Elephant Boy', and was 'Mowgli' in 'The Jungle Book'.)
David Hal (Hal David was a popular music lyricist, working with Sammy Kaye and Guy Lombardo, and helped Morty Nevins with four songs for the movie Two Gals and a Guy (1951). In 1957, David met composer Burt Bacharach, and the two teamed up and wrote their first hit "The Story of My Life", recorded by Marty Robbins in 1957. Bacharach and David wrote "Alfie", "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head", "This Guy's in Love with You", "I'll Never Fall in Love Again", "Do You Know the Way to San Jose", "Walk On By", "What the World Needs Now Is Love", "I Say a Little Prayer", "(There's) Always Something There to Remind Me", "One Less Bell to Answer" and "Anyone Who Had a Heart". David also worked on themes from 3 James Bond movies.)
Davis Beryl (Beryl Davis began singing for her father's band in England, and was a popular singer for Allied troops during WWII. Glenn Miller discovered her in London, and she sang for the Army Air Force Orchestra. Later, she sang with her father's big band, and with Frank Sinatra for a year on Your Hit Parade. She was part of The Four Girls singing group, which recorded sixteen singles, and albums which became best sellers. She also appeared in variety shows and films.)
Davis Bette
Davis Brad (Actor Brad Davis starred in Midnight Express, about a drug-smuggler imprisoned in Turkey. He died of AIDs contracted by intravenous drug use.)
Davis Gail (Gail Davis was best known as Annie Oakley in the 1950s TV Western series Annie Oakley. She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and is in the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame.)
Davis Rufe (Rufe Davis acted in about 30 westerns, and played Fred Smoot, the conductor, on TV's Petticoat Junction.)
Dawn Isabel (Isabel Dawn was a screenwriter, including Singin' in the Corn, Don't Bet on Blondes, and Remember Pearl Harbor. With Boyce de Gaw, she co-wrote 1937's Girl of the Golden West, which starred Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. She appeared in one episode of Cheyenne in 1958. She original worked at two newspapers, and acted on stage and radio.)
Day Laraine (Laraine Day acted as Nurse Mary Lamont in seven Dr. Kildare movies beginning  in 1939 with Lew Ayres, and prominent supporting parts in My Son, My Son! and  Hitchcock's thriller Foreign Correspondent.)
De Kova Frank (Frank De Kova was a teacher before the acting bug hit. His roles were usually the bad Mexican or Indian. He  may be best-known for his role as the colonel in Viva Zapata, or as Chief Wild Eagle on TVs F-Troop.)
De Normand George (George De Normand acted in Dick Tracy (1937).  The Gay Amigo (1949),  and Satan's Cradle (1949). He had uncredited parts in Citizen Kane, and A Raisin in the Sun. TV included several episodes of the Cisco Kid series, The Range Rider, Bourbon Street Beat,  Peter Gunn, The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, Have Gun - Will Travel, Dennis the Menace, The Untouchables, My Mother the Car, Mission: Impossible,The Big Valley, The Wild Wild West, and Gunsmoke.)
De Patie Edmond (Edmond De Patie was a film-industry executive as vice president and general manager of Warner Bros. Burbank studio. In 1955 he became president of the Motion Picture Relief Fund, later launching an unsuccessful campaign to establish a Motion Picture Exposition and Hall of Fame to honor film-making and to bring in revenue for the Motion Picture & Television Fund Country House. Given the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian award at the 1966 oscars.)
De Paul Gene (Gene de Paul was a pianist, composer and songwriter. A hit song was Teach Me Tonight, and he was nominated for a Tony for Seven Brides For Seven Brothers.)
De Toth Andre (Andre DeToth directed the 3-D movie House of Wax, despite being unable to see in 3-D due to losing an eye at an early age. He is known for his gritty B movies in the western and crime genres. In 1951 was co-nominated for an oscar  for best writing with William Bowers for The Gunfighter. He also directed Pitfall, and Crime Wave. One of his 7 wives was actress Veronica Lake.)
De Treaux Tamara (Tamara De Treaux was supposedly the world's shortest actress at 31 inches. She appeared in 5 movies and was used in ET The Extraterrestrial for model movement.)
De Vol Frank (Frank DeVol was a composer with 4 oscar nominations for movie scores.)
Dedeaux Rod (Rod Dedeaux coached baseball at USC for 45 seasons, winning 28 conference championships and 11 national titles including 5 straight from 1970–74, He was Coach of the Year six times, and named Coach of the Century by Collegiate Baseball magazine. In 2006, he was among the 10 initial inductees to the College Baseball Hall of Fame.)
Deer
DeeSandra
Denecke Henry (Henry Denecke invented the digital time-slate which replaced the mechanical 'clapper' to synchronize sound and action on film.)
Denny Reginald (Actor Reginald Denny was also an RAF pilot in WWI, the brigade boxing champ, and pioneer of radio-controlled models leading to an Army contract for RC target drones.)
Dent Vernon (Vernon Dent acted in Million Dollar Legs, Chip Off the Old Block, Kill the Umpire, The Harvey Girls and Rockin' in the Rockies. He was more known for two-reel comedies, especially The Three Stooges.)
Dickerson William
Dio Ronnie (Ronnie Dio was a heavy-metal singer who performed with Elf, Rainbow, Black Sabbath, Heaven & Hell, and his own band Dio.)
Diskant George (George Diskant was a cinematographer, whose early jobs included Banjo, and Desperate. Other credits include They Live by Night (1949), Port of New York (1949), The Racket (1951), On Dangerous Ground (1952), The Narrow Margin (1952), Beware, My Lovely (1952), and Kansas City Confidential (1952). Later, Diskant worked exclusively in TV shows such as Playhouse 90, The Westerner, and many episodes of The Rifleman.)
Disney Roy (Roy O. Disney was the brother of Walt Disney, and handled the business side of the Disney company. Had a son Roy E. Disney who was a company senior exec, and died in 2009.)
Dmytryk Edward (Director Edward Dmytryk made The Carpetbaggers, Broken Arrow, and The Caine Mutiny, had 6 actor in oscar-nominated performances, and later was a professor and author.)
Dodd Jimmie (Jimmie Dodd was an actor and the host of the 1950s The Mickey Mouse Club, and wrote the theme song, The Mickey Mouse Club March.)
Dugan Johnny (Johnny Dugan was an actor, known for You're in the Navy Now (1951) and The Colgate Comedy Hour (1950). He hosted his own TV show, "The Johnny Dugan Show," beginning in 1952. He was also emcee on the TV show "Ladies Choice.")
Duke George (George Duke was an American musician, known as a keyboard pioneer, composer, singer and producer in both jazz and popular mainstream music. He worked with numerous artists as arranger, music director, writer and co-writer, record producer and as a professor of music. He first made a name for himself with the album The Jean-Luc Ponty Experience with the George Duke Trio, and later with Frank Zappa.)
Dunphy Jerry (Jerry Dunphy was a TV news anchor in Los Angeles for many years. Part of his daily greeting in on his marker - 'From the desert to the sea, to all of Southern California, a good evening'.)
Durocher Leo (Leo Durocher was a Hall of Fame baseball player for 4 teams, and manager of 5 teams. A good fielder and not so great batter (.247 lifetime), he was ejected from the game 95 times as a manager, placing him 4th on that list.)
Duryea Dan (Actor Dan Duryea usually played the bad guy the audience loved to hate.)
Edeson Arthur (Arthur Edeson was a cinematographer on Robin Hood, The Thief of Bagdad, and The Lost World in the 20's, and Frankenstein, The Old Dark House, and The Invisible Man in the 30's. Nominated for 3 oscars.)
Eisley Anthony (Anthony Eisley starred in the '60s TV series Hawaiian Eye, and was in Onionhead, Frankie and Johnny, The Navy vs. the Night Monsters, Journey to the Center of Time, and The Doll Squad.)
Elliott Maxine (Maxine Elliott started her career at age 5. She acted in  200 films, and was on TV's All in the Family, The Jeffersons, Rhoda, Growing Pains and Frasier.)
Ellis Ron
England Hal (Hal England is best remembered for his roles as 'Waldo' on TV's Bewitched (1964-1972), and as Lt. Douglas Merrill on The Clear Horizon (1960-1962).)
English David (David Melvin English, known by the stage name Melvin Franklin, was the bass singer with the Motown group The Temptations from 1960 to 1994.)
Enright Daniel (Dan Enright and business partner Jack Barry created TV's  Winky Dink and You, Juvenile Jury, Life Begins at Eighty, Wisdom of the Ages, Back That Fact, You're On Your Own, Tic-Tac-Dough, Twenty One, Concentration, and Dough Re Mi.)
Essert Gary (In 1971, Gary Essert and Gary Abrahams co-founded FILMEX, the Los Angeles Film International Festival. Later, the two created the American Cinematheque in 1981. Both men passed away in 1992 from AIDS.)
Evans Josh (Joshua Evans was an actor, known for his role of Timmy, as a doll that the evil witch Tabitha Lenox brought to life with magic, in the soap opera Passions. Though he was 17 years old when Passions debuted, Evans had the appearance and voice of a small child due to achondroplasia, a form of dwarfism. Evans began at age 12 in various commercials. His fimls include Baby Geniuses, and Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas. TV included P.T. Barnum, Ally McBeal, 7th Heaven, and Poltergeist: The Legacy. He was nominated for an Emmy and won two Soap Opera Digest Awards.)
Evans Michael (Michael Evans acted on Broadway in "Gigi" with Audrey Hepburn, and toured as Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady in the late 1950s and 1960  in the USSR.  He appeared in the movie version of Bye Bye Birdie (1963), and TVs Rat Patrol, The Love Boat, Hart To Hart, and several episodes of The Young and the Restless. Patrica Sigris provided voice in TV's 1978 Black Beauty.)
Fallon Marie (Marie Wilson acted on radio and movies  from the 1930s thru the 70s. She was Irma in My Friend Irma in the 50's. Robert Fallon acted in 2 episodes of  Flight in 1958, and produced St. Patrick's Day TV Special in 1969, and Mr. Blackwell Presents TV Movie in 1968.)
Farnsworth Richard (Richard Farnsworth was a stuntman for over 30 years before moving to acting. He got an Oscar nomination in 1979 for Comes a Horseman.)
Feldman Marty
Fetherston Eddie (Eddie Fetherston appeared, mostly uncredited, more than forty times on the screen as a reporter, a newspaperman, a news or cinema operator or photographer - though he started in vaudeville comedy. Over 200 appearances include 13 Three Stooges films, True to the Navy (1930), Scarface, Charlie Chan at the Race Track, Kid Galahad, Topper, Flying G-Men, Meet Boston Blackie, Meet John Doe, It's a Wondeful Life (1946), The Babe Ruth Story, and his last role as a townsman in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1960).)
Field Walter (Walter Field was an actor and stuntman, among other things,  and lived to be almost 102 years old.)
Fisher Shug (Shug Fisher was a character actor, singer, songwriter, musician and comedian. During a 50-year career, he appeared in many Western films, often as a member of the Sons of the Pioneers in Roy Rogers serials. Fisher appeared on TV, including Gunsmoke and The Beverly Hillbillies. His comic trademarks included his ability to stutter at will and his bemused facial expressions.)
Fitts Buron (Buron Rogers Fitts was the 29th Lt Governor of California, from 1927 to 1928, and resigned to become a prosecutor in the Julian Petroleum Co scandal, and he was the LA County district attorney until 1940. He had been shot in the knee in the Battle of Argonne during WWI and limped for the rest of his life. He joined the Army Air Corps in 1942 with the rank of major. He was chief, intelligence, Pacific Overseas Air Technical Services. He committed suicide at age 78 .)
Florey Robert (Robert Florey was a director, screenwriter, film journalist, author and occasional actor. He directed the Marx Bros' The Cocoanuts, Murders in the Rue Morgue, and Daughter of Shanghai.)
Fontane Tony (Tony Fontane was a pop singer in the 40s and 50's. After a near-fatal car crash  and vision of God during a 30-day coma, he 'converted' from atheism to Christianity and became a gospel singer.)
Foster Ruth (Ruth Foster won a dance contest at age 12, then acted in TV's Ben Casey, Little House on the Prairie, two Little House TV-movies, and last appeared on Highway to Heaven in 1989. She also edited episodes of Matlock, Jake and the Fat Man, and the dcumentaries Paul Simon's Concert in the Park, and The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus. She was married to comedian Bobby Pinkus (Accardy).)
Francis Robert (Actor Robert Francis played the young ensign Willie Keith in 'The Caine Mutiny'. He only made 4 films before dying in a private plane crash.)
freeman mona
Frey Arno (Arno Frey was a German actor who portrayed the Nazi villain Dr. Lang in the Frank Buck movie Tiger Fangs (1943).  He acted in more than 90 movies, including Man Hunt (1941), The Valley of Vanishing Men (1942), Hangmen Also Die (1943), The Adventures of Rusty (1945), Secret Agent X-90, and 13 Rue Madeleine.)
Fuller Bobby (Bobby Fuller was the lead of the Bobby Fuller Four, most famous for the song 'I Fought the Law (And the Law Won)'. Opinions vary on the cause of his early death.)
Gallery Tom (Tom Gallery was a silent-screen actor, and was married throughout the 1920s to actress Zasu Pitts.)
Gallico Al (Al Gallico began his career in running errands for the classical music publishing corporation G. Schirmer. After many years inckuding as GM with Leeds Music and Shapiro-Bernstein, he opened the independent publishing venture, Al Gallico Music Corporation. One of his first staff writers was the now legendary Billy Sherrill. Gallico’s worked included British rock and classic country. He published country standards including “Stand by Your Man,” “Almost Persuaded,” “The Most Beautiful Girl” and “Let Me Be There,” while his catalog also contains “House of the Rising Sun” and the Zombies’ “Time of the Season,” “Hold Your Head Up” and “Liar.” In 1995, he was inducted into The Songwriters Hall Of Fame when he received the Abe Olman Publisher’s Award.)
Galstyan Henrik (Henrik Galstyan was a judo world champion, and was shot to death at a mini-mall in an argument over money.)
Gardiner Reginald (Reginald Gardiner acted in Hitchcock's 1926 The Lodger, Christmas In Connecticut, Clune Brown, Halls of Montezuma, Ain't Misbehavin', Burke's Law, and The Phyllis Diller Show, Batman and The Monkees.)
Garrison Michael (Michael Garrison started as an actor, and was an associate producer on Peyton Place, The Long Hot Summer, The Sound and the Fury, and An Affair to Remember.  He produced The Dark at the Top of the Stairs and Crowded Sky. He was the creator of TV's The Wild Wild West, which he pitched as James Bond on horseback.)
Gaye Frankie (Frankie Gaye was a recording artist and brother of Marvin Gaye. Both Frankie and Marvin sang in church and then with local doo-wop groups. Frankie was a disc jockey in the Army in Vietnam, and  his recollections of the Vietnam War inspired Marvin's song, "What's Happening Brother". Frankie's memoirs entitled Marvin Gaye: My Brother, was released after his death from a heart attack.)
George Wally (Wally George was an abrasive  TV show personality, famous for yelling at call-in viewers.)
Gibb Andy (Andrew Roy Gibb was the youngest of the musical Bee Gees. Depression, booze and drugs took a toll on him and he died just after his 30th birthday.)
Gibb Hughie (Hughie Gibb was a musician  and band leader, and father of the Bee Gees band members.)
Gilbert Paul (Paul Gilbert was an actor in 1950s and 60s, and was in Cat Ballou with Lee Marvin. He was the adoptive father of actress Melissa Gilbert.)
Gillespie Haven (Haven Gillespie wrote Santa Claus Is Coming To Town.)
Gilmore Art (Art Gilmore was a voice actor and announcer heard in on radio and television programs, children's records, movies, trailers, radio commercials, and documentary films. He also appeared in several television series and a few feature films.)
Gimbel Roger (Roger Gimbel was a producer primarily of TV movies, many based on real events. In 1973, Gimbel shared an Emmy with George Schaefer for A War of Children. Other credits include Queen of the Stardust Ballroom, The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, The Amazing Howard Hughes, Chernobyl: The Final Warning, The Glass House, I Heard the Owl Call My Name, Shattered Dreams, and Tell Me Where It Hurts.)
Giorgio Tony (Norman Hall was a screenwriter with 93 credits from the 1940s-60s, including 1933's The Three Musketeers, 1937's Secret Agent X-9, Jungle Jim, and Radio Patrol, 1939's Buck Rogers, 1940's Adventures of Red Ryder, and 1951's Gene Autry and The Mounties, and 6 episodes of TV's Annie Oakley in 1954.)
Givney Kathryn (Kathryn Givney was an actress best-known for My Friend Irma (1949), and A Place in the Sun (1951), Guys and Dolls (1955), and Daddy Long Legs (1955). TV roles included Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Perry Mason, Hazel, My three Sons, and lastly, Owen Marshall 1n 1972.)
Goulding Alf (Alfred Goulding was a film director and screenwriter. He directed 182 films between 1917 and 1959, including comedy shorts for Hal Roach and Mack Sennett, and Laurel and Hardy's A Chump At Oxford.)
Grant Earl (Earl Grant was a pianist, organist, and vocalist in the 1950s and 60s. His single, The End, rose to #7, as did his album, Ebb Tide. He appeared in Tender Is the Night, Juke Box Rhythm, and on The Ed Sullivan Show.)
Green William (Duke Green has 61 acting credits, including minor roles in King Kong, Call of the Wild, Bringing Up Baby, Beau Geste, Perils of Nyoka, They Were Expendable, Mighty Joe Young, Earth vs the Flying Saucers, and Donovan's Reef. He has 78 credits as a stunt man, including in Don Juan, King Kong, Call of the Wild, Dick Tracy Returns, Submarine Patrol, Dodge City, Wake Island,  Drums of Fu Manchu, They Were Expendable, Joan of Arc, and The Great Race.)
Greenfield Howard (Howard Greenfield composed the theme music for TV's The Wackiest Ship in the Army, Hazel, Gidget, Love on a Rooftop, Occasional Wife, The Ugliest Girl in Town, Bewitched, and A Year at the Top. He co-wrote four songs that reached #1: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" with Neil Sedaka; "Everybody's Somebody's Fool" and "Breakin' in a Brand New Broken Heart" with Connie Francis, and "Love Will Keep Us Together" with The Captain & Tennille.)
Gross Charles (Charles Gross was a film editor on 11 movies, mostly 1950's sci-fi, including It Conquered the World, Attack of the Crab Monsters, Not of This Earth, and Invasion of the Saucer Men. Other films include Gunslinger starring John Ireland, and his last credit for director Roger Corman's Sorority Girls.)
Haggerty Don (Don Stansauk was a professional wrestler know as Hard-boiled Haggerty. He did some acting after his pro career.)
Hale Monte (Monte Hale  was a country singer and movie actor of B-Western films, and starred in Home on the Range in 1946. He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.)
Hall Jon (Charles Locher, known as actor Jon Hall, found success in the 1937 movie The Hurricane. After suffering with cancer, he shot himself.)
Hall_Norman
Hamblen Stuart (Stuart Hamblen was a radio singing cowboy, actor, Christian songwriter,  alcoholic-turned-temperance supporter, and recurring political candidate including the '52 Presidency.)
Hamilton Sue (Sue Hamilton was the April 1965 Playmate of the Month as Sue Williams. She acted in How to Stuff a Wild Bikini, Sergeant Dead Head, Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine, The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini and Fireball 500 before her suicide.)
Hampton Orville (Orville Hampton was a writer of bad TV and B movies, then contributed to Flipper, Perry Mason, Lassie and Hawaii 5-0.)
Hancock John (John Hancock was an actor whose film appearances include Bonfire of the Vanities, Crossroads, A Soldier's Story, and Airplane II. TV included  Roots: TNG, and multiple episodes of Love & War, Pacific Station, LA Law, Star Trek: TNG, Cop Rock, Family Ties, and Hardcastle and McCormick.)
Hannah Jack (Jack Hannah.)
Hardaway Ben (Ben Hardaway  was an animation director, writer, and voice actor. He supplied the voice of Woody Woodpecker in many cartoon shorts.)
Harding Ann (Actress Ann Harding started in movies in 1929, co-starring with Fredric March in Paris Bound.. She worked on and off over the years, working again with Fredric March in The Man In the Gray Flannel Suit in 1956.)
Harling W Franke (W Franke Harling was a composer of film scores, operas, and popular music. He spent two years at  West Point, and composed both its hymn, The Corps, and its official march, West Point Forever. Won an oscar for Stagecoach.)
Harris Laura (Laura Ellen Harris was a violinist, and played other instruments while touring the world with 'all girl' swing bands in the 1930s and 1940s.)
Harvey M Eugene (M. Eugene Harvey had a short career in Hollywood but  is mostly known as an aerospace engineer who worked on the Apollo program.)
Hatley T Marvin (Marvin Hatley was a  film composer and musical director, with the Hal Roach studio from 1929-40. He composed The Cookoo Song which was Laurel and Hardy's theme song. He twice earned oscar nominations.)
Hayes George (George is better known as 'Gabby' Hayes, a radio, film and TV actor who usually played the sidekick to the star.)
Hayes Sam (Sam Hayes was an actor, known for They Made Me a Criminal (1939),  High Sierra (1941) and The Hitch-Hiker (1953). All of his 82 roles were as the announcer or broadcaster.)
Hayward Herbert (Herbert Heyward, as Herbert Haywood, acted in The Strawberry Blonde (1941), King of the Pecos (1936) and Green Grass of Wyoming (1948). Other uncredited appearances included King's Row, Yankee Doodle Dandy, The Egg and I, They Died with Their Boots On, The Grapes of Wrath, and Scarlet Street.)
Healy Jim (Jim Healy started on radio sports out of college, and eventually had his own show, complete with sound effects, repetitive sound-bites, and his trade-mark line "Is...it...true?")
Hefti Neal (Neal Hefti was a composer who's credits include the Batman and Odd Couple themes.)
Heidt Horace (Horace Heidt was a pianist, big band leader, and radio and TV personality. He toured vaudeville, and performed through the 1930s and 40s. He appeared as himself in Pot O' Gold.)
Hendrix Wanda (Actress Wanda Hendrix was featured in several forgetable movies, and may be best known for her brief marriage to US hero Audie Murphy.)
henry buck (Buck Henry, born Henry Zuckerman, was an American actor, writer, comedian, and filmmaker. He was a co-director on Heaven Can Wait alongside Warren Beatty, and a co-writer for The Graduate, and What's Up, Doc?. He began on TV with Steve Allen in The New Steve Allen,  co-created Get Smart with Mel Brooks, and hosted Saturday Night Live 10 times. Henry shared an Oscar nomination with Calder Willingham for their screenplay of The Graduate, in which he also appeared in a supporting role as a hotel concierge. Henry's cameo in The Player (1992) had him (playing himself) pitching a 25-years-later sequel to The Graduate, which Henry later claimed led to real-life interest in such a project from some studios. Other screenwriting credits include the sex farce Candy, the romantic comedies The Owl and the Pussycat (1970) and What's Up, Doc? (1972), the satire Catch-22 (1970), the thriller The Day of the Dolphin (1973), the comedy Protocol (1984), and the dark crime dramedy To Die For (1995). In several of these, he also a)
Hodgson James (James Day Hodgson was a politician, and served 1970-1973 as Richard Nixon's Secretary of Labor, and from 1974-1977, he served as the Ambassador to Japan under Gerald Ford. Beginning in 1977, Hodgson served as the Chairman of the Board of the Uranium Mining Company. From April 24, 2010, until his death, Hodgson was the oldest living former Cabinet member.)
Holloway Red
Howard Jean (Actress Jean Speegle Howard is the mother of actor/director Ron Howard and actor Clint Howard.)
Howell Hoke (Hoke Howell was an actor with spots on TVs The Andy Griffith Show, Green Acres, Here Come the Brides, Columbo, JAG, The Fall Guy, Hunter, Webster, Happy Days and Scarecrow & Mrs. King. Movies include Splendor In The Grass, Far And Away, Grant theft Auto, Geronimo: An American Legend, and cult classics Humanoids From the Deep, and Kingdom of the Spiders, plus exploitation films such as Slaughter's Big Rip-Off, Bikini Drive-In, Vice Girls and Bikini Hoe-Down. He wrote screenplays for Click: The Calendar Girl Killer, One Block Away and B.O.R.N. and also three episodes of "The Rookies.")
Huffman David (David Huffman acted in the lead role in Tom Edison: The Boy Who Lit Up the World, and appeared in Ice Castles, F.I.S.T., Blood Beach, St. Helens and Firefox. He was killed by a thief he was chasing.)
Hutchence Michael (Michael Hutchence was the singer for INXS.)
Ingram Rex (Rex Ingram earned a degree in medicine, then acted, most notably in 1918's silent Tarzan of the Apes, as De Lawd in 1936's The Green Pastures, and as Jim in 1939's Huckleberry Finn with Mickey Rooney.)
Inn Frank (Frank Inn, born Elias Franklin Freeman was an animal trainer including the dogs in the Thin Man and Benji movies, the cat Orangey in The Incredible Shrinking Man, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and The Diary  of Anne Frank, and the pig from Green Acres. After his wife's death, Inn retired and devoted his time to writing poetry, creating a museum of memorabilia from his long career, and training a new generation of animal wranglers. Rumor has it the ashes from some of his pets are buried with him, though it is illegal at Forest Lawn.)
Iwerks Ubbe (Ubbe Iwerks was Walt Disney's first cartoon animator. He completed the first Mickey Mouse short, Plane Crazy, in only 2 weeks.)
Jackson DeeDee (Delores "DeeDee" Jackson was the ex-wife of Jackson 5 member Tito Jackson. Her boyfriend, Donald Bohana, said at his trial that she died in a swimming pool accident, but prosecutors said she had been beaten and choked.)
Jackson Eddie (Eddie Jackson was a stage and movie during the 1930-1940s, and appeared with Margaret O'Brien and Jimmy Durante in the 1944 comedy Music for Millions.  TV included the All Star Revue (1950), The Jimmy Durante Show (1954), and President Kennedy's Birthday Salute (1962).)
Jackson_Thomas (Thomas Edward Jackson started on Broadway in juvenile parts from 1899-1903, then gained experience as a theatrical director and producer. Jackson earned notoriety as a tough sarcastic detective in the 1926 hit show, "Broadway." The 43-year old actor was enticed to Hollywood, where he reprised his role in one of Universal's first "all talking pictures." He then was in demand in character roles, including as Thomas Flaherty in the classic "Little Caesar" (1930) as Edward G. Robinson's nemesis, and as a detective in Fritz Lang's The Woman in the Window (1944). He appeared on TV through the mid-1960s.)
James Claire (Claire James was Miss California in 1938 and finished First Runner-Up in the 1938 Miss America pageant. She acted in 42 roles, including in Jack Armstrong (1947), Voodoo Man (1944) and Hop Harrigan America's Ace of the Airways (1946). She had brief marriages to musical producer Busby Berkeley, Raymond Dorsey, William Girard, and lastly, Dr. Peter L. Hoffman.)
James Dennis (Dennis James is credited as the host of the first network TV game show, and he hosted Chance of a Lifetime, The Price Is Right, Name That Tune, High Finance, and Lets Make a Deal.)
jarreau al (Alwin Jarreau was a singer and musician, winning seven Grammy awards. In college, he sang with a group called the Indigos. He graduated with a degree in psychology and later earned a degree in vocational rehabilitation. While working as a rehab counselor, he played in a jazz trio headed by George Duke. In 1967, he joined with guitarist Julio Martinez, becoming the main attraction at a Sausalito night club.  The duo headed to the LA area, and appeared at popular clubs and on late night talk shows. Jarreau became involved with the United Church of Religious Science, and Scientology. He began writing his own lyrics with his Christian spirituality influencing his work.He was also a part of "We Are the World" in which he sang the line, "...and so we all must lend a helping hand. He has a star on the Hollywood WoF.)
Jarrott Charles (Charles Jarrott directed The Other Side of Midnite, Mary Queen of Scots, and Anne of a Thousand Days which earned him a Golden Globe.)
Jarvis Howard (Howard Jarvis was a businessman, lobbyist, and politician. He is probably best remembered as the guy in the taxi in the beginning and end of the movie Airplane.)
Jason Sybil (Sybil Jason sang, danced and played the piano from a very early age. Her first performances were mimicking entertainers of the day such as Mae West, Maurice Chevalier, Greta Garbo and Jimmy Durante. She was in 16 films including two Shirley Temple movies - The Little Princess, and The Blue Bird which was her last film (and much of her performance was cut).)
Jay Tony (Tony Jay was an on-screen actor in through the 80's then moved to voice work as Claude Frollo from Disney's The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Megabyte from ReBoot, and the Elder God (and the original Mortanius) from the Legacy of Kain series, Shere Khan in TaleSpin, The Legend of Prince Valiant, 2 Stupid Dogs, Virgil in Mighty Max, TMNT, the Draggit in Invasion America, Rugrats, and many others. .)
Jefferies Dean (Edward Dean Jeffries was a custom car designer and fabricator, as well as stuntman and stunt coordinator for film and TV. Jeffries, with neighbor and racer Troy Ruttman, worked on cars together. After Ruttman joined with JC Agajanian, the Indianapolis 500 race team and Ascot Speedway owner, Agajanian hired Jeffries to stripe and letter his cars in 1953. Mobil Oil hired him to paint many of the Indy race cars and helmets,  including Jim Rathmann, Parnelli Jones, and AJ Foyt, and became Foyt's paint and body man. After that, in 1962, he worked for designer and builder Carroll Shelby on the Cobra. He began custom fabrication in the 1960s and built the Mantaray, Black Beauty, Monkeemobile, Landmaster from Damnation Alley, moon buggy from Diamonds Are Forever, trolley from Who Framed Roger Rabbit, and the custom fabrication work on the movie Convoy.)
Jenks Si (Howard "Si" Jenk was a character actor in over 180 roles. In "Captain January," he teaches Shirley Temple how to spit. In "Drums Along the Mohawk," Jenks attempts to get reluctant Edna Mae Oliver to go to the fort for protection from the Indians. In a "Day At The Races," he arrives with a telegram for horse doctor "Hugo Z. Hakenbush," (Groucho Marx).  Jenks passes by Clark Gable and Jean Harlow in "Saratoga" and is the man gulled out of his money by Will Rogers in "Steamboat Around The Bend."  In "Topper" Jenks is a surprised passerby finding Reginald Owen talking to a ghost that he, Jenks, cannot see. In "Stagecoach", Jenks is the bartender on the porch hoping to get a glimpse of  Claire Trevor's petticoats. In "My Little Chickadee" with WC Fields, he plays a love struck deputy sheriff who Mae West manages to flatter and get the six guns out of his holster.)
Jerome Patti (Patti Jerome started as a singer with Jerry Blaine’s Jubilee Records. She recorded with the Eddie Wilcox Orchestra. Later in life she was an actress appearing in the movies Alligator, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, and Buddy Buddy. TV included Archie Bunker's Place, Emergency! and The Streets of San Francisco.)
Jesus Statue
Johnson Clarence (Kelly Johnson was the head of Lockheed's secret Skunk Works, and developed many technologically-advanced aircraft including the P-38 Lightning in WWII, and the U-2 and SR-71 spy planes.)
Johnson Coy (Coy Johnson acted in Ride Lonesome,The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond, Comanche Station, and TV's The Virginian.)
Jolley I Stanford (Isaac Stanford Jolley was a character actor, primarily in western roles as cowboys, law-enforcement officers, or villains. Jolley appeared in 500 roles, including Corregidor, Joan of Arc, and Sands of Iwo Jima. One-time father-in-law of actor Forrest Tucker.)
Jolson Harry (Harry Jolson was the older brother of singer Al Jolson, and the brothers had a Vaudeville act together for several years. Harry was Al's manager for a time.)
jones mickey
Joslyn Allyn (Allyn Joslyn made his stage debut at 17, and soon appeared regularly on Broadway. His film debut was in They Won't Forget (1937). TV included 8 episodes of The Eve Arden Show, and 26 episodes of McKeever & the Colonel. He was also busy as a radio actor on over 3,000 shows.)
Kallman Richard (Dick Kallman acted in movies and TV, including starring in  Hank, and Medical Center. He also recorded an album, and later joined a partnership to manufacture women's play clothes and party clothes, and also began working as a dealer in antiques, silver, and art. He and his partner were murdered during a burglary.)
Kane Bob
Kane Bob (Bob Kane created the "Batman" comics in 1939, among others.)
Kassel Art (Art Kassel was a saxophone and clarinet player, and leader of "Kassels in the Air", a society orchestra which played 'sweet' (rather than swing) dance music to audiences in the Midwest. His longest engagements were at the Bismarck Hotel in Chicago (15 years) and at the Aragon ballroom. Benny Goodman was at one time featured with Kassel's band.)
Kearns Joseph (Joseph Kearns was an old-time radio actor, but is most famous as the neighbor, George Wilson, in TV's Dennis the Menace. He was a pipe-organist in theater and radio before his voice and acting career.)
Keaton Buster (Joseph Francis Keaton Jr. , nicknamed Buster, was a silent-era comedian. 'All my life I have been happiest when the folks watching me said to each other, 'Look at the poor dope, will ya?)
Kelly Orry (Australian-born Orry Kelly was an  Oscar-winning costume designer for An American in Paris, Les Girls, and Some Like it Hot.)
Kent Paula (Paula Kent Meehan was a businesswoman, executive and philanthropist. She co-founded the Redken hair care products company with Jheri Redding. She worked as a fashion model and acted in Love for Lydia (1977), State Trooper (1956) and Within These Walls (1974).)
kilmister lemmie
Kilmister Lemmy (Ian Fraser Kilmister,, known as Lemmy, was a musician, singer and songwriter who founded and fronted the rock band Motörhead. He was known for his appearance, including mutton chops, and his gravelly voice. He also had minor roles in film and TV.)
Kilmister Lemmy (Ian Fraser Kilmister, known as Lemmy, was a musician, singer and songwriter who founded and fronted the rock band Motörhead. He was known for his appearance, including mutton chops, and his gravelly voice. He also had minor roles in film and TV.)
King Pete (Pete King was a composer and conductor for movies of the 1950s-70s, and for TV's Happy Days. He composed The Mood I'm In, A Night Out, The Wide Open Spaces, The Breaking Point, Whim of Fancy and Lovers Rhapsody.)
King Rodney (Rodney King, a black man, was videotaped while being beaten by white cops after trying to evade them to avoid a probation violation and being uncooperative. The tail-end of the beating was videotaped and shown on the nightly news. The original acquittal is credited as leading to the 1993 Los Angeles riots. His famous news conference contained the (mis) quote on his marker.)
Klune_Raymond (Raymond Klune began in the mail room for director D W Griffith, eventually rising to be general manager of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1958. Klune had been production manager on 41 films, including 1939's Gone With the Wind. He is credited in 1967 with the concept of re-releasing "Gone With the Wind" on 70-millimeter film and in stereo sound. Over the years Klune was an executive with Selznick International and 20th Century Fox.)
Kolzak Stephen (Stephen Kolzak was as senior VP of casting and talent at Columbia Pictures Television and previously, manager of West Coast casting for NBC and VP of casting for Embassy Television. TV shows he cast include Cheers, Starsky and Hutch, Facts of Life, Silver Spoons, One Day at a Time, The Jeffersons, and Who's the Boss?  The annual GLAAD Stephen F. Kolzak Award is presented to an openly LGBT member of the entertainment or media community for his or her work toward eliminating homophobia.)
Korngold George (George Korngold was a record producer and music editor and film producer. He was the younger son of Austrian composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold. As a record producer, George co-produced the 14-volume Classic Film Scores Series, and produced a series of 'landmark' recordings of his father's work. In 1979, he produced one of the first digital audio recordings - the first commercial release of his father's music for "Kings Row". In Hollywood,  Korngold was a music editor on The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964), Fedora (1978), The Fury (1978) and Outland (1981).)
Kovacs Ernie
Krasna Erle (Erle Krasna was an occasional actress, and fourth wife of singer Al Jolson. Upon his death 5 years later, she controlled  nearly half of his $4-million estate and his musical legacy. A year later she married oscar-winning screenwriter Norman Krasna.)
Krasna Norman (Norman Krasna was a screenwriter, best known for screwball comedies centered around a case of mistaken identity. Krasna also directed three films during a forty-year career.. He earned four oscar nominations for screenwriting, winning once for 1943's Princess O'Rourke, which he also directed.)
Kroger William (William Saul Kroger  was a medical doctor who pioneered the use of hypnosis in medicine. Though he was trained as a gynecologist and obstetrician, his contributions include psychiatry, psychosomatic illness and treatment, endocrinology, neurobiology and bio-engineering. He is the author of the medical textbook Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, and others.)
Kruger Otto (Otto Kruger acted in Chained with Clark Gable and Joan Crawford, and in Magnificent Obsession. He usually played the heavy or businessman.)
Kurtis Frank (Automobile designer Frank Kurtis produced everything from midget racers to five Indy 500 winners.)
Kuter Kay (Kay Kuter acted in The Last Starfighter, Warlock, Gross Anatomy, and Forbidden Warrior. TV included Bonanza, Perry Mason, Gunsmoke, Star Trek: TNG and DS9, ER, Charmed, and Seinfeld. He voiced Hershey's Kisses ads for 14 years.)
LaLanne Jack (Jack LaLanne was a body-builder and health-and-fitness  guru on TV and in books. He opened  fitness gyms in the 30's, and performed occasional feats such as pulling boat while handcuffed (at age 60+).)
Lally_Mike (Mike Lally was an actor, mostly in small supporting roles, with 340 credits including Citizen Kane, Singin' in the Rain, Kid Galahad, The Ballad of Josie, The Sting, and Coma. On TV, he appeared on The Twilight Zone, Twin Detectives, Future Cop.  He was in 24 episodes of Columbo in various bits such as crime-scene photographer or cab driver, but also had some speaking roles.)
Lamour Dorothy (Dorothy Lamour was Miss New Orleans of 1931. She made over 60 films, 6 of which had her in a floral wrap-around sarong, mostly in the Bob Hope/Bing Crosby 'Road to...' movies.)
Landers Muriel
Lane Lenita (Lenita Lane acted on Broadway, then mostly uncredited in film from the 1930s-1950s. Her most notable film role was her last in The Bat (1959), as Lizzie Allen) with Agnes Moorehead, Vincent Price and Darla Hood. Other films include Imitation of Life (1934), The Women (1939), The Devil on Wheels (1947'), Castle in the Desert (1942),  and "The Mad Magician" (1954). She was married to silent film star, film director, and screenwriter Crane Wilbur.)
Lang Fritz (Director Fritz Lang is most famous for the movie M with Peter Lorre. He refused the offer to be head of the German Cinema Institute, and fled Germany before WWII.)
Lang June (June Lang started in vaudeville, and theater chorus lines as young as age 13,  Her promising film career in the 30's abruptly ended after getting bad press when she married a Chicago mobster.)
Lansing Mary (Mary Lansing was an actress starting with 1929's Happy Days, and appeared on The Andy Griffith Show (1960), and Mayberry R.F.D. (1968). She voiced Aunt Ena and Mrs. Possum in 1942's Bambi. Her last role was on Apple's Way in 1978.)
Lantz Walter (Walter Lantz originated, and was the voice of, the animated character Woody Woodypecker.)
Larson Nicolette (Singer Nicolette Larson is probably best known for her cover of Neil Young's Lotta Love.  She was Valerie Bertinelli's maid of honor at her wedding to Eddie Van Halen.)
Lathrop Philip (Philip Lathrop was a cinematographer with 87 credits including Rawhide, Peter Gunn, Days of Wine and roses, the Pink Panather, 36 Hours, The Illustrated Man, The Gypsy Moths, They Shoot Horses Don't They?, Portnoy's Complaint, Airport 1975, The Killer Elite, Airport '77,  Deadly Friend, and his last, Little Girl Lost.)
lau wesley (Wesley Lau was an actor, best known for his role on TV's Perry Mason as Lt. Andy Anderson. After serving in the Air Corp in WWII, Lau studied playwriting and earned a MA at Yale Drama School. He continued his studies at The Actors Studio in NY. He wanted to be a writer, but found more acting jobs in NY. Lau first appeared on Perry Mason as a defendant, then made 81 appearances as Lt. Anderson. Other TV includes Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Gunsmoke, Have Gun-Will Travel, Peter Gunn, The Twilight Zone, The Time Tunnel, The Big Valley, Mission: Impossible, Cannon, Wagon Train, and The Six Million Dollar Man. He reunited with Raymond Burr in an episode of Ironside. Movies include I Want To Live!, and The Alamo.)
Laughton Charles
Laurel Stan
Laurel Stan (Arthur Stanley Jefferson was better-known as Stan Laurel, the skinny half of the Laurel and Hardy comedy team. Even after a stroke and retirement, he replied to fan letters, and was listed in the telephone book.)
Lebon Yvette (Yvette Lebon studied music and art before going into acting. During WWII, she was the mistress of Jean Luchaire, a French journalist and politician.  After moving to the US, she married producer Nathan Wachsberger. She turned 103 in August 2013, and was France's oldest actress.)
Lee Arthur (Arthur Taylor Lee was the frontman, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist of the Los Angeles rock band Love, best known for the critically acclaimed 1967 album, Forever Changes.)
Lee Robert (Robert Edwin Lee was a playwright and lyricist. With his writing partner, Jerome Lawrence, Lee worked for Armed Forces Radio during World War II, and they became the most prolific writing partnership in radio. They turned to live theater in 1955 with Inherit the Wind, and wrote Auntie Mame and First Monday in October. In 1965, Lawrence and Lee founded the American Playwrights' Theater which produces their wildly successful play, The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail. With James Hilton, they created the 1956 musical adaptation of Hilton's novel Lost Horizon, entitled Shangri-La. They also adapted Auntie Mame into the hit musical Mame with composer Jerry Herman. Lee was married to actress Janet Waldo, who provided the voice of many well-known cartoon characters, including Judy Jetson.)
LeGault Lance (Lance LeGault acted on TV's AirWolf, Dynasty, The A-Team, Magnum PI, and Werewolf, and was Col. Glass in the Bill Murray movie Stripes.)
Lenox_John (John Thomas Lenox was a production manager and assistant director, known for Splash (1984), Ishtar (1987) The Long Hot Summer (1985), TV's Happy Days, and Laverne & Shirley, plus TV movies Rescue from Gilligan's Island, The Brady Girls Get Married, and The Executioner's Song.)
Leonard Herbert (Herbet Leonard was a  a production manager, then an independent producer of TV's The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin, Route 66, and Naked City, the last two were notable for being shot on location. Films included The Perils of Pauline (1967), and Popi (1969).)
Lester_Harry (Harry Lester, best known by his stage name The Great Lester, was a vaudeville ventriloquist. One of Lester's most noted acts was a bit where he called up Heaven and Hell in search of his sister. He was also the first ventriloquist to walk among the audience while his dummy whistled. Lester was also a noted teacher of ventriloquism, and there are many examples of student recordings.Edgar Bergen, one of the most famous ventriloquists of all time, was one of this students.)
Levey Stan (Stan Levey was drummer with Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker, and later a professional photographer.)
Levitt Harold (Harold Levitt was an architect, and designed homes for Walter Mirisch, Steven Spielberg, Lew Wasserman, Olivia Newton John, Ross Hunter, Quincy Jones, Burt Lancaster, Dean Martin, Debbie Reynolds, Lionel Richie, Kenny Rogers and Hal Wallis. He also designed the Riviera Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip and the headquarters of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills.)
Liberace
Liberace 2
Liberace_Photos
Liberty Mural
Lincoln Mural
Lincoln Mural
Lincoln Sign
Lincoln Statue
Lincoln Statue
Lindon Lionel (Lionel Lindon directed movies from the 40's thru 70's and TV's McHale's Navy and The Munsters.)
Linkletter Diane (Diane Linkletter was Art's daughter, and jumped from a balcony to her death....)
Loadvine William (William Loadvine was Executive Director of Advancement at USC's Keck School of Medicine, and an auto racing enthusiast.)
Loftin Carey (Carey Loftin is famous for not being seen as the truck driver in Steven Spielberg's Duel, and the stunt-driver in Vanishing Point, Bullitt, The Love Bug, Thunderbolt and Lightfoot, and others.)
Lokey William (Hicks Lokey was an animator for cartoons in the 30s, then Fantasia, Dumbo, Scooby Doo, Godzilla, Pac Man, Smurfs, and Paw Paws.)
Love Cecil (Cecil Love won 2 technical oscars on  separate occasions "For the concept, engineering, and development of the Acme-Dunn Optical Printer for motion picture special effects". He contributed special effects to The Searching Eye, Melody Cruise, and Airport.)
MacDonald Kenneth (Kenneth MacDonald was an actor, starting in movies in 1930. He had a flair for comedy and made appearances in Three Stooges comedies including Monkey Businessmen, Hold That Lion!, Crime on Their Hands, Punchy Cowpunchers, and Loose Loot. He had a bit role as Jerry Lewis's father in 1961's The Ladies' Man, and was a member of the court martial board in The Caine Mutiny (1954).On TV he played a judge in 32 episodes of Perry Mason.)
MacGibbon Harriet (Harriet MacGibbon had a long career on the stage before getting into movies and TV. Her most famous role was that of Mrs. Drysdale, wife the banker, on 55 episodes of The Beverly Hillbillies.)
MacGregor Chummy (Chummy MacGregor, was a pianist and composer, and was Glenn Miller’s pianist from 1936-1942. He composed the songs Moon Dreams, It Must Be Jelly ('Cause Jam Don't Shake Like That), and Slumber Song. He was a consultant and technical advisor for The Glenn Miller Story (1953), starring James Stewart and June Allyson.)
maglieri mario (Mario Maglieri was born in Seppino, Italy, and came to America when he was 4. After managing restaurants and clubs in Chicago, he moved to Los Angeles in the 1960s to manage the Whiskey a Go Go on Hollywood's famous Sunset Strip. He eventually took over ownership, and with partners opened the Rainbow Bar & Grill in 1972.)
Main Marjorie (Actress Mary Krebs changed her name to Marjorie Main so as not to embarrass her family, the father of which was a minister. She is known for the role as Ma Kettle in a series of Ma and Pa Kettle movies.)
Malotte Albert (Albert Hay Malotte was a pianist, organist, composer and educator. While in the Special Services in WWII, he toured with the USO in New Guinea, Australia and Europe. Malotte composed a number of film scores, including those from Disney. Two movies won best Short Subject oscars(Ferdinand the Bull in 1939 and The Ugly Duckling in 1940), he is best remembered for a setting of the Lord's Prayer. Written in 1935, it was recorded by the baritone John Charles Thomas, and remained popular in churches and at weddings in the US for some decades.)
Mamaux Al (Albert Leon Mamaux was a professional baseball player and manager. He pitched four innings in the 1920 World Series for Brooklyn. He spent 20 years during the off-season touring as a vaudeville singer and was known as The Golden Voice Tenor.)
Manne Shelly (Sheldon Manne was a jazz drummer. He was known for his versatility and played a number of other styles, including Dixieland, swing, bebop, avant-garde jazz and fusion. He contributed to the musical background of hundreds of Hollywood films and TV programs.)
Manoukian Shavarsh
maren jerry (Jerry Maren was an actor who played a Munchkin member of the Lollipop Guild in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz, handing a lollipop to Dorothy Gale (Judy Garland). He was the last surviving adult Munchkin 2014. Maren appeared in an Our Gang short Tiny Troubles as the criminal "Light-Fingered Lester", and was an extra in the Western film The Terror of Tiny Town. After The Wizard of Oz, Maren appeared in many movies and TV shows, including as a circus performer in the Marx Brothers film At The Circus (1939) and as an ape in Battle for the Planet of the Apes (1973). He is also featured, along with fellow Munchkin Billy Curtis, in American International Pictures' release Little Cigars (1973), about a gang of "midgets" on a crime spree. In the 1950s Maren worked as a Little Oscar for the Oscar Mayer Company and as Buster Brown in TV and radio commercials. He later joined his friend Billy Barty in organizing Little People of America. He also portrayed Mayor McCheese and The TurkeyBoy in McDonald's commercials. In the late 1970s, Maren was the man in top hat and tuxedo on The Gong Show. He made a notable appearance in the episode "Felix the Horseplayer" of The Odd Couple as Harry Tallman, a racehorse exerciser who gives Oscar tips on winning horses. In 1982 he played Morris the bellboy, a regular character on the sitcom No Soap, Radio. Maren had a walk-on role in the Seinfeld episode "The Yada Yada", and played a mime in the 2010 comedy horror movie Dahmer Vs. Gacy.)
Marks Franklyn (Franklyn Marks composed music for many Disney movies and TV's Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color.)
Marshall Garry (Garry Marshall was a film director, film producer, screenwriter and actor, best known for creating Happy Days and its various spin-offs, developing Neil Simon's 1965 play The Odd Couple for TV, and directing Pretty Woman, Runaway Bride, Valentine's Day, New Year's Eve, Mother's Day, The Princess Diaries, and The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement. He provided the voice of Buck Cluck in Chicken Little. Brother of actress Penny Marshall.)
marshall penny (Carole Penny Marshall was an American actress, director and producer. She is best-known for her role as Laverne DeFazio on the TV sitcom Laverne & Shirley (1976–1983), earning three Emmy nominations. Marshall made her directorial debut with Jumpin' Jack Flash (1986) before directing Big (1988), which became the first film directed by a woman to gross more than $100 million. Other directing credits included Awakenings (1990), which was nominated for Best Picture, A League of Their Own (1992), Renaissance Man (1994), The Preacher's Wife (1996) and Riding in Cars with Boys (2001). She also produced Cinderella Man (2005) and Bewitched (2005), and some TV series. She had a brother, actor/director/TV producer Garry Marshall)
Martin Lock (Lock Martin was a 7-ft 7-inch tall doorman at Grauman's Chinese theater before he was chosen to play Gort, the robot in the Day the Earth Stood Still. He also hosted a children's TV show called the Gentle Giant.)
Martin Strother (Actor Strother Martin was the prospector in 'Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid', though most famous as the work boss in 'Cool Hand Luke' - 'What we have here is failure to communicate'.)
Marvin Michelle (Michelle Marvin is most-famous for her palimony lawsuit against actor Lee Marvin, which she ultimately lost.)
Matthews_Junius (Junius Matthews was an American actor, best known for being the original voice of Rabbit in the Winnie the Pooh franchise from 1966 to 1977. His career began on stage where he got his first role in a silent film called The Silent Witness (1917). He later played the role of the Tin Woodsman on a radio version of The Wizard of Oz.)
Mayo Frank (Frank Mayo was an American actor, appearing in 310 films between 1911 and 1949, mostly uncredited. Later films include The Life of Emile Zola, They Made Me a Criminal, Dark Victory, Meet John Doe, They Died with Their Boots On, Kings Row, Yankee Doodle Dandy, Gilda, The Fuller Brush Man, and Samson and Delilah.)
McCarthy John (John McCarthy was a poet and naturalist. He was awarded the John Burroughs Medal in 1928 for his book Nature Poems.)
McCormick Larry (Newscaster Larry McCormick.)
McWilliams Caroline (Caroline McWilliams acted as Marcy Hill on TVs Benson, Sally on Soap, and was a regular on The Guiding Light, and occasionally on Another World, and Beverly Hills 90210.)
Meeker Ralph (Ralph Meeker had lead roles on Broadway but was mostly a supporting character in movies, including his role as the conniving corporal in Stanley Kubrick's Paths of Glory.)
Melcher Marty (Marty Melcher was the husband of actress Doris Day, and produced some of her work.)
Melville Sam (Actor Sam Melville played Mike Danko on TV's The Rookies.)
Mendez Raphael
Meredith Cheerio (Cheerio Meredith, originally Lucile Hoffman, acted on stage, movies and notably TVs The Ozzie and Harriet Show, The Andy Griffith Show, and One Happy Family.)
Mesoamerican (Still at Forest Lawn...)
Miller Eve (Eve Miller worked as a shipyard welder during WWII, and then acted in The Big Trees (1952), Kansas Pacific (1953) and There's No Business Like Show Business (1954). She appeared on TV's Annie Oakley,  Crossroads, Lassie, Perry Mason, The Lineup. and lastly on Coronado 9.)
Miller William (16-year old William Miller stole some wine from a liquor store, and killed a cop before dying in a shoot-out.)
Mills Donald (Donald Mills was one of the singing Mills Brothers.)
Mills Harry (Harry Mills was one of the singing Mills Brothers.)
Mills Shirley (Shirley Mills was an actress, notable in her first role as the lead in Child Bride (1938),  the daughter Ruth Joad in The Grapes Of Wrath (1940), and Nine Girls (1944). She appeared in seven World War II-era movies as a member of the "Jivin' Jacks And Jills" dance group. After retiring from acting, in the 60's she was a marketing and public relations sales specialist for computer data processing services. Later, she became an independent business woman and started a party and social event planning service called "A Party For All Seasons.")
Milner Victor (Victor Milner started as a film lab assistant, rising to cinematographer with 8 oscar nominations including The General Died at Dawn, The Buccaneer,  Reap the Wild Wind, The Furies, and  winning for 1934s Cleopatra.)
Mims Chris (Chris Mims played professional football for the Chargers and Redskins. He was found dead in his apartment during a welfare check. He weighed 450 lbs and had an enlarged heart.)
Mims William (William Mims acted in TV westerns, Lonely Are the Brave, Hot Rods to Hell,  Columbo, Fantasy Island, The Beverly Hillbillies, and North And South.)
Mockridge Cyril (Cyril Mockridge was an English film and TV composer. He created the scores for Cheaper by the Dozen, Grand Canary, Danger - Love at Work, In the Meantime, Darling, Wake Up and Dream, Nightmare Alley, and Road House. Mockridge was nominated for an oscar for the 1955 film Guys and Dolls and also composed the music for TV's Lost in Space, and Laramie.)
Moebus Hans (Hans Moebus was a German-born actor of the 1940s and 50s, mostly in uncredited roles. He played the butler in A Place in the Sun with Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift.)
Monette Paul (Paul Monette was an author, poet, and activist in the gay community. His memoirs, Becoming a Man: Half a Life Story, won the 1992 National Book Award for non-fiction.)
Moore Alvy
moore alvy
Moore Fred (Fred Moore was an artist and character animator for Disney. He was the resident specialist in the animation of Mickey Mouse, and redesigned the character in 1938 for Fantasia, a look which remains Mickey's official look to this day. He also redesigned the character Woody Woodpecker for Walter Lantz in the mid 40s. Fred Moore was inducted as a Disney Legend in 1995, and received the animation industry's Winsor McCay Award in 1983.)
Mural
Mural Detail
Murphy Brittany (Actress Brittany Murphy died in the shower from pneumonia and a variety prescription drugs.)
Murphy Timothy (Timothy Patrick Murphy was an actor, perhaps best known for his role as Mickey Trotter on the soap opera Dallas from 1982–83. He started in TV commercials, then the 1978 miniseries Centennial. He played a conman on TV's Search for Tomorrow,  was in the short-lived 1984 drama Glitter, episodes of Quincy, Hotel, The Love Boat, and Hunter. A substantial role was in the 1984 film Sam's Son, the biography of Michael Landon. Murphy contracted HIV and died of AIDS. He once stated that he had an affair with the allegedly bisexual actor Brad Davis.)
Murphy Willie (Willie Crawford played pro baseball. In his best season, 1973, he hit .295, with 14 homers and 66 RBI in 145 games. He hit a home run against Oakland in the 1974 World Series.)
Mustin Burt (Burt Mustin started TV and film acting at age 67, in The Dick Van Dyke Show, Leave It to Beaver, Dragnet, The Andy Griffith Show, The Brady Bunch, Petticoat Junction, My Three Sons, Bewitched, Adam-12, and All in the Family.)
Myhers John (John Myhers acted in multiple spots in Get Smart, Hogan's Heroes, Love American Style, and Fantasy Island.)
Nelson Donald (Donald Nelson was a chemist at Sears Roebuck, rising to exec vice president in 1939. President Roosevelt picked him to lead the military procurement departments in WWII. He wrote  Arsenal of Democracy about wartime industrial mobilization.)
Nelson Harriet (Ozzie and Harriet Nelson were band leader and singer first, then they had their own TV show.)
Nelson Ozzie (Ozzie and Harriet Nelson were band leader and singer first, then they had their own TV show.)
Nelson Ozzie Harriet (Ozzie and Harriet Nelson were band leader and singer first,then they had their own TV show.)
Nelson Ricky (Near Ozzie and Harriet is their younger son Eric 'Ricky' Nelson. He was somewhat of a teen heart-throb singer, and sometime actor. He had 19 top 10 hits, the last being in 1972 with Garden Party. He died in a plane crash.)
Nelson Sam (Sam Nelson was an assistant director on 118 films including  Some Like It Hot, All the King's Men, 3:10 to Yuma, A Raisin in the Sun, and The Wackiest Ship in the Army.)
Nichols Loring (Ernest Loring "Red" Nichols was a jazz cornet player, composer, and bandleader. Nichols was a child prodigy and by twelve was playing difficult pieces for his father’s brass band.  In 1926 he and Miff Mole began recording with a variety of bands, most of them known as “Red Nichols and His Five Pennies,” but few were actually quintets. Nichols’ band started out with Mole on trombone and Jimmy Dorsey on alto sax and clarinet. Other musicians in the band at one time or another were Benny Goodman (clarinet), Glenn Miller (trombone), Jack Teagarden (trombone), Pee Wee Russell (clarinet), Joe Venuti (violin), Eddie Lang (banjo and guitar), and Gene Krupa (drums).)
Niles Chuck (Chuck Niles was the voice of jazz radio for over 40 years, and served as an unofficial jazz ambassador, emceeing countless concerts, memorials and other jazz-related events.)
Noe William (William Noe is credited with inventing the Autocrat Safety Belt, first used in 1956 Ford vehicles.)
ODay Peggy (Peggy O'Day acted in 37 silent movies through 1928, including  Fast and Furious, Thundering Hoofs, and The Fighting Skipper. She edited 5 films in the early 30's, and wrote the screenplay for The Four from Nowhere, and Whistling Jim, both 1925.)
Onsgard Al (Al Onsgard was a US champion swimmer and Air Force pilot.)
Orr William (William Orr married Joy Page, and was soon made a producer by Jack Warner, and later headed Warner Bros TV. They divorced in 1970.)
Orth Frank (Frank Orth was a film and TV actor of the 1920s through the 1950s. He performed in Vaudeville with his wife, actress Ann Codee, in an act billed as "Codee and Orth." His best-known role was that of 'Inspector Faraday' in the "Boston Blackie" TV series of the 1950s.)
Ott Warrene (Warrene Ott was an actress in the 1960s, and appeared in TV shows such as The Beverly Hillbillies and Bewitched.)
Ott Warrene 2
Page Joy (Joy Page is most famous as the newlywed in Casablanca, a role she got from step-father producer Jack L Warner. Her biological father was Latin-lover actor Don Alvarado.)
Paiva Nestor (Nestor Paiva acted on TV's Get Smart, The Beverly Hillbillies, and The Addams Family, and played the boat captain in the 1954 horror film The Creature from the Black Lagoon.)
Palange  Inez (Inez Palange was an Italian-born American actress who was best known for her role as Mrs. Camonte in the 1932 film Scarface. Other films include  One Million B.C. (1940), Monster from the Ocean Floor, A Bell for Adano, and a camp woman in the Grapes of Wrath.)
Palange Louis (Louis Palange played the clarinet and other instruments before becoming a composer. His compositions were used in four films in the 1950s. His classical works include "Evangeline", "The Plagues of Egypt", "King Dinosaur", and "Dark Venture".)
Palange Louis 2
Palmer Maria (Maria Palmer acted in Mission to Moscow, Days of Glory, Lady on a Train, The Web, Strictly Dishonorable, and Outcasts of the City, She turned to radio, TV and commercials, formed her own production company, and hosted a TV show.)
Parker Jean (Jean Parker was 'discovered' while posing for a poster contest, then acted in the 1933 version of Little Women, Rolling Home, The Gunfighter, Black Tuesday, and Apache Uprising.)
Patterson Elmer (Hank Patterson was an actor and musician, most known for playing stableman Hank Miller on Gunsmoke and Fred Ziffel on Petticoat Junction and Green Acres.)
Paul Don (Don Paul was a linebacker for the LA Rams from 1948–1955, and went to three Pro Bowls. He was inducted into the UCLA Hall of Fame in 1986. He was one of only two players to play in six UCLA-USC games during the World War 2 years. Later, he co-founded the Rams Horn restaurant and the Pump Room restaurant.)
paxton bill (William Paxton was an actor and director. He appeared in Stripes, The Terminator, Commando, Weird Science, Aliens, Near Dark, Predator 2, Tombstone, True Lies, Apollo 13, Twister, Titanic, Mighty Joe Young, U-571, Vertical Limit, Frailty (which he also directed), Broken Lizard's Club Dread, Thunderbirds, Edge of Tomorrow, and Nightcrawler. He starred in the HBO Big Love (2006–2011) and earned three Golden Globe Award nominations. He was nominated for an Emmy and a Screen Actors Award for the miniseries Hatfields & McCoys, and in the TV's Training Day. His final film appearance was in The Circle, released two months after his death. In 1982, Paxton and his friend, Andrew Todd Rosenthal, formed a new wave musical band called Martini Ranch and released its only full-length album, Holy Cow, in 1988.)
Peach Kenneth (Ken Peach was a cinematographer, starting in 1923 and becoming a director of photography in 1926. He worked with composite processes, miniatures, montages and matte shots for two years, then joined the tech effects department at Warner Bros-First National, then with RKO's special effects. In 1933 he began working with producer Hal Roach, shooting several Laurel and Hardy films including Dirty Work, and Sons of the Desert. His TV included Lassie (73 episodes), The Outer Limits (25 eps), HR Pufnstuf (17 eps), and Taxi (59 eps).)
Peet Bill (Bill Peet was a children's book illustrator and a story writer for Disney Studios, and later independently.)
Penn And Teller (Penn and Teller used this in one of their acts.)
Perren Freddie (Freddie Perren was a songwriter, record producer, arranger, and orchestra conductor best known as co-songwriter and co-producer of such mega-hits as "Boogie Fever" by the Sylvers, "I Will Survive" by Gloria Gaynor which earned him a Grammy, and "Shake Your Groove Thing" by Peaches & Herb.)
Perryman Lloyd (Lloyd Perryman was a singer and actor of the 1930-60s. He was a member of the western singing group The Sons of the Pioneers for over 40 years.)
Peters Brock (Actor Brock Peters played the accused rapist in 'To Kill A Mockingbird', and was 'Adm. Cartwright' in some of the Star Trek movies.)
Petrie George (George Petrie acted in The Honeymooners,  Ironside,  Quincy M.E., Hard Copy, Wiseguy, Dallas, and Mad About You.)
Phillips Esther (Esther Phillips was known for her R&B vocals, but she also performing pop, country, jazz, blues and soul music. She was nominated for a Grammy 4 times.)
Picker Sylvia (Sylvia Picker was an adtress, best-known as Alan Ladd's ditzy secretary, Suzi, on the radio drama "Box 13." She also did the voice of Chuck Jones' animated mouse, Snuffles. Short films included Sterling's Rival Romeo, Beau Bashful, and Henry's Social Splash, all in 1934.)
Pierce Charles (Charles Pierce was an actor and radio announcer, but best known as a female impersonator and impressions of Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Tallulah Bankhead, Carol Channing and Katharine Hepburn.)
Pollard Snub (Snub Pollard starred in a series of one- and two-reel shorts, including 1923's It's a Gift, in which he plays an inventor of many Rube Goldberg-like contraptions, including a magnet-powered car.)
Pope Tony (Tony Pope was a voice actor on TVs The Dukes, Pole Position, The Transformers,  Creepy Crawlers and others.)
Poppe Harry (Harry Poppe was an associate producer on Sky King, and the Lone Ranger, and production exec on My Favorite Martian. He also had worked as the stage manager for Harry Houdini in England.)
Porcara Jeffrey (Jeffrey Porcaro was a session drummer with many bands, and a founding member of Toto.)
Porcaro Michael (Porcaro worked as a session bass player before replacing Toto original bass player David Hungate in 1982 shortly after the band completed recording the Toto IV album. He remained with the band until 2007. Along with Toto, Porcaro played numerous sessions in Los Angeles, and toured with Michael Franks, Seals and Crofts, Larry Carlton, and Boz Scaggs.  He retired from touring in 2007 as a result of being diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).)
Post Don (Don Post is credited for makeup and special effects on Dune (1984) and Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956), and made the masks for Halloween II (1981) and III (1982) . He appeared as himself on Merv Griffin's "Salute to Horror" in 1971.)
Price Paton (Paton Price was an actor in 2 roles, director including 4 episodes of 77 Sunset Strip, and acting coach for Jason Robards and Kirk Douglas. He was a imprisoned for 4 years as a  conscientious objector during WWII, and was an anti-death penalty advocate.)
Prinze Freddie
Pulque Jaguar (Jaguar altar AD 1325-1521, and  the God of Pulque - an alcoholic drink.)
Raft George
Randolph Amanda (Amanda Randolph began in black musical revues. In 1949, she appeared on TV's Amanda which was the first network series to feature a black  performer in a regular role, and Amos ‘n' Andy, and Beulah with her sister Lillian.)
Randolph Lillian (Lillian Randolph was on the radio in the series Beulah, and The Great Gildersleeve. On TV she appeared as Madame Queen on the Amos ‘n' Andy show, on Sanford and Son, and The Jeffersons. Films included Gentleman From Dixie, Three Little Sisters, It's a Wonderful Life, Once More My Darling, Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte, and The Onion Field.)
Rasch Raymond (Ray Rasch was a pianist and arranger in Hollywood in the 1950s and 1960s.  He won a posthumous Oscar in 1972 for Limelight (shared with Charles Chaplin and Larry Russell).)
Rawls Lou
Reichard Edward (Edward Reichard won multiple oscars in the Scientific/Technical category, and is responsible for the color proofing printer for motion pictures.)
Reilly Hugh (Hugh Reilly was the father on the TV series Lassie. His films include Johnny Stool Pigeon, and Bright Victory. He turned down the role of the professor on Gilligan's Island.)
Remsen Bert (Bert Remsen acted in  Brewster McCloud, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Thieves Like Us, California Split, Nashville, Buffalo Bill and the Indians, and A Wedding. After an injury, he went into casting.)
Rennahan Ray (Ray Rennahan was a cinematographer, winning oscars for Gone with the Wind, and Blood and Sand. He was nominated for  Drums Along the Mohawk, Down Argentine Way, The Blue Bird, Louisiana Purchase, For Whom the Bell Tolls, and Lady in the Dark.)
Rey Reynaldo (Reynaldo Rey, Harry Reynolds, was an actor, comedian, and TV personality. He started his career in comedy, on the road with the musical group, the O'Jays. He then joined the Harlem Theater Group, appeared in his first of 52 movies, then performed in Europe, Asia and Africa for 2 years. Films include Friday, House Party 3, White Men Can't Jump, A Rage in Harlem, and Harlem Nights. TV included 18 episodes of "227".)
ReynoldsFisher_Knickknacks
Ritter John (I always thought actor John Ritter was a buffoon in sitcoms like 'Three's Company, however he earned my respect as the gay store manager in Sling Blade.)
rivera naya (Naya Marie Rivera was an American actress, singer, and model. She began her career as a child actress and model, first appearing in national TV commercials. At the age of four, she landed the role of Hillary Winston on the short-lived CBS sitcom The Royal Family (1991–1992), earning a nomination for a Young Artist Award at age five. Her most notable role was as lesbian cheerleader Santana Lopez on the Fox television series Glee (2009–2015). She was signed to Columbia Records as a solo musical artist in 2011 and released the single, "Sorry", in 2013.ards as a music artist. Films include the horror film At the Devil's Door (2014) and the comedy Mad Families (2017). In 2016 she published a memoir titled Sorry Not Sorry: Dreams, Mistakes, and Growing Up. Because of her varied roles across her three decades as a performer, Rivera is seen as having been a vanguard of Afro-Latino and LGBT representation on TV.)
Rivers Victor (Victor Rivers was with Joey Chitwood Auto Thrill Show before becoming a stuntman in Moving Violation, Grand Theft Auto, and Hi-Riders. He drowned in a stunt vehicle before help arrived.)
RobardsSr Jason (Jason Robards Sr was an actor appearing on stage and film. He and his oscar-winning son acted together only once, on stage in The Disenchanted.)
Roberts Lynne (Lynne Roberts began acting at age 14 in Bulldog Edition. In 1938, she starred in the cliffhangers: The Lone Ranger and Dick Tracy Returns, and played a role in The Higgins Family. In 1941 she starred with Sonja Henie and John Payne in Sun Valley Serenade,  and with Gene Autry in Sioux City Sue, Robin Hood of Texas, and Saddle Pals. She was in 3 films with Roy Rogers, and one with Monte Hale. Her 4th husband was wrestler Don Sebastian.)
Robi Paul (Paul Robi sang with the Platters who had hits with Only You, The Great Pretender, Magic Touch, My Prayer, Twilight Time and Smoke Gets in Your Eyes.)
Robinson Dar (Stuntman Dar Robinson.)
Robinson Jay (Jay Robinson was a character actor. His best-known role was playing Emperor Caligula in The Robe (1953) and its sequel Demetrius and the Gladiators (1954). Subsequent films included The Virgin Queen (1955), My Man Godfrey (1957), Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask) (1972), and Bram Stoker's Dracula. TV included  Star Trek, Days of Our Lives, The Wild Wild West, Bewitched, and was the host and narrator for Beyond Bizarre from 1997 to 2000.)
Rogers Josie (Kasey Rogers acted in Special Agent, Samson and Delilah, Paid in Full, Two Lost Worlds, and (as Laura Elliott)  Strangers on a Train. TV included Stage 7, The Restless Gun, the Lone Ranger, Maverick, Perry Mason, Wanted: Dead or Alive, and the second "Louise Tate" on Bewitched. She later got into motocross racing and promoted women's events through the Powder Puffs Unlimited Riders and Racers association.)
Roseboro John (John Roseboro was a professional baseball player and coach. He played as a catcher 1957-1970, most notably for the Dodgers. Roseboro was a four-time All-Star player and won two Gold Glove Awards for his defensive skills. He was the starting catcher in four World Series. During a game with multiple pitches close to the head from both side, pitcher Juan Marichal, at bat, struck Roseboro in the head twice with a bat during a game in 1965, resulting in a 14-minute brawl between the teams.)
Ross Joe (Joe E Ross was an actor known for his trademark "Ooh! Ooh!" exclamation, which he used in a lot of his roles, many of which were cops. He was in  The Phil Silvers Show and Car 54, Where Are You?)
rossitto angelo
Rozsa Miklos (Miklos Rozsa was a composer and scored films, winning oscars for Spellbound, A Double Life, and Ben-Hur.)
Ruscio Al (Al Ruscio was an actor, training at The Neighborhood Playhouse School for the Theater in New York, including co-starring with Steve McQueen and Kim Stanley.  Moving to Los Angeles in 1958, his first role was as Tony in "Al Capone" with Rod Steiger. TV shows included Gunsmoke, 77 Sunset Strip, Bonanza, Peter Gunn, Days of Our Lives, and Santa Barbara. Ruscio made repeated appearances on The Untouchables, The Rockford Files, Lou Grant, Barney Miller, Hill Street Blues, and 7th Heaven, with recurring roles on Falcon Crest, Scarecrow and Mrs. King, and Life Goes On. He co-starred in three short-lived series: Shannon, Steambath, and Joe's Life. Films include Any Which Way You Can, The Jagged Edge, The Godfather Part III, Guilty by Suspicion, Showgirls, and The Phantom. In the 1960s Ruscio left LA to create the drama department at the new Midwestern College in Denison, Iowa. After five years, he moved to Windsor, Canada, to be professor of acting at the University of Windsor. He served as Artistic Director of the A)
Russell Ann (Audrey Ann Dosch acted in bit parts as Ann Russell. A  mother of 3 children, she was a passenger in the small plane which crashed on takeoff and killed actor Robert Francis, who was the pilot, and agent George Meyers.)
Sagal Boris (Director Boris Sagal was pre-occupied with thoughts about his work and walked into a helicopter tail rotor. He was the father of Katey Sagal from Married With Children.)
Sanford Isabel
Savalas George (Actor George Savalas was Telly's brother, and appeared on Kojak.)
Savalas Telly
Scott Dave (Dave Scott was a child radio actor and played Alexander on Blondie and Dagwood, and was on The Jack Benny Show, and Ozzie and Harriet.)
Sekka Johnny (Johnny Sekka acted on stage and film in Britain, then in the US where had better, though smaller, roles. He was in Khartoum, Women of Straw, The Message, and TV's Good Times, and Babylon 5.)
Shamroy Leon (Leon Shamroy was a cinematographer on Leave Her To Heaven, The Robe,  The King and I, South Pacific, Cleopatra, and others. Nominated 18 times for an oscar, winning 4 times.)
Shaw Buddy
Shaw Reta (Reta Shaw acted in movies including Picnic, The Pajama Game, Mary Poppins, Pollyanna, The Ghost And Mr. Chicken,  Escape to Witch Mountain, and on TV as the housekeeper in the Ghost and Mrs. Muir.)
Shay Larry (Larry Shay's first song was Do You, Don't You, Will You, Won't You.  In 1929 he co-authored his most famous song, When You're Smiling.  In the 1930s, he became MGMs music director, subsequently hiring Bing Crosby.)
Shayne Robert (Robert Shayne found fame as Insp. Bill Henderson on TVs Adventures of Superman. As a child, he once sat in president William H Taft's lap and remarked about Taft's (large) belly.)
Shimada Teru (Teru Shimada acted in Night Club Lady, Mr. Moto's Last Warning, as the SPECTRE agent Mr. Osato in You Only Live Twice, and as the Japanese general in King Rat.)
Shroeder Gordon (Gordon Schroeder was a pit-crew member of Indy race teams, and developed  innovative racing chassis and components.)
Silvani Al (Al Silvani trained over 20 world champion boxers including Jake LaMotta, Rocky Graziano, and Ingemar Johansson.  He also acted in films in From Here to Eternity, Ocean's Eleven, and the Rocky movies.)
Smalley Phillips (Wendell Phillips Smalley began his career in vaudeville and acted in more than 200 films between 1910 and his death in 1939. He also directed over 300 from 1911-21. One of his later and uncredited roles was as a spectator with the wrong hat in the Marx Brothers' A Day at the Races in 1937. Smalley was first married to Lois Weber (the first female to direct a full-length movie in the US), but is interred with his second wife, Phyllis.)
smith keely (Dorothy Jacqueline Keely, known as Keely Smith, was a jazz and popular music singer. When Smith was 11 years old, she sang as a cast member of The Joe Brown Radio Gang program. At age 14, Smith sang with a naval air station band led by Saxie Dowell, and at 15, she got her first paying job with the Earl Bennett band. She performed and recorded extensively in the 1950s with then-husband Louis Prima. They won a Grammy in 1959 for "That Old Black Magic". She performed solo throughout the 1960s. Her first big solo hit was "I Wish You Love" in 1957 which earned a Grammy nomination, and in 2008 she performed a duet with Kid Rock of “That Old Black Magic” during the 50th Grammy Awards. She has stars on the Palm Springs Walk of Stars and the Hollywood Walk of Fame.)
smith roger
Smith Wingate (Wingate Smith was an assistant director known for Stagecoach (1939), The Searchers (1956), The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962) and Donovan's Reef (1963). He had uncredited acting roles in 4 films in 1936. He was the brother-in-law of director John Ford.)
Solari Rudy (Rudy Solari acted in Redigo, Garrison's Guerillas, Mission: Impossible, Police Story, and Quincy ME. He headed the Masters acting program at UCLA.)
Soo Jack (Jack Soo is most famous as Det. Yamana on TV's 'Barney Miller'. His character always made bad coffee. Legend has is that  Jack's dying words were...'it must have been the coffee'.)
Soule Olan (Olan Soule voiced Bachelor's Children on radio, and acted in Capt Midnight, Dragnet, Wanted: Dead or Alive, the Jack Benny Show, Bachelor Father, Alfred Hitchcock, Have Gun - Will Travel, the Andy Griffith Show, Perry Mason, and Bonanza.)
Southern_Jeri (Jeri Southern, born Genevieve Lillian Hering, was an American jazz pianist and singer.  After beginning her career at the Blackstone Hotel in Omaha, she joined a US Navy recruiting tour during WWII. In the late 1940s, she worked in Chicago clubs and once played piano for Anita O'Day. She recorded the pop standard "When I Fall in Love" accompanied by the song's composer Victor Young and his orchestra in 1952. In 1955, her recording of "An Occasional Man" reached #89 in the Billboard pop chart. Later, she sang in a few films and in 1957 had a Top 30 hit with "Fire Down Below". In the 1960s she gave up the music industry to teach, and later worked on film composing with Hugo Friedhofer. She wrote "Interpreting Popular Music At The Keyboard".)
Sperzel Martin (Martin Sperzel was the baritone member of The Three Ambassadors singing group with Gus Arnheim's Orchestra at the Cocoanut Grove night club, and later with The Sportsmen Quartet who were regular performers on the Jack Benny Show. He co-wrote  radio jingles for Sav-On Drug Stores and Rayne Soft Water Service. He acted in Footlight Varieties (1951), Paris Follies of 1956 (1955) and Beer and Pretzels (1933).)
St Denis Ruth (Ruth St Denis was a dancer, choreographer, and pioneer of modern dance using eastern and oriental influences. With her husband, Ted Shawn, founded the Denishawn dance company and school.)
St Jaques Raymond (Raymond St. Jacques was an actor, and was the first black actor to appear in a regular role in a western series, playing Simon Blake on Rawhide. He may be best known for playing Coffin Ed in the blaxploitation classics Cotton Comes to Harlem and Come Back, Charleston Blue. He also played Judge Clayton C. Thomas on TV's Superior Court from 1988 to 1989.)
Starrett Jack (Jack Starrett was a director/actor of the 1960s, 70s, and 80s. He directed many popular TV series such as The Dukes of Hazzard, Starsky and Hutch, and Hill Street Blues.)
Statue
Statue
Statue
Steele Bob (William Bradbury, as Bob Steele after 1927, started in vaudeville, then acted as Curly in Of Mice and Men, and in The Big Sleep. He also was trooper Duffy in TVs F-Troop.)
Steiger Rod
Steiner Elmer (Elmer Steiner may have been a world-renowned photographer, but I could find no information about him.)
Stevens George (Director George Stevens made Gunga Din, Shane, Giant, The Diary of Anne Frank,  and The Greatest Story Ever Told.)
Stevens Yvonne (As Yvonne Howell, Julia Rose Shevlin was a "bathing beauty" for Mack Sennett in the 1920s and had supporting roles in a few films including the drama Fashions for Women (1927), and the western Somewhere in Sonora (1927) opposite cowboy star Ken Maynard. In 1930, she became the first wife of then cameraman George Stevens, later an oscar-winning film director.  Their son, George Stevens, Jr., was founding director of the American Film Institute. After her film career ended, she was a nurse's aide in California during WWII and later served as a volunteer tutor.)
Stevenson McLean (McLean Stevenson was Col Blake on TV's M*A*S*H.)
Stewart Jay (Jay Stewart was a TV and radio announcer on Let's Make A Deal, Scrabble, Sale of the Century, The Joker's Wild, Bullseye and Tic-Tac-Dough. Depression and alcohol after his daughter's suicide led to his own a few years later.)
Stewart Margie (Margie Stewart was the official US Army poster girl during WWII, appearing on twelve posters, of which a total of 94 million copies were distributed. After college, she became a model and appeared in about 20 RKO wartime movies, all uncredited roles except that of Marjorie Forrester in Gildersleeve's Ghost. Stewart toured the US as one of the Bondbardiers, accompanied by various Hollywood stars, to sell war bonds. In 1945, she toured Europe and was one of the first civilians to enter Germany after the end of the war. In 1945, she married Jerry Jeroske, an army captain. The Jeroskes subsequently changed their last name to Johnson. Later, they produced concerts at the Hollywood Bowl. Margie also did volunteer work at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.)
Stone Dorothy
Stout Bill (Bill Stout was a newscaster in the LA area.)
Strange_Glenn (George Strange was an actor, mostly in Western films. He may best remembered for playing Frankenstein's monster in three films during the 1940s, and for his role as Sam Noonan,the popular bartender,  in 233 episodes of TV's Gunsmoke. He also appeared in several episodes each of The Lone Ranger, Judge Roy Bean, The Rifleman, Annie Oakley, Death Valley Days, and The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp.)
Sues Leonard (Leonard Sues was a composer, conductor, trumpeter and actor. He began conducting at age five and by age six-1/2 he was touring vaudeville as a conductor and trumpeter. Later, he conducted for Eddie Cantor, Ole Olsen, Chic Johnson, and for 20 years was Milton Berle's musical director and performer. He had bit parts in 32 films, frequently as a trumpeter, band member or conductor.)
Sun God Mask (Sun god mask from AD300-950.)
Sun Stone (Sun stone calendar from 1325-1521 was made from basalt and weighs over 21 tons.)
Sutherland Linda
Sutherland Victor (Victor Sutherland worked on stage and in motion pictures from the 1910s through the 1950s,  and TV's My Little Margie, and Perry Mason. He was also in the original cast of the 1939 hit play Arsenic and Old Lace. Films include Donovan's Brain, Powder River, Them!, and We're Not Married!)
Sweet Elliott (George Elliott Sweet was an oilman and author. He founded Sweet Geophysical Co. in Malibu in 1940, which located several major oil deposits.  Sweet published eight books, including "The History of Geophysical Prospecting", "Gentleman in Oil" and "The Petroleum Saga." Sweet also helped found Southern California's Shakespeare Authorship Roundtable, and was a proponent of the theory that Shakespeare's plays and poems were actually written by Queen Elizabeth. He set out the theory in his book "Shakespeare: The Mystery.")
Sylbert Christopher (Christopher Sylbert was a stand-up comedian, winning L.A. Cabaret's Funniest-Person-in-the-Valley in 1994. He battled multiple sclerosis for nearly 20 years. His nickname Stick was derived from his walking cane.)
Talman William (Actor William Talman is best-known as the attorney on Perry Mason.)
Tayback Vic (Actor Vic Tayback had a role as a gangster in a Star Trek episode, was a guard in Papillon, and is best remembered as Mel, the diner owner, on the TV show Alice.)
Taylor_Forrest
Teagarden_Jack
Temple Facade (Temple facade from 300AD-950AD.)
Temple Facade Head (The head represents the feathered serpent Quetzlcoatl. The rain god Tlaloc is in the background.)
Thomas Frank (Frankie Thomas was an actor whose biggest role was  as Tom Corbett, Space Cadet. After acting, he began writing, and playing  master-level bridge and teaching its strategy.)
Thorsden Kelly (Kelly Thordsen usually played sheriffs or judges. He appeared on just about all TV Western shows, such as Laramie, Bonanza, The Rifleman, and Little House on the Prairie.)
Tilton Martha (Martha Tilton sang on a small radio station while in high school, and she dropped out in eleventh grade to join Hal Grayson's band. After singing with the quartet Three Hits and a Miss, she joined the Myer Alexander chorus on Benny Goodman's radio show, Camel Caravan. She was a popular singer during America's swing era and traditional pop period, best known for her 1939 recording of And the Angels Sing. Her movies include Sunny (1941), Strictly in the Groove (1942), Swing Hostess (1944), Crime, Inc.. (1945), and The Benny Goodman Story (1956).)
Titus Calvin (Medal of Honor winner Calvin Titus was a bugler during the Boxer Rebellion. His citation reads 'Gallant and daring conduct in the presence of his colonel and other officers and enlisted men of his regiment; was first to scale the wall of the city.')
Tom Layne (Layne Tom Jr., played a different son of Charlie Chan in three movies - as Charlie Chan, Jr in "Charlie Chan at the Olympics", as Tommy in "Charlie Chan in Honolulu",  and "Willie" in "Charlie Chan's Murder Cruise". He also appeared in The Good Earth, The Hurricane, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, and Lady of the Tropics. He then served in the US Navy, and graduated from USC with a degree in architecture. He designed the flagship Bank of America building in Los Angeles' Chinatown, among other buildings. His only return to show-biz was The Barbara Stanwyck show in 1960 and 2 Charlie Chan short documentaries in 2006.)
Tomasini George (George Tomasini was a film editor, working on nine Hitchcock movies including The Birds, Psycho, North by Northwest, Vertigo, and Rear Window. He also edited Elephant Walk, Houdini, Stalag 17, The Time Machine, and 1962's Cape Fear. He was oscar-nominated for North By Northwest.)
Tomllin Pinky (Pinky Tomlin was a singer, songwriter, and bandleader of the 1930s and 1940s. He also acted in occasional motion pictures. He wrote and published 22 songs, several in the top ten on Hit Parade. In 1938, his song In Ole Oklahoma was named as Oklahoma’s state song. His most famous hit was The Object of My Affection which was covered by many singers including Ella Fitzgerald, and it was used in the movie Paper Moon. Others include What's the Reason (I'm Not Pleasin' You?), and The Love Bug Will Bite You.)
Tover Leo (Leo Tover began as a clapper boy, then was a  cinematographer with over 120 credits, including The Great Gatsby (1926), The Major and the Minor, The Snake Pit, The Day the Earth Stood Still, We're Not Married!, Love Me Tender,  Journey to the Center of the Earth, and Island of the Blue Dolphins.)
Troup London (Singer/actor Bobby Troup popularized Get Your Kicks on Route 66, and was in the movie MASH, and TV's Emergency. His wife, Julie London, was a singer-turned-actress, also appearing  on Emergency.)
Trowbridge Charles (Charles Trowbridge appeared in 233 feature films between 1915 and 1958. He began on stage in San Francisco, then Broadway in New York. He appeared in The Fight (1915),  Thais (1917), Submarine Patrol (1939), The Mummy's Hand (1940), Sergeant York (1941), Adventures of the Flying Cadet (1943), They Were Expendable (1945) and The Wings of Eagles (1957).)
Tucker Forrest
Vacio_Natividad (Natividad Vácio was a Mexican-American character actor in films and TV in the 1950s-1980s. His debut was in a 1950 episode of The Lone Ranger. He was featured in The Hitch-Hiker, a 1953 film noir directed by Ida Lupino. He appeared in the 1988 Robert Redford film Milagro Beanfield War as  "Onofre", a man with one arm, who said his arm was eaten off by butterflies.  He played a character called "Fronk", the family gardener in five episodes of Father Knows Best. He was a close friend of Superman actor George Reeves and taught him how to play the guitar.)
Van Cleef Lee
Van Patten Dick (Dick Van Patten was an actor, businessman, and animal welfare advocate, best known for his role as patriarch Tom Bradford on the TV comedy-drama Eight Is Enough. Previously, he was in TVs I Remember Mama, and Young Dr. Malone. He appeared in Robin Hood: Men in Tights, Spaceballs, Soylent Green, and Charly. Van Patten was the founder of Natural Balance Pet Foods and National Guide Dog Month.)
Veterans Mem
Visitors
Vitale Carol (Carol Vitale was a platinum blonde and was Playboy magazine's Miss July 1974. She earned a degree in broadcasting, and for 11 years had her own Carol Vitale Show. Longtime health issues led to suicide.)
Vogan Emmett (Emmett Vogan was an actor with almost 500 film appearances from 1934–54, mostly uncredited, making him one of the most prolific film actors of all time. Films include Sergeant Murphy (1938), Margin for Error (1943), Faces in the Fog (1944), Along the Navajo Trail (1945), Dangerous Money (1946), The Lost Weekend (1945), The Shadow Returns (1946) and The Fuller Brush Man (1948).)
Vogel_Virgil (Virgil Vogel was an American TV and film director. His career spanned nearly sixty years directing episodes of Wagon Train, Bonanza, The Big Valley, and Mission: Impossible, among other series. He was earlier a film editor on Mystery Submarine, Under the Gun, Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man, The Man from the Alamo, and Touch of Evil.)
Wagner Pauline (Pauline Wagner was an American actress and glamour girl who had minor roles in the 1930s. She made her debut in King of Jazz in 1930.
Her first significant role was in College Lovers where she played Frank's girlfriend. She was Fay Wray's understudy in King Kong (and doubled her in the "ledge" scene) in 1933.  She had small parts in Lady Killer and Mr. Deeds Goes to Town.)
Wahl Charles (Dr Charles Wahl was 'psychoanalyst to the stars', author, and professor at UCLA.)
Wakely Jimmy (Jimmy Wakely was an actor and country Western music vocalist. He was one of the last "singing cowboys". During the 1930s-50s, he released records, appeared in several B-Western movies, was on radio and TV,  and even had a series of comic books. His duet singles with Margaret Whiting from 1949–51 produced a string of top seven hits, including 1949's number one hit, "Slippin' Around." Wakely later owned two music publishing companies, and performed at the Grand Ole Opry until shortly before his death.)
Walker Paul (Paul Walker IV was an actor, whose early work includes the teen films She's All That and Varsity Blues. He is best known for his role as Brian O'Conner in 2001's street racing action film The Fast and the Furious. He played that role in five of the next six installments, but in the middle of filming Furious 7 in 2013 , he died as a passenger in his new-to-him Porsche on bad tires, driven by his business partner. He founded the disaster-relief charity Reach Out Worldwide in response to the 2010 Haiti earthquake.)
Walker Paul 2 (Paul Walker is most famous for The Fast and the Furious series of movies, and TV's Throb. He died as a passenger in his own car in an explosive car-crash.)
Waller Eddy (Eddy Waller worked in vaudeville and theater before he entered Hollywood, and appeared in more than 250 films between 1929 and 1963, including 116 westerns and six serials. He is best remembered as Nugget Clark, the sidekick in many films starring Allan 'Rocky' Lane between 1947 to 1953. On TV he was in multiple episodes of Lassie, Casey Jones, and Laramie.)
Walters Larry (Larry Walters was famous for riding a helium-balloon lifted lawn chair, which inadvertently flew into LAX airport airspace.)
Walters Ron (Ron Walters was a makeup artist on TV's Family Matters and Police Squad!, and The Breakfast Club and Star Trek: The Undiscovered Country movies.)
Warrior Column (Warrior column from AD950-1168.)
Washington Sign
Washington Statue
WashingtonStatue
Waterbury Ruth (Ruth Waterbury was a 50-year film critic and writer, best known for her work with Photoplay and Silver Screen magazines, and later, the Los Angeles Examiner, and The New York Daily News. She was president of the Hollywood Women's Press Club five times. In the 1960s she published separate biographies on Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.)
Wayne Bruce (Bruce Wayne was a radio traffic reporter in Los Angeles for 18 years. He crashed shortly after takeoff.)
Wayne Frances (Frances Wayne was an American jazz singer. In her teens in  New York City she sang in a group fronted by her brother, saxophonist Nick Jerret. Early in the 1940s she recorded with Charlie Barnet's big band, and in 1943 sang with Woody Herman's band. In 1944 she married Neal Hefti, who played trumpet and arranged material for Herman. Hefti formed his own big band in 1947, and Wayne soloed in this ensemble as well. She sang with Hefti into the 1950s, and later with smaller ensembles, which featured Hank Jones, Milt Hinton, Jerome Richardson, Richie Kamuca, John LaPorta, Billy Bauer, and Al Cohn.)
Wayne Michael (Michael Wayne was the son of John Wayne. He was an actor, and produced some of JW's movies.)
Weatherwax Paul
Webb Jack (Jack Webb was Sgt Joe Friday on Dragnet.)
Weege Reinhold (Reinhold Weege was a TV writer, producer and director. Weege wrote for several TV series, including Barney Miller and MASH. He created the series Park Place in 1981 and Night Court. In 1984. He was nominated for four Emmys, one for Barney Miller and three for Night Court.)
Wells Frank (Franklin G. Wells was President of the Walt Disney Company from 1984 until his death in 1994. Previously at Warner Bros, he was VP of West Coast in 1969, President in 1973, and Vice Chairman 1977-1982. Wells was a mountain climber who scaled 6 of the 7 highest mountains, though he was forced off Everest by bad weather only 3,000 ft from the summit..)
West Billy (Billy West was an actor, producer, and writer of the 1910s, 20s, and 30s. He was one of the more well-known and successful  imitators of Charlie Chaplin's "Tramp" character, until developing his own. Oliver Hardy frequently appeared with him.)
Whitfield Norman (Norman Whitfield produced many of the biggest hits for artists Marvin Gaye, Gladys Knight and the Pips, The Marvelettes, The Velvelettes and Rose Royce. From 1963 to 1974 he wrote nearly every song for The Temptations.)
Willard Jess (Jess Willard was a boxer, winning the world heavyweight title from Jack Johnson in April 1915 (earning the nickname "The Great White Hope") and lost it to Jack Dempsey in July 1919.)
Williams Rhys (Rhys Williams acted on TV's Crossroads, The DuPont Show with June Allyson, Peter Gunn, Riverboat, The Lloyd Bridges Show, Temple Houston, 77 Sunset Strip, The Wild Wild West, Twelve O'Clock High, The F.B.I., Mission: Impossible, Mannix, The Donna Reed Show, Here Come the Brides, and The Andy Griffith Show. His first movie role was in How Green Was My Valley after being hired to coach the other actors in the Welsh accent.)
Williams Roy (Roy Williams started working with Walt Disney on 1925 in the animation and writing department, and he eventually began storyboarding the upcoming Mickey Mouse Club episodes. Disney selected him to be the co-host of the show. He was known as Moose Williams on his highschool football team.)
Williams Vesta (Mary Vesta Williams sang pop, jazz, adult contemporary and R&B. She had six Top 10 hits on the Billboard R&B chart from the mid–1980s to the early–1990s including Once Bitten, Twice Shy; Sweet Sweet Love; Special, and her 1989 R&B hit and signature song, Congratulations.)
Williamson Kate (Kate Williamson began her acting career in 1977. Most of her credits were TV appearances including Little House on the Prairie, Hill Street Blues, Newhart, Cheers, Falcon Crest, Highway to Heaven, Murder She Wrote, and Ellen. Films include Bye Bye Love, Touch, Disclosure, and Dahmer. She died less than a month after her husband, actor Al Ruscio.)
Wilson Dick (Dick Wilson is famous as Mr. Whipple on the 'Don't squeeze the Charmin' commercials.)
wilson scott (Scott Wilson, born William Delano Wilson, was an actor with over 50 film credits. His debut was in In the Heat of the Night, followed by his best role co-starring with Robert Blake as a murderer in In Cold Blood. Other movies include The Great Gatsby, Dead Man Walking, Pearl Harbor, The Right Stuff, and Junebug. In 1980, Wilson received a Golden Globe nomination for his role in The Ninth Configuration. He played veterinarian Hershel Greene on TV's The Walking Dead series. He had a recurring role on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation as casino mogul Sam Braun, and a lead role on The OA as Abel Johnson.)
Winfield Paul (Actor Paul Winfield starred opposite Cicely Tyson in 'Sounder', and was in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan'. He is buried with his long-time companion.)
withers bill
Wolgast Adolph (Adolphus Wolgast, the "Michigan Wildcat", was a Lightweight boxing champ. He turned pro in 1906, and in 1910 earned the championship. Wolgast defended the title against Joe Rivers in 1912 -  they knocked each other out, and controversially, the win was awarded to Wolgast. Wolgast defended the belt 4 more times before losing it to Willie Ritchie in 1912. In 1917, Wolgast was declared incompetent and a guardianship was set up for him. He suffered a breakdown, was placed in a sanitarium from which he escaped, and was found living in the "North Woods" of California as a "mountain man." In the early 1920s, an owner of a boxing gym, took Wolgast "under his wing" and allowed him to train, though Wolgast never fought again.)
Wooden John (John Wooden coached UCLA's men's basketball team to 88 straight wins, and 10 championships in 12 years including 7 in a row. He was coach of the year 6 times, and had a 664-162 record.)
Wrestler (The Wrestler. The original  was carved in basalt. and dates from 300BC-1500BC.)
Yearsley Ralph Grace
Zane Bartine (Bartine Zane starred with Buster Keaton in The High Sign in 1920, and  subsequently acted with Gloria Swanson, Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy and Lon Chaney. She retired in 1928, and unretired some 40 years later, showing up on TV shows and commercials.)
Hastings Bob (Bob Hastings was a radio, film, and TV character actor and provided voices for cartoons. His best-known role was of annoying suck-up Lt. Elroy Carpenter, on McHale's Navy. After serving in WWII as a navigator on B-29s, he played Archie Andrews in a radio series based on the Archie comic from 1945-53.  His first recurring TV role was as a lieutenant on Sergeant Bilko in the late 1950s. He appeared 5 times on Dennis the Menace. Hastings' movies include Did You Hear the One About the Traveling Saleslady?, The Bamboo Saucer, Angel in My Pocket, The Love God?, The Boatniks, How to Frame a Figg, The Poseidon Adventure, The All-American Boy, No Deposit No Return, and Harper Valley PTA.)
Ferrari William (William Ferrari was an art director and shared an oscar win for Gaslight (1945) and was nominated (with others) for How the West Was Won (1964). He earned a TV Emmy for  the TV series You Are There (1953), and worked on two dozen Twilight Zone episodes.)
Todd Art (Art Todd and his wife Dotty were a singing duo, who had two one-hit wonders - one in the UK and one in the US. In 1953, their number-one hit in England was "Broken Wings", and during 1956 in the US, "Chanson d'Amour" reached  number six and remained on the charts for 11 weeks. They appeared twice on the Ed Sullivan Show, had a radio show, and performed in Las Vegas until retiring in 1980.)
Eiler Barbara (Barbara Eiler was an actress on radio and TV from the 1940s through the '60s She started acting as a teenager and appeared regularly on the radio programs The Life of Riley, A Day in the Life of Dennis Day, The Fabulous Dr. Tweedy and Glamor Manor. On TV, she was in many series, including Dragnet, Wagon Train, The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, and several Disney programs.)
ReynoldsFisher (Mary Frances "Debbie" Reynolds was an American actress, singer, and businesswoman. She was nominated for a Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer in the 1950 film Three Little Words. Her first leading role was as Kathy Selden in Singin' in the Rain (1952). Other credits include The Affairs of Dobie Gillis (1953), Susan Slept Here (1954), Bundle of Joy (1956), The Catered Affair (1956), and Tammy and the Bachelor (1957), in which her performance of the song "Tammy" topped the Billboard music charts. In 1959, she starred in The Mating Game (with Tony Randall) and released her first pop music album, titled Debbie. She was in How the West Was Won (1962), and The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964) which earned her an Oscar nomination, The Singing Nun (1966), Divorce American Style (1967), What's the Matter with Helen? (1971), Charlotte's Web (1973), Mother (1996) and In & Out (1997). In 1969, Reynolds starred in The Debbie Reynolds Show, earning her a Golden Globe nomination. In 1973, she starred in the Broadway revival of the musical Irene, which earned her a Tony nomination. She was also nominated for an Emmy for A Gift of Love (1999). In 1988, she published her autobiography titled Debbie: My Life. In 2013, she released a second autobiography, titled Unsinkable: A Memoir. In January 2015, she received the Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award. In 2016, she received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award. Reynolds died from a stroke, one day after the death of her daughter, actress Carrie Fisher.)

Audio Mute
Prev
Play
Next
Shuffle
Include
Privacy and cookie policy
This site uses cookies to enhance your browsing experience, serve personalized content, and analyze traffic. By continuing to use this site you agree to use of cookies and stewardship of your data.