Ray Manzarek was born on February 12, 1939 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He was a director and composer, known for Army of the Dead (2021), Strange Days (1995) and The X Files (1998). He was married to Dorothy Manzarek. He died on May 20, 2013 in Rosenheim, Bavaria, Germany.
Ray Marioni was born in 1933 in London, England, UK. He is an actor, known for Department S (1969), Bognor (1981) and The Dark Side of the Sun (1983).
Ray Martin was born on August 25, 1906 in Illinois, USA. He was an actor, known for The Green Pastures (1936), The Woman I Stole (1933) and The Duke Is Tops (1938). He died on January 25, 1966 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
Ray Martin started acting after graduating High school in 1999. He landed a role in the show Ed where he earned his sag card. Ray stopped acting abruptly in 2002 to take care of his Mother who passed away later that year from colon cancer. Ray stayed home met his wife Andrea and started One of the countries first all green chauffeur services in 2008. A few years later Ray came up with a TV show idea where he could interview celebs in the limo . This was years before anyone else had came up with this idea but Ray did not know how to make it happen. One day he ran into Paula Rudd and asked him for some advice. At that moment after talking with Paul Ray came up with the concept of Stealing Paul Rudd the Movie. He spent the next 10 years trying to get the script to Paul but had no luck. Eventually Ray and his partner Walt Haley made the script into Stealing A survivor which Ray directed and stared along side George Wendt. Ray has since directed wrote and stared in Happy Hour Slasher . A Christmas Reckoning and Killing Smallz which is currently in Pre Production and will be released in 2022 Ray's style is similar to Adam Sandler as he likes to put his friends and family in all of his movies including his wife and 3 kids.
Ray Mason was born on December 9, 1935 in the USA. He was an actor, known for To All My Friends on Shore (1972). He died on June 18, 2011 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Ray McAleenan is known for All About Eva (2020).
The younger brother of director Leo McCarey, Ray McCarey entered the film business in the mid-'20s as a prop boy, working his way up to assistant director, screenwriter and then director. In the early 1930s he joined Hal Roach Studios, where he directed several Our Gang and Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy comedies, then moved on to Columbia, where he helmed several of The Three Stooges shorts. McCarey worked in all genres and many studios, from musicals at Republic to westerns at Columbia, but most of his output was routine and he never achieved the stature of his famous older brother.
Indefatigable Ray McDonald was born to dance and dance he did. A New York City native born June 27, 1921, Ray was still in grade school when he and older sister (by three years) Grace McDonald formed a popular vaudeville tap dancing act. By the age of 16 Ray had made it to Broadway in the musical "Babes in Arms", in which he and Grace made quite an impression with the song "I Wish I Was In Love Again." Talent scouts took both of them to Hollywood, but not as a duo. Grace went to Paramount and later Universal, while Ray was signed by MGM. He seemed to have all the earmarkings of a star. Dark and boyishly handsome with energy to spare, he first played a leading role as a youth in the low-budget programmer Down in San Diego (1941), then kicked up his heels a bit in the Mickey Rooney/Judy Garland musical Babes on Broadway (1941), where he danced to "By the Light of the Silvery Moon." He appeared with Rooney again in the star's vehicle Life Begins for Andy Hardy (1941). After that, things stopped clicking. The momentum of his career was not helped by war service, where he at least managed to appear in both the stage and film versions of Winged Victory (1944). Unable to rise above the secondary ranks, the June Allyson/Peter Lawford collegiate musical Good News (1947) would prove to be Ray's last feature for MGM. Divorced from actress Elisabeth Fraser whom he met while appearing in the stage show of "Winged Victory" in 1943, he met and subsequently married fellow dancer/singer Peggy Ryan while freelancing in films. They appeared together in Shamrock Hill (1949) and There's a Girl in My Heart (1949) for Eagle-Lion, and later in the musical All Ashore (1953) for Columbia, a poor man's "On the Town" with Mickey Rooney, Dick Haymes and Ray as three swabbies on leave. This would be Ray's last film. During the subsequent lean years, he and Peggy toured stages and nightclubs until their divorce. Ray popped up on TV variety shows as well and in 1959, while in New York to appear on a show, he died after choking on food in his hotel room. He was only 37. Not remembered well today, as is the case with sister Grace, Ray McDonald nevertheless had a great musical talent and ingratiating presence, which certainly deserves a mention.
Ray McKinnon is a writer, actor, director and producer. He served from 2012 through 2016 as creator, showrunner, writer and director of the Peabody Award winning, Sundance TV series, "Rectify." As an actor, McKinnon has created a canon of unforgettable, offbeat and richly textured characters. In a career spanning two decades, McKinnon steadily built an impressive resume, including memorable roles on FX's critically acclaimed "Sons of Anarchy" (as Lincoln Potter) and the award winning HBO series "Deadwood" (as Reverend H.W. Smith). He has also appeared in series such as "NYPD Blue," "X Files" and "Matlock." Big screen credits include "Mud", "O Brother, Where Art Thou?", "Take Shelter", "The Blind Side", "Footloose", "Apollo 13", and "Bugsy". As a filmmaker, in 2008, he produced and starred in the critically praised indie feature, "That Evening Sun", and garnered an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his work as Lonzo Choat, opposite Hal Holbrook. McKinnon has complemented his work in front of the camera with other notable turns as a writer, director and producer. He has frequently collaborated with his friend Walton Goggins and his late wife, actress Lisa Blount, under their Ginny Mule Pictures banner. Their debut film, the McKinnon-penned and titular played, "The Accountant", won an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short in 2002. Their first feature, "Chrystal" (written and directed by McKinnon and starring Ms. Blount), was selected for the Sundance Film Festival's prestigious Dramatic Film Competition in 2004.
Ray McNeil was born on December 17, 1964. He was previously married to Sally McNeil. He died on February 14, 1995 in Oceanside, California, USA.