Richard Cotton is an actor and producer, known for Lói: Þú Flýgur Aldrei Einn (2018), The Libertine (2004) and Love Actually (2003).
Richard Courcet is known for J'ai pas sommeil (1994), Both Sides of the Blade (2022) and Beau Travail (1999).
Richard Cowl was born on September 27, 1922 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. He was an actor, known for The Choppers (1961), Last Dance (1996) and Furnace (2007). He died on May 9, 2011 in Casselberry, Florida, USA.
Richard Cox was born on May 6, 1948 in New York City, New York, USA. He is an actor, known for Cruising (1980), The Vindicator (1986) and Executive Suite (1976). He has been married to Sarah Boucher since May 23, 1997. They have two children. He was previously married to Joanna Heimbold.
Richard Coyle was born and raised in Sheffield, in the UK with his four brothers. He began his career when, studying languages and the history of art at York University (1992 - 1995), he got interested in student drama and traveled to the Edinburgh festival twice. A decision to raise funds to study at the prestigious Bristol Old Vic Theatre School resulted in an extra's job on a new film adaptation of the classic novel Jane Eyre. When director Franco Zeffirelli heard Richard was about to start drama school he gave him a line, his first on screen: "Mr. Rochester, Mr. Rochester, your house sir!" After graduating drama school he took a number of small roles in television and film before landing a larger role in the 1998 ITV drama The Life and Crimes of William Palmer: Episode #1.1 (1998) and a super cameo turn in Justin Kerrigan's Human Traffic (1999) as "Andy" - a party goer engaged in some seriously "deep" debate on Star Wars and drugs culture with Danny Dyer's character "Moff". In 2000 Richard landed the two roles that would launch him into the limelight: "Jeff" in BBC2's inspired comedy series Coupling (2000) and "John Ridd" in the BBC's Christmas production of Lorna Doone (2000). Richard has trodden the boards in the West End, firstly at The Royal Court Theatre in Peter Gill's "The York Realist" and then alongside Gwyneth Paltrow in "Proof" at the Donmar Warehouse. Also "Don Carlos" in 2005 and "The Lover/The Collection" in 2008. Polar Bears at the Donmar Warehouse in 2010, Macbeth in New York in 2014, and Ink at the Almeida and West End in 2017/2018.
Richard Cramer was born on July 3, 1889 in Bryan, Ohio, USA. He was an actor, known for Saps at Sea (1940), Captain of the Guard (1930) and Hell-Bent for Frisco (1931). He was married to Hilda. He died on August 9, 1960 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
Dark haired, athletic American leading man of '40s B-movies. Richard Crane was at his most successful at a time when Hollywood was somewhat denuded of its male stars, most of whom were doing wartime military service. Upon their return to the ranks, Crane's career went into decline. He did, however, have a brief resurgence in the 1950s as the square-jawed, muscular hero of several space-borne serials, notably as the titular star of Rocky Jones, Space Ranger (1954). The next fifteen years he spent guesting in TV westerns and crime dramas, frequently appearing on The Lone Ranger (1949) and Lassie (1954). His final recurring role was as a police lieutenant in Surfside 6 (1960), a detective series aimed at the teenage market. At the time of Crane's death, he was President of Film Trend Productions.
Richard Cranor was born in rural Alabama but spent most of his childhood growing up on the west coast. He eventually moved to Seattle where he spent some time homeless, attempting to earn enough money doing odd-jobs to pay for tuition into the Art Institute of Seattle. Eventually, he came up with the money and began attending classes. After completing the multimedia program, Richard went on to direct several feature and short films that played in film festivals worldwide and secured national DVD distribution deals. "Katana", a web series about a retired ninja who must complete one last kill to save his daughter's life, was his Hollywood debut. It premiered on Strike.TV's Internet television network in the summer of 2008. It is the first martial arts based Internet television series to ever debut on the world wide web. It was produced and co-written by his friend and mentor, Yuji Okumoto, who also starred in the web pilot. Yuji Okumoto played the villain in "Karate Kid 2" and has starred in hundreds of film and TV episodes since. The two collaborated on the show while hanging out a Yuji's restaurant in Seattle, the Kona Kitchen. Richard has also worked for a number of years with Martin Design LLC, an advertising and marketing execution firm in the Pacific Northwest, shooting viral video campaigns for Microsoft and other clients and helping pioneer the "Viral Ecosystem", a concept that involves internet videos being seeded in a number of different blog and social media outlets to help sustain its presence and life cycle on the internet. He continues to write and direct feature films as well as develop new technologies and marketing strategies that combine Hollywood movie-making with the internet's interactive capability and potential.
Richard was born and raised in a working class family in the mining town of Doncaster, South Yorkshire in 1989. After secondary school he studied Acting at High Melton College in Doncaster, graduating in 2007. He then moved to London in 2010 to study Acting at 'The Poor School' he graduated from the school in January 2012 and went onto his first Feature Film 'The Knife That Killed Me', an adaptation of Anthony McGowans novel by the same name. He played one of the principle roles of Kirk.
Richard Donald Crenna was born in Los Angeles, California, into a modest-income family, the only child of Edith J. (Pollette) and Domenick Anthony Crenna, a pharmacist. His parents were both of Italian descent. His mother managed a small hotel in downtown Los Angeles, where Richard and his family resided. He began his career when he was eleven years old, playing the dimmer half of two youngsters called Herman and Sam in the Los Angeles radio show "Boy Scout Jamboree". He stayed with the series on and off for seventeen years, doing hundreds of other radio shows in between, including voicing Ougy Pringle in "A Date with Judy" (1946). During this time, he graduated from high school with letters in track and basketball, and later enrolled at the University of Southern California, where he majored in Theater Arts. He was cast as Walter Denton in the radio show "Our Miss Brooks" and stayed in the part when the show moved from radio to television (Our Miss Brooks (1952)). The role called for a gangly, awkward, cracked-voice adolescent. Crenna was a tall, graceful man with a rich voice, yet his acting skills were such that he was easily able to fulfill the character's requirements, leading many viewers to believe that he actually was of high school age, when in fact he was 26 years old at the time. Crenna went on to star in another early television series, The Real McCoys (1957), but it was his role as the dedicated state legislator in the short-lived Slattery's People (1964) that finally established him both as a dramatic actor and a leading man. From that moment on, he was rarely absent from either television or motion pictures. In 1985, Crenna was awarded an Emmy for Best Performance by an Actor for The Rape of Richard Beck (1985). During the 1980s, he also became known for playing Colonel Trautman in the Rambo films (First Blood (1982), Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985), and Rambo III (1988)). His star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame is in a prime position, opposite Mann's Chinese Theatre, two stars down from his Rambo co-star Sylvester Stallone. Crenna married shortly after his graduation from USC, but the marriage was short-lived. He met and married his last wife in the late 1950s. Richard Crenna died at age 76 of heart failure on January 17, 2003 in Los Angeles, with more than 70 major motion pictures to his credit.