Richard Dale is an EMMY and BAFTA award winning director with a groundbreaking track record in creativity and innovation in factual storytelling for television and film. A BAFTA Best New Drama Director nominee for the Channel 4 cult drama hit Teachers, Richard is a pioneer in the dramatic telling of factual stories. His international success, D-Day 6-6-44 (BBC/Fr2/Pro7) was Grierson and BAFTA nominated, whilst 9/11 Inside the Twin Towers (BBC/Discovery) and Moonshot (ITV/History Channel) moved the factual drama genre into Primetime, winning EMMY nods in the category of Best Made for TV Movie. His documentary feature, Rocketmen (SONY PICTURES JAPAN) is regarded as the definitive cinematic telling of NASA's first pioneering half century in space. Richard began his career at the BBC before becoming Director of Creative Content at Independent Production Company, Dangerous Films Ltd, which he founded in 2005. Dangerous was sold to European media giant Zodiak in 2009. Richard has been instrumental in the transformation of TV content into global business brands. His IMAX 3D feature "Walking with Dinosaurs, Prehistoric Planet" and Giant Screen Feature "The Human Body" turned two of the most successful factual TV series of their era into multi-million dollar world wide properties.
Richard Daleki is known for Her Majesty's Prime Ministers: Margaret Thatcher (2022), Modernising Monarchy: One Hundred Years of Technology (2023) and Princess Margaret and Antony Armstrong-Jones (2023).
Richard Daniel Williams is known for Transcendence (2014), Deadly Illusions (2021) and Cents (2016).
Richard Danielpour is known for Budapest to Gettysburg (2007) and Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am (2019).
Richard Darbois was born on December 7, 1951 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He is known for Finding Nemo (2003).
Richard Davalos was born on November 5, 1930 in Bronx, New York City, New York, USA. He was an actor, known for East of Eden (1955), Cool Hand Luke (1967) and Kelly's Heroes (1970). He was married to Ellen Davalos. He died on March 8, 2016 in Burbank, California, USA.
Richard Daverin is known for California Dreaming (2019).
Richard David was born in Akron, Ohio, but ended up being raised in one of the greatest cities - Atlanta. Atlanta is where he really began to cultivate his craft and the start of his budding career. Richard likes to capture moments through photography as a hobby as well as he produces and directs. He started his own film company called Day Rose Films to play around with his other passions and skills.
Richard David-Caine is an actor and writer, known for Horrible Histories (2003), People Just Do Nothing (2014) and Class Dismissed (2016).
Richard Davies was born Dennis Wilfred Davies on January 25, 1926 in Dowlais, Wales. In a television era unabashed at employing cultural and racial stereotypes for easy and often dubious humour, Richard Davies grew accustomed to finding himself typecast as irascible Welshmen perpetually bothered and bewildered by their English colleagues. An accomplished character actor with a theatre background that included West End appearances and seasons at the Bristol Old Vic, he always managed to resist caricature and bring a flesh-and-blood reality to often undemanding roles. He is best remembered as Mr Price, the sarcastic, long-suffering and world-weary science teacher in John Esmonde and Bob Larbey's Please Sir!, which, at its peak during its four-year run from 1968, attracted audiences of 20 million and spawned a 1971 film. Pitted against the puppy-dog enthusiasm of John Alderton's fresh-faced, newly graduated teacher, Davies provided a grittier perspective on the experience of teaching unruly students in a grimy inner-London suburb. His laconic, dyspeptic delivery regularly stole laughs and entire scenes from his fellow actors. The son of a railway guard, born in the village of Dowlais in Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorgan, he began acting at school before going down the mines for a brief time. When war broke out, he enlisted in the military police and soon found himself seconded to the Combined Services Entertainment Unit. Back on Civvy Street, he joined a touring theatre company and in 1947 made his West End debut in Little Lambs Eat Ivy at the Ambassadors Theatre. He spent the 1951-52 season touring Europe and South Africa with the Old Vic and in 1953 played the Welsh captain Fluellen in Henry V in Guildford. That year also saw him return to the West End in Carrington VC at the Westminster Theatre. By then, he had made his first appearance in film (a bit part in 1951's The Lavender Hill Mob). At the end of the decade Davies was back in Bristol where he played Feste (Twelfth Night, 1957) and Grumio and Vincentio in The Taming of the Shrew (1959). Although television increasingly came to dominate his career, in 1965 he appeared alongside Bob Monkhouse in Basil Ashmore's The Gulls at the Jeanetta Cochrane Theatre. Later theatre credits included Gwyn Thomas' The Keep (Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford, 1970) and several productions of Under Milk Wood, including Theatr Cymru's 25th anniversary revival (seen at London's Mayfair Theatre) in 1978. In the 1972 film version starring Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, he played Mr Pritchard. In the late 1980s, Davies was a member of a co-operative theatre company formed by ex-Please Sir! cast members, with whom he appeared in stage versions of classic BBC radio comedies. The success of Please Sir! led to regular small-screen appearances, notably as Idris Hopkins in Coronation Street (1974-75), Taffy Evans in Rule Britannia! (1975) and Clive in Oh No, It's Selwyn Froggitt (1976-77). He also made memorable contributions to episodes of Fawlty Towers (1979), Yes, Minister (1980) and in particular One Foot in the Grave (1992). His later film work never matched his iconic performance as Private 593 Jones in 1964's Zulu, alongside Michael Caine and Stanley Baker. In his later years he had suffered from Alzheimer's disease and died on October 8 2015, aged 89. He is survived by his second wife, the actress Jill Britton, to whom he was married for nearly 60 years, their two children, and a son from his first marriage.