Frank Ellis is an actor, known for Evel Knievel (1971).
Frank has been an actor since 1961, and has appeared in literally hundreds of stage plays since then, as well as television, films and radio work. His most recent stage appearances were at York in "Little Shop of Horrors", playing Mushnik, Derby in "Jack & The Beanstalk", Croydon in "Skin Deep", Salisbury in "Barbarians" & "Dick Whittington". Frank is currently appearing at Harrogate in "Aladdin" He is married to former actress, now teacher, Jenny and has two sons born in 1974 and 1979.
Frank Epps is known for Hot Money (2021).
Frank Fabra is known for Fox Sports: Copa Libertadores (2002), Superliga Argentina de Fútbol (2017) and Liga Profesional de Fútbol (2020).
Frank Failla is an actor, known for Family Obligations (2019), Innate (2017) and It's Love Bro.
Frank Falcone was born on August 30, 1970 in North York, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He is known for My Big Fat Greek Wedding (2002), Molly's Game (2017) and You Don't Know Dick.
Frank Fay was born on November 17, 1891 in San Francisco, California, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for Nothing Sacred (1937), God's Gift to Women (1931) and The Matrimonial Bed (1930). He was married to Barbara Stanwyck, Gladys Buchanan, Betty Kean and Frances White. He died on September 25, 1961 in Santa Monica, California.
American character actor who specialized in average-guy parts and who could be equally effective in sympathetic or unlikeable roles. His parents, the vaudeville team of Ruf and Cusik, took him onstage with them when he was a baby, and Faylen grew up in the theatre. He attended St. Joseph's Preparatory College in Kirkwood, Missouri, but returned to vaudeville as a comic pantomimist. He toured the country throughout the late Twenties and early Thirties as a clown and later as song-and-dance man with acrobatic agility. During a tour stop in Los Angeles, he was screen tested and began a thirty-year career as one of Hollywood's most familiar character players. His most famous film roles were as the vicious male nurse Bim in The Lost Weekend (1945) and as the cabdriver Ernie in It's a Wonderful Life (1946). But his greatest fame came in television, particularly as Dobie's dad Herbert T. Gillis in The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis (1959). Faylen was married to actress Carol Hughes, with whom he had two daughters. He retired after Funny Girl (1968), and died in 1985.
Frank completed a BA in Performance at the Hayman Theatre and was a Top 20 Finalist in the Hollywood Acting Immersive competition from over 5000 applicants around the world. He appeared in the feature film In Corpore which received positive reviews including the Hollywood Reporter and is currently streaming on Amazon Prime. He also acted in the ABC TV series Superwog, Nominated for an AACTA Award for Best Online Video or Series and played a supporting role in the film Trying which was selected for the Academy Accredited International Short Film Festival, Flickerfest. Frank was nominated for Best Actor at the Western Australian Screen Awards for his role in Restare Uniti, an award-winning historical drama which gained recognition at international film festivals. Frank is a passionate Aussie actor whose Italian family background has provided him with additional skills from speaking fluent Italian to playing soccer. Currently, he is developing his own feature comedy Chasing Sophia with a writer and producer, based on real-life adventures of a young actor who dreams of working with Sophia Loren.
American character actor Frank Ferguson appeared in scores of films and television shows, often as self-important types. Prior to his film debut, he was a prominent performer and director with the acclaimed Pasadena Community Playhouse, where he coached numerous up-and-coming young actors such as Dana Andrews, George Reeves, Robert Preston and Victor Mature. He broke into films, himself, in the early 1940s, usually playing minor supporting roles, though he was seen to advantage in larger roles, notably in two of the best-known (and oddest) westerns of the '50s, Rancho Notorious (1952) and Johnny Guitar (1954). He played hundreds of ranchers, bankers and police detectives in films and television throughout the '50s and '60s. He became most familiar as "Gus" on the children's program My Friend Flicka (1955) and later as "Eli Carson" on the two TV series based on the novel Peyton Place (1964). He semi-retired in 1972 and died of cancer six years later.