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aprile 28 aprile 29 aprile 30 maggio 01

Celebrities born on aprile 29

Movie celebrities, actresses, actors and film producers born on aprile 29
Luca Laurenti
Born: apr 29, 1963
Roma, Italy
Age: 62
Per 11 anni fa pianobar e in 11 anni ha lavorato soltanto una volta in carriera in un villaggio turistico e lo ha fatto per un mese in estate ad Amendolara Marina (CS), come ha dichiarato nella puntata di Avanti un altro del 4 marzo 2018. Ottiene un grande successo a inizio 1991 con Paolo Bonolis in Urka! in onda su Italia 1 con Brunella Andreoli e Leo Valli e fa parte anche del cast de Il gioco dei 9 presentato da Gerry Scotti. Con Paolo Bonolis darà vita a un sodalizio artistico. Oltre a Urka! i due lavoreranno insieme in vari programmi di Rai e Mediaset: Sabato Notte Live (1994), Fantastica italiana (1995-1996), I cervelloni (1996), Miss Italia nel Mondo (1996), Tira & Molla (1996 - 1998); Il gatto e la volpe (1997);[2] Ciao Darwin[3] (1998 - 2000, 2003, 2007, 2010, 2016); Chi ha incastrato Peter Pan? (1999, 2000, 2009, 2010, 2017); Italiani (2001),[4] Striscia la notizia[3] (2000 - 2003); Serie A - Il grande calcio e Un mercoledì da tifosi (2005 - 2006); Il senso della vita[5] (2005 - 2008, 2011); Fattore C[6] (2006); Avanti un altro! (dal 2011), la 59ª edizione del Festival di Sanremo (2009) (durante il quale, nell'ultima puntata, presenta una canzone da lui scritta insieme con Francesco Sighieri: Sogni d'Oro), e Music (2017) Un altro suo brano famoso, interpretato in diverse trasmissioni televisive è Innamorarsi noi, tratto dall'album Nudo nel mondo del 1998. Apprezzato per la sua vena ironica e le sue qualità canore, ha fatto parte del cast di Buona Domenica per diverse edizioni:[7] memorabili gli sketch che lo vedono protagonista con Claudio Lippi, nei quali Laurenti doveva indovinare la parola (nel caso di Laurenti, sempre difficilissima) scritta su un cartellino appostogli in fronte. Inoltre nel 1999 esordisce al cinema facendo parte del cast del film I fobici, e nel 2000 ha recitato al fianco del duo comico Manuel & Kikka e Biagio Izzo nel film Bodyguards - Guardie del corpo, dove interpreta la parte di sé stesso. Nel 2001 e nel 2002 è stato anche protagonista delle due stagioni della sit-com Don Luca, andate in onda su Canale 5, e della terza stagione, intitolata Don Luca c'è, andata invece in onda su Italia 1 nel 2008. Nello stesso anno, in autunno, ha condotto insieme con Barbara d'Urso il varietà Fantasia, in prima serata su Canale 5. Nel 2009 ha presentato assieme a Paolo Bonolis la cinquantanovesima edizione del Festival della canzone italiana di Sanremo. A ottobre 2009 ha condotto la terza edizione di Chi ha incastrato Peter Pan? assieme a Paolo Bonolis[9] e da marzo 2010 è stato al fianco di Bonolis per la sesta edizione di Ciao Darwin. Dal 2011 collabora con Bonolis e con Gerry Scotti nel preserale di Canale 5 Avanti un altro!. Il 14 novembre 2011 esce nei negozi il singolo Ricordati che devi morire, canzone con la quale è solito irrompere durante Avanti un altro!.
Bahar Yanılmaz
Born: apr 29, 1980
Rize, Türkiye
Age: 45
Carolyn Coates
Born: apr 29, 1927
Oklahoma City - Oklahoma
Date of death: mar 28, 2005 (77)
Coates was born in Oklahoma City and grew up in Santa Monica, Calif., where she acted in children's theater. She went on to major in acting at the University of California, Los Angeles, and worked in stock companies in the East. She met her future husband, James Noble - who played "Governor Gene Gatling" on the TV show Benson(1979) - in 1951 in Worcester, Mass., while playing "Eliza Doolittle" in "Pygmalion". The couple appeared in many plays together, notably "Long Day's Journey into Night" and "A Delicate Balance". - IMDb Mini Biography
Fehmi Karaarslan
Born: apr 29, 1981
İstanbul, Türkiye
Age: 44
Ferris Webster
Born: apr 29, 1912
Walla Walla, Washington,
Date of death: feb 04, 1989 (76)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Ferris Webster (April 29, 1912 – February 4, 1989) was an American film editor with approximately seventy-two film credits. He was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Film Editing for his work on Blackboard Jungle (1955), The Manchurian Candidate (1962), and The Great Escape (1963). Webster was raised in the state of Washington, and was a student at the University of Southern California, where he was an outstanding track and field athlete. He was trained as an editor at the MGM Studios, and received his first feature-film credit in 1943 for Harrigan's Kid. At MGM, Webster edited six films with director Vincente Minnelli: Undercurrent (1946), Madame Bovary (1949), Father of the Bride (1950), Father's Little Dividend (1951), The Long, Long Trailer (1954), and Tea and Sympathy (1956). Film critic Bruce Eder has written of Madame Bovay that, "the cutting of the film in the gala ball sequence, in particular, was a marvel of the editor's art in the service of old Hollywood's restrained, elegant storytelling." In the mid-1950s, he edited three films with director Richard Brooks: Blackboard Jungle (1955), Something of Value (1957), and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958); Webster received his first nomination for the Academy Award for Blackboard Jungle. His last film at MGM was Key Witness (1960). Bruce Eder has written, "If ever a film editor deserved public recognition in the 1960s, it was Ferris Webster." Webster edited the three films of director John Frankenheimer's "paranoia trilogy": The Manchurian Candidate (1962), Seven Days in May (1964), and Seconds (1966). Eder writes that The Manchurian Candidate was "the editor's magnum opus. The shooting, cutting, and intercutting of one extended brainwashing sequence, seen from multiple points-of-view, is still striking decades later, and the movie earned Webster his second Academy Award nomination." Frankenheimer cast Webster in his only appearance as a film actor, as Air Force Gen. Bernard "Barney" Rutkowski in Seven Days in May. Webster was nominated for an Academy Award for the editing of The Great Escape (1963), which was directed by John Sturges. Webster and Sturges' notable collaboration included fifteen films between 1950 and 1972, which is about half of Sturges' films in that period. It started with The Magnificent Yankee and Mystery Street (1950), and included The Law and Jake Wade (1958), The Magnificent Seven (1960), and Ice Station Zebra (1968). The final film of their collaboration was Joe Kidd (1972), which was near the end of Sturges' career. Joe Kidd starred Clint Eastwood. In the last phase of his career, Webster edited and co-edited eight films that were directed by Eastwood, starting with High Plains Drifter (1973), which was Eastwood's second film as a director. Webster edited Breezy (1973), The Eiger Sanction (1975), The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), The Gauntlet (1977), Bronco Billy (1980), Firefox (1982) and Honkytonk Man (both 1982). These latter two films with Eastwood concluded Webster's career as an editor, apparently after a falling-out between the two men. Additional credits include The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945), Lili (1953), Forbidden Planet (1956), Les Girls (1957), Divorce American Style (1967).
Brad Lewis
Born: apr 29, 1958
Contea di Sacramento, Cal
Age: 67
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Bradford "Brad" Lewis  (born c. 1958) is an American film producer and local politician. He produced DreamWorks' Antz and, for Pixar, the Oscar winning Ratatouille. He is a former mayor of the city of San Carlos, California. Description above from the Wikipedia article Brad Lewis, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia
Ted V. Mikels
Born: apr 29, 1929
Date of death: ott 16, 2016 (87)
​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Ted V. Mikels (born Theodore Mikacevich on 29 April 1929) was an American filmmaker of independent cult films. Mikels was also known for his home life, as he once lived with a harem in a Glendale, California castle that contained secret passageways. Description above from the Wikipedia article Ted V. Mikels, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Ryan Fisher
Born: apr 29, 1987
Sarnia, Ontario, Canada
Age: 38
Corey Rand
Born: apr 29, 1946
Mexico
Date of death: dic 22, 2002 (56)
Toots Thielemans
Born: apr 29, 1922
Brussels, Belgium
Date of death: ago 22, 2016 (94)
Jean-Baptiste Frédéric Isidor, Baron Thielemans (29 April 1922 – 22 August 2016), known professionally as Toots Thielemans, was a Belgian jazz musician. He was mostly known for his chromatic harmonica playing, as well as his guitar and whistling skills, and composing. According to jazz historian Ted Gioia, his most important contribution was in "championing the humble harmonica", which Thielemans made into a "legitimate voice in jazz". He eventually became the "preeminent" jazz harmonica player. His first professional performances were with Benny Goodman's band when they toured Europe in 1949 and 1950. He emigrated to the U.S. in 1951, becoming a citizen in 1957. From 1953 to 1959 he played with George Shearing, and then led his own groups on tours in the U.S. and Europe. In 1961 he recorded and performed live one of his own compositions, "Bluesette", which featured him playing guitar and whistling. In the 1970s and 1980s, he continued touring and recording, appearing with musicians such as Oscar Peterson, Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Bill Evans, Dizzy Gillespie, Kenny Werner, Pat Metheny, Jaco Pastorius, Mina Mazzini, Elis Regina, Quincy Jones, George Shearing, Natalie Cole, Billy Joel, Paul Simon and Paquito D'Rivera. Thielemans recorded the soundtracks for The Pawnbroker (1964), Midnight Cowboy (1969), The Getaway (1972), Cinderella Liberty (1973), The Sugarland Express (1974) and Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977). His harmonica theme song for the popular Sesame Street TV show was heard for 40 years. He often performed and recorded with Quincy Jones, who once called him "one of the greatest musicians of our time." In 2009 he was designated a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts, the highest honor for a jazz musician in the United States. Thielemans was born in Brussels on 29 April 1922. His parents owned a café. He began playing music at an early age, using a homemade accordion at age three. During the German occupation of Belgium beginning in 1940, he became attracted to jazz, but was then playing on a full-size accordion or a harmonica, which he taught himself to play in his teens. After being introduced to the music of Belgian-born jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt, he became inspired to teach himself guitar, which he did by listening to Reinhardt's recordings. At the time he was a college student majoring in mathematics. By the war's end in 1945, he considered himself a full-time musician. He said in 1950, "Django is still one of my main influences, I think, for lyricism. He can make me cry when I hear him." During an interview in 1988, he recalled, "I guess I was born at the right time to live and adapt and be touched by the evolution in the jazz language."[ He played in two Silverio Pisu stories: Giacomino passerotto vagabondo and Manolo gattino sognatore. In 1949 he joined a jam session in Paris with Sidney Bechet, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Max Roach and others. He first heard the faster bebop style of jazz from records by Parker and Dizzy Gillespie after they had reached Belgium after the war. They became his musical "prophets." As his small collection of jazz records grew, the music of Benny Goodman and Lester Young began to impress him the most. ... Source: Article "Toots Thielemans" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Walter K. Jordan
Born: apr 29, 1964
Nashville, Tennessee, USA
Age: 61
Bob Byington
Born: apr 29, 1971
Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.
Age: 54
Indie favorite Bob Byington burst on to the scene in 2008 with his SXSW midnight lo-fi, low culture hit, RSO [Registered Sex Offender]. He followed that up at Lincoln Center's New Directors/New Films series with the Sundance Lab project "Harmony and Me" (2009). In 2012 Byington won the prestigious Special Jury Prize at the Locarno Film Festival with "Somebody Up There Likes Me" starring Nick Offerman, and shortly thereafter he teamed with Jason Schwartzman for cult smash "7 Chinese Brothers" (2015). In 2017 Byington worked with comedy stalwart Kieran Culkin to make "Infinity Baby" --the film took best feature at the much lauded Woodstock Film Festival that year. Bob is an Annenberg Fellow and is in the permanent collection at MoMA. His new film is "Frances Ferguson".
Irina Arkhipova
Born: apr 29, 1982
Age: 43
Thomas Robsahm
Born: apr 29, 1964
Arendal, Norway
Age: 61
McLaren Stewart
Born: apr 29, 1909
Michigan, USA
Date of death: mag 14, 1992 (83)
In October of 1934 he joined the Disney studio as a story sketch man.  He worked in the animation department for many years, was a layout artist, and also worked on Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, including art styling on Disneyland After Dark.
Mark Drewry
Born: apr 29, 1955
Doncaster, South Yorkshir
Date of death: ott 19, 2004 (49)
Raj Lal
Born: apr 29, 1985
British Columbia, Canada
Age: 40
José F. Ortuño
Born: apr 29, 1977
Sevilla, Spain
Age: 48
José Ortuño, best known by José F. Ortuño (Seville, April 29, 1977) is a Spanish screenwriter, film director and dramatist. Born in Seville, Ortuño is a scriptwriter and playwright with over 20 years of experience that has earned him great prestige, especially in Andalusia. Winner of numerous awards both for his plays and for his television programs, series, documentaries or feature films, he specializes in the genre of comedy. From Wikipedia (es), the free encyclopedia
Shevy Gutierrez
Born: apr 29, 1979
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Age: 46
William T. Deutschendorf
Born: apr 29, 1988
Los Angeles, California,
Age: 37
William (Will) T. Deutschendorf was born in America on April 29, 1988. He and his twin brother William were nephews of folk singer John Denver, and became actors. He and his twin "tag teamed" the role of baby Oscar in Ghostbusters II (1989).