Eugene Parker was born on 10 June 1927 in Michigan, USA. He was previously married to Niesje. He died on 15 March 2022 in Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Eugene Pinlaston II is known for Detroit Dreams (2022).
Eugene Rodriguez is a musician, composer, educator, music and documentary producer. He formed the youth group Los Cenzontles in 1989 and incorporated the San Pablo non-profit in 1994. Eugene has produced over 30 CD's of Mexican roots and cross cultural projects for Los Cenzontles and was nominated for a Grammy for his 1995 production of children's album Papa's Dream with Los Lobos and Lalo Guerrero. His collaborators include David Hidalgo, Linda Ronstadt, Ry Cooder, Jackson Browne, The Chieftains, Los Lobos, Taj Mahal, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Flaco Jimenez, and the San Francisco Symphony, among many others. Eugene's many documentaries are acclaimed for their first voice power and some have been broadcast on PBS across the country. He has received numerous awards that include a United Artists Fellowship; the KQED Local Hero Award; Community Leadership Award from the San Francisco Foundation; and the California Arts Council Director's Award and many others.
Eugene Sampang is an actor, known for Spinster (2019), The Sinner (2017) and Cam Boy (2021).
Eugene Seloca is known for Dark Tide (2012).
Eugene Shaw is an actor, known for Mr. Robot (2015), Magnum P.I. (2018) and Murder in the First (2014).
Eugene Simon is a British actor born in London on the 11th June 1992. His series regular role as Lancel Lannister on HBO's 'Game of Thrones' has been running for six seasons, formerly alongside his lead role in Nickelodeon's 'House of Anubis' for three seasons. Eugene joined child agency Abacus at the age of eight beginning his career in theatre with the role of Archie in James Joyce's 'Exiles'. It was his childhood love for reciting poems from Roald Dahl's 'Dirty Beasts' that sparked his interest in acting. At twelve Eugene was the younger self to Heath Ledger's 'Casanova', and at thirteen performed his lead role as Gerald Durrell in the BBC's TV-film adaptation of 'My Family and Other Animals'. Eugene continued to worked throughout his years at Downside School in a number of comercials, and most notably as Young Ben Hur in Drimtim Entertainment's 'Ben Hur'. After filming he began modelling through UK agency Models 1, he continues to do so. On his 18th birthday Eugene was offered both his roles in both Game of Thrones & House of Anubis. Between filming the two shows Eugene debuted as lead American characters in his first US films; 'Before I Sleep' as fictional poet Eugene Devlin alongside 'Harry Potter' co-star Bonnie Wright, and Lord-of-the-Flies esque movie 'Eden' as US soccer player Kennefick. Eugene resides between London and Los Angeles throughout the year. Known trivia about Eugene includes: his love of languages, speaking French and Spanish from a father that speaks Russian and Portugese. He is the middle of an older brother and a younger sister, the only actor in the family. The name Eugene was given from his great-grandfather Eugene Barry Walsh as a homage to his Irish ancestry. Training includes sword-fighting, horse-riding and charioteering. Impersonation, mimicry and voice over work are much loved pastimes of his and are the reasons, he says, that he got into acting.
Eugene Solfanelli is known for Gotham (2014), The Equalizer (2021) and Big Dogs (2020).
Eugene Stevenson is known for The Pamela Principle (1992).
For the 2001 release of the book "Milking the Moon", which is actually an "oral autobiography" of many hours of tape recorded conversations that Eugene Walter had with novelist Katherine Clark, the publishers are promoting Eugene as "the most well-known man you've never heard of." After three years in Alaska as an Army cryptographer during World War II, he made is way to New York's Greenwich Village for a few years. Then to Paris for the 1950s, and to Rome for the 1960s. Along the way he met many famous and not so famous people such as Robert Penn Warren, William Faulkner, Judy Garland, Alice B. Toklas and Joan Crawford. His friendships with Federico Fellini, Michaelangelo Antonioni, and Franco Zeffirelli got him most of his starring roles. With George Plimpton, Walter helped found the Paris Review and later the Transatlantic Review. He won several literary awards, including a Rockefeller-Sewanee Fellowship, an O. Henry citation, and the Prix Guilloux. Monkey Poems (1953), The Byzantine Riddle (1980), and American Cooking: Southern Style (Time-Life, 1971) are among his best-known books. The University of Alabama Press recently reprinted his out of print book "The Untidy Pilgrim".