Edward Oates is known for Battle of Dunkirk: From Disaster to Triumph (2018).
Born Dublin, Ireland. Studied drama - London - The City Lit, Morley College & The Actor's Centre, Paris - Studio 34 & Coté Cour. Appeared in over 20 short films in London & Paris in both languages. Now based in Madrid, appearing in TV, films,commercials & corporate videos. Recent work has included Arritmia by Vicente Peñarrocha. Also working doing voice-overs for corporate videos & adverts. Has appeared in commercials for various major brands. Speaks English, French, Spanish, Portugese, Italian, Rumanian & German. Former lawyer and law lecturer.
Edward Olson is known for The Open House (2018), Who Is the Bloodiest Royal? and Illusions (2015).
Edward P. Blinn is known for The Bronx Bull (2016), The Dog Who Saved Easter (2014) and Hydra (2009).
Edward Pagan is known for The Florida Project (2017), Prince of Broadway (2008) and On the Outs (2004). He has been married to Sujeil Lopez since 9 August 1997. They have five children.
Edward Parker was born in 1956 in Madera, California, to Edward Guy and Margaret Kathryn Parker. He graduated from Madera High and attended Merced JC. Parker started acting in the television series Sun Records, and has continued in numerous TV and movies. His first speaking role was in the film The Auctioneer. Edward resides in northern Mississippi, and works in Atlanta, New Orleans and Nashville.
Edward Parone was born on 30 August 1925 in Hartford, Connecticut, USA. He was a director and actor, known for Black Moon Rising (1986), The Misfits (1961) and Knots Landing (1979). He died on 24 January 2016 in Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA.
Edward Patterson is an actor, known for The Corridor Crossing (2023), The Stylist (2020) and Burying Mitchell (2019).
Edward Joel Pawley was a native of Kansas City, Missouri, and attended Manuel Training High School. He took drama classes in high school, and after graduation he worked for six months in his half-brother's traveling stage show (under canvas). He went to New York in 1920 to seek his fame and fortune. He acted in various shows both on and off Broadway before getting his first starring role on Broadway (in 1928) as "Elmer Gantry" in the popular and controversial show of the same name. While still performing on Broadway in the early 1930s, he became interested in movies and obtained some small parts in a couple of films. He also supplemented his income from the theater by performing, on radio, skits from some of his Broadway shows. Around 1933, he left Broadway and moved to Hollywood, where he found work in more than 50 films over a ten-year period. He was a versatile character actor and appeared in some of the better known films of the 1930s with stars like James Cagney, Humphrey Bogart, Mickey Rooney, The Dead End Kids, Rita Hayworth and John Garfield, among others. He became disenchanted with Hollywood in the early 1940s because of what he saw as attempted Communist infiltration of the movie industry. After making a searing speech against those in the industry who he believed had joined the Communist party, he found himself unable to obtain work because of what he saw as "blackballing" by several producers and directors. Consequenly, he found it more difficult to find worthwhile roles, so he left Hollywood in 1942 and returned to the New York stage. He also worked for a while on the popular radio series "Portia Faces Life". He and Lucille Wall were the Love Story Boy and Girl on that show. In 1943 he auditioned for the leading role in the very popular drama series "Big Town, and won the part. He played Steve Wilson, the idealistic managing editor of the Illustrated Press who was not afraid to fight for what he believed in. His sidekick on the show was Fran Carlon, who played Lorelei Kilbourne, the paper's "girl reporter." Pawley played the role until 1952. He retired to Rappahannock County, Virginia, where he lived a very domesticated existence, raising and selling championship goats, writing poetry and working part-time as a radio announcer. His rich baritone voice was quite mellifluous and could charm any audience. He married (in 1922) his high school sweetheart, Martina May Martin, who was a stage actress. They had one child, a son they named Martin Herbert Pawley (b. 1923). After they divorced and later remarried (only to divorce again), he married (in 1937) the famous Broadway musical star Helen Shipman, of Pennsylvania. They remained married until her death in 1984; however, there were no children born of this union. His magnificent voice was stilled on January 27, 1988, as the result of a heart attack. He was a man of integrity, charm, eloquence, modesty, and patriotism, not to mention his ability to perform successfully in three different entertainment mediums: stage, movies, and radio.