Georga Bullivant is an actress, known for Seamonsters (2011).
Georgandreas Kalaritis is known for Support Group Olympus (2021) and Makarioi aftoi pou ton Theo epoiisan (2015).
George is known for Thalainagaram 2 (2023).
George is known for Djibouti (2021).
George is known for Vanna Jigina (2015) and Saivam (2014).
George is known for Hara Hara Mahadevaki (2017).
There aren't many actors who can claim that they appeared in everything from innocuous family features to sexy soft-core smut to popular television programs to various horror, science fiction, and exploitation movies as well as worked behind-the-scenes on a slew of films in assorted production capacities throughout the course of their careers. The exceptionally talented and versatile George "Buck" Flower did all this and more during a remarkably busy, diverse, and impressive career that spanned 35 years and over a 100 movies as a character actor alone. Flower was born on October 28, 1937, in the Blue Mountains of Eastern Oregon. He enlisted in the army as a teenager and enrolled at Eastern Oregon College following his military service. Flower then moved to California and attended Pasadena City College. He soon became a member of the repertory theater group The Inspiration Players and stayed with the group for twelve years. The theater company toured Alaska and all 48 continental United States. Flower first started acting in movies in the early 1970s and initially established himself in the blithely lowbrow soft-core outings Country Cuzzins (1972), Below the Belt (1971), and The Dirty Mind of Young Sally (1973) for legendary trash flick filmmaker Harry H. Novak. Portly and grizzled, with a rumpled face, a scraggly beard, an engagingly rough-around-the-edges demeanor, and a deep, thick, heavy drawling rumble of a throaty voice, Flower was often cast as grubby bums, sloppy drunks, grouchy old guys, and scruffy rednecks. Among the notable directors Flower appeared in countless films for are Matt Cimber, Jim Wynorski, Don Edmonds (he's in the first two notoriously nasty "Ilsa" movies acting under the alias C.D. LaFleure), William Lustig, Bill Rebane, David DeCoteau, Bethel Buckalew, Jack Starrett, Nick Phillips, Anthony Hickox, and Fred Olen Ray. Flower achieved his greatest popularity with his terrific contributions to a handful of John Carpenter features: he's an ill-fated fisherman in The Fog (1980); a bum in Escape from New York (1981); a crusty cook in Starman (1984); excellent as the rags-to-riches bum Drifter in They Live (1988); another bum in the "Unleaded" segment of the horror anthology Body Bags (1993); and a boozy high school janitor in Village of the Damned (1995). Flower's other memorable roles include the cantankerous forest-dwelling hermit Boomer in the "Wilderness Family" pictures, a detective in The Witch Who Came from the Sea (1976), a corrupt vice cop in The Candy Tangerine Man (1975), a machete-brandishing lunatic in Drive In Massacre (1976), an irascible old coot in Relentless (1989), a senile janitor in Sorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-O-Rama (1988), the stern patriarch of a mountain family in Pumpkinhead (1988), a grouchy handyman in Cheerleader Camp (1988), a gregarious railroad worker in The Alpha Incident (1978), a homeless man on a park bench in Back to the Future (1985) (Flower reprised this part in the first sequel), an ill-kept hick in A Small Town in Texas (1976), a peppery camp caretaker in Berserker (1987) and a hillbilly hunter in Skeeter (1993). Flower had guest spots on the TV shows The Dukes of Hazzard (1979), Flo (1980), NYPD Blue (1993), ER (1994), and Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (1993). In addition to his substantial acting credits, Flower also was the casting director for The Witch Who Came from the Sea (1976) and Tiger Man (1983), served as a producer on such features as Hell's Belles (1995), Takin' It Off Out West (1995), The Night Stalker (1986), and Up Yours (1979), handled second unit director chores on The Lonely Lady (1983), Bare Knuckles (1977), and Teenage Innocence (1973), and even co-wrote the scripts for such movies as Wooly Boys (2001), Party Plane (1991), Death Falls (1991), In Search of a Golden Sky (1984), Joyride to Nowhere (1977), Drive In Massacre (1976), and Teenage Seductress (1975). He's the father of actress/costume designer Verkina Flower. George "Buck" Flower died of cancer at age 66 on June 18, 2004. Although the "Buck" may have sadly stopped, George "Buck" Flower's extraordinary cinematic legacy shall continue to live on and entertain film fans all over the world for all eternity. Author: woodyanders
George "G Dot" Hill is a Los Angeles based stand-up comedian, producer, and actor. His experiences as a LA Native fuels his edgy perspective on relationships, women, normal life tasks, and his entertainment life, bringing audiences together with thought and laughter every time he graces the stage. G Dot started his comedy writing career in 2006 after graduating from Stanford University. In 2009, G Dot became a lawyer, founding his own law firm and practicing in both corporate transactions and litigation. Thereafter, he reinvigorated his comedy career through stand-up comedy and has never looked back since. In addition to stand-up, G Dot has been successful in his pursuits in acting and producing. G Dot is an executive producer, writer and recurring character on the LeviNLA Films TV Series "Christian Brothers." Christian Brothers has various free episodes for viewing on YouTube and the full seasons can be viewed at Amazon Prime, Stream Now & Stream Now Pro. He is a writer, producer, and recurring character on Season 3 of Christian Brothers. G Dot Hill is a radio host and personality on Accelerated Radio's More Music More Funny Radio Show, airing every Monday from 8pm-10pm. The show provides a platform for unsigned, aspiring, and experienced talent to showcase their talents and events to hundreds of thousands of people. G Dot has also been a featured co-host on Worldwide Underground Radio Show, Tha Outhouse Radio Show, GoDaWork Radio Show, and the Journey to Stardom Radio Show on Accelerated Radio. G Dot is the founder and host of the G Dot Hill & Friends Monthly Comedy Showcase. The showcase features various up & coming Black comedians from all over the country performing in Orange County, California. G Dot tags this production as bringing Black Comedy to the OC, where this type of comedy is not as prevalent, but just as necessary. G Dot has performed stand-up all across California and the country, including: The Comedy Store (Hollywood, CA), The Laugh Factory (Hollywood, CA), Flappers Comedy Club (Burbank, CA), Hollywood Improv (Hollywood, CA), The Viper Room (Hollywood, CA), Van Nuys Comedy Club in Springbok (Van Nuys, CA), Sals Comedy Hole (Hollywood, CA ), Ice House Comedy Club (Pasadena, CA), OC SteelHouse (Anaheim, CA), The Study (Hollywood, CA), The Lexington Bar/Theater (Los Angeles, CA), Karma Lounge (Los Angeles, CA), 5 star Bar (Los Angeles, CA) Federal Underground Bar (Long Beach, CA), Blacklight District Lounge (Long Beach, CA), The Sky Room (Long Beach, CA), Luck Lizard (Whittier, CA), Kush Factory LA (Los Angeles, CA), Fanatic Salon Theater (Los Angeles, CA), French Quarters (Bellflower, CA), Muldoons Saloon (Long Beach, CA), Iron House Training Facility (Palmdale, CA), Vape & Bake (Rosamond, CA), Burbank Comedy Festival Regional Showcase (Sunnyvale, CA), Tommy T's Comedy Club (Pleasanton, CA), Punchline Sacramento (Sacramento, CA), Rooster T Feathers Comedy Club (Sunnyvale, CA), Mutiny Radio (San Francisco, CA), Brainwash Cafe (San Francisco, CA), Level 13 Club (Oakland, CA), Stateside Lounge (Las Vegas, NV), First Annual Northwest Black Comedy Festival (Portland, OR), Fun House Lounge (Portland, OR), Ford Food & Drink (Portland, OR), The North Bar (Chicago, IL). You can catch him performing stand-up throughout the Los Angeles, Orange County and across the nation.
American character actor, the most famous of Western-movie sidekicks of the 1930s and 1940s. He was born May 7, 1885, the third of seven children, in the Hayes Hotel (owned by his father) in the tiny hamlet of Stannards, New York, on the outskirts of Wellsville, New York. Hayes was the son of hotelier and oil-production manager Clark Hayes, and grew up in Stannards. As a young man, George Hayes worked in a circus and played semi-pro baseball while a teenager. He ran away from home at 17, in 1902, and joined a touring stock company. He married Olive Ireland in 1914 and the pair became quite successful on the vaudeville circuit. Retired in his 40s, he lost much of his money in the 1929 stock market crash and was forced to return to work. Although he had made his film debut in a single appearance prior to the crash, it was not until his wife convinced him to move to California and he met producer Trem Carr that he began working steadily in the medium. He played scores of roles in Westerns and non-Westerns alike, finally in the mid-1930s settling in to an almost exclusively Western career. He gained fame as Hopalong Cassidy's sidekick Windy Halliday in many films between 1936-39. Leaving the Cassidy films in a salary dispute, he was legally precluded from using the "Windy" nickname, and so took on the sobriquet "Gabby", and was so billed from about 1940. One of the few sidekicks to land on the annual list of Top Ten Western Boxoffice Stars, he did so repeatedly. In his early films, he alternated between whiskered comic-relief sidekicks and clean-shaven bad guys, but by the later 1930s, he worked almost exclusively as a Western sidekick to stars such as John Wayne, Roy Rogers, and Randolph Scott. After his last film, in 1950, he starred as the host of a network television show devoted to stories of the Old West for children, The Gabby Hayes Show (1950). Offstage an elegant and well-appointed connoisseur and man-about-town, Hayes devoted the final years of his life to his investments. He died of cardiovascular disease in Burbank, California, on February 9, 1969.
George 'The Slayer' Stiso was born on March 21, 1971 in New Jersey, USA. He is an actor, known for The Worst Horror Movie Ever Made (2005), Dirtbags: Evil Never Felt So Good (2009) and Night of the Pumpkin (2010).