Philip Joseph Prince was born on May 28, 1953 in the Bronx. His father Philip was of French and English descent while his mother Mary was an Irish woman who was born and raised in Country Cork. Moreover, Prince had two stepbrothers and a sister. Phil grew up in an Irish Catholic community and learned early on how to hold his own in a fight. Prince became involved in all sorts of criminal activities after losing his beloved mother to cancer at age twelve and eventually dropped out of high school in his mid-teens. Phil moved to the rough neighborhood of Hell's Kitchen and hooked up with a local Irish mob known as the Westies. Prince also befriended a local hood named James 'Jimmy C.' Coonan, who helped Phil get a job working as muscle for a ring of Times Square strip clubs. Prince met and married a Puerto Rican stripper named Teresa Mendez; the couple went on to perform in live sex shows in adult clubs circa 1973. However, Phil eventually got burned out from performing live sex shows and turned to dealing cocaine instead. Moreover, Teresa was tragically murdered in September, 1977. In the wake of his first wife's untimely death Prince went on to work as a projectionist and night manager for the Avon porn theater chain. (He also continued to engage in all kinds of wild criminal behavior such as stealing television sets around this time.) Phil got married a second time to a woman named Susie in April, 1979. It was through his association with the Avon theater chain and his friendship with Avon head honcho Murray Offen that Prince wound up directing a handful of notoriously sick and twisted BDSM-themed hardcore roughies for Avon in the early 1980's. After making said films for Avon, Phil returned to dealing cocaine and was involved in a shooting incident at a Haagen Daz ice cream parlor in the West Village that resulted in Phil serving three years in a maximum security prison. After getting paroled in 1988 Prince got a job as a truck driver as well as ran a pizzeria for ten years. His second wife Susie died in 2011. Phil died at age 65 on September 11, 2018 in his home in Beacon, New York. He was survived by three children and three grandchildren.
Member of 1970's comedy troupe Firesign Theater, along with Peter Bergman, David Ossman, and Phil Austin. LPs include All Hail Marx and Lennon (or, How Can You Be In Two Places at Once, When You're Not Anywhere at All), featuring on side two The Further Adventures of Nick Danger (third eye). Additional LPs include Don't Crush that Dwarf, Hand Me the Pliers; I Think We're All Bozos On This Bus; Everything You Know Is Wrong; as well as many other titles of original material released on albums or recorded from broadcast radio shows.
Phil Redburn is known for Dinosaur World (2020), Reagan and Seeker.
Phil Reeves was born on January 12, 1953 in New York City, New York, USA. He is an actor and writer, known for Election (1999), Sideways (2004) and About Schmidt (2002).
Phil Ridarelli is an actor and writer, known for Road to Perdition (2002), The Break-Up (2006) and Mr. 3000 (2004).
Phil Robertson is an actor, known for Dad's Army (2016).
Phil Robertson is a producer and writer, known for Duck Dynasty (2012), In the Woods with Phil (2017) and Duck Commander (2009). He has been married to Kay Robertson since 1966. They have four children.
Phil Robertson is known for Black Death (2010), The Zero Theorem (2013) and Hannibal Rising (2007).
Phil Roman was born on 21 December 1930 in Fresno, California, USA. He is a producer and director, known for The Simpsons (1989), Garfield in Disguise (1985) and Garfield's Babes and Bullets (1989). He has been married to Anita Roman since 1970.
Russian-born Phil Rosen began his film career as a cameraman during the silent era, and worked his way into directing. Rosen was a highy regarded director in the silent era, as evidenced by the fact that when MGM fired Josef von Sternberg from Exquisite Sinner (1926)--for, among other things, his extravagance, slow shooting schedule and total disregard for the budget--the studio brought in Rosen to re-edit, re-shoot and generally tighten it up, and by most contemporary accounts he did a first-rate job. However, like all too many of his colleagues of the period, the success he enjoyed during the silent era didn't carry over into talking pictures, and Rosen spent most of the rest of his career churning out B-grade (and cheaper) fodder for outfits like Monogram, PRC, and the bottom-of-the-barrel states-rights market.