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Sofia I. Ramos Ramos
Biography
Sofia I. Ramos Ramos is a 19-year-old filmmaker based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. She recently graduated from the MNTC Digital Cinema & TV Production program and is currently a sophomore studying at OCCC, pursuing an Associate’s in Digital Cinema Production. She plans to move to the East Coast and apply to UNCSA, where she would study cinematography but is considering staying and building a career in Oklahoma’s growing film industry. “With You” is her first short film and the project that sparked her passion for directing.
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Adam Sandler
Biography
Adam Richard Sandler (born September 9, 1966) is an American comedian, actor, and filmmaker. He was a cast member on Saturday Night Live from 1990 to 1995, before going on to star in many Hollywood films, which have combined to earn more than $2 billion at the box office. Sandler had an estimated net worth of $420 million in 2020, and signed a further four-movie deal with Netflix worth over $250 million.
Sandler's comedic roles include Billy Madison (1995), Happy Gilmore (1996), The Waterboy (1998), The Wedding Singer (1998), Big Daddy (1999), Mr. Deeds (2002), 50 First Dates (2004), The Longest Yard (2005), Click (2006), Grown Ups (2010), Just Go with It (2011), Grown Ups 2 (2013), Blended (2014), Murder Mystery (2019) and Hubie Halloween (2020). He also voiced Davey, Whitey, and Eleanore in Eight Crazy Nights and Dracula in the first three films of the Hotel Transylvania franchise (2012–2018).
While some of his comedic films, including Jack and Jill (2011), have been panned, resulting in Sandler receiving nine Golden Raspberry Awards and 37 Raspberry Award nominations, more than any actor other than Sylvester Stallone, he has received critical acclaim for his dramatic performances in the dramedy films Spanglish (2004), Reign Over Me (2007), and Funny People (2009). He has also been roundly praised for his leading roles in auteur films including Punch-Drunk Love (2002) by Paul Thomas Anderson, Noah Baumbach's The Meyerowitz Stories (2017), and the Safdie brothers' Uncut Gems (2019), the last of which earned him the Independent Spirit Award for Best Male Lead.
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Sean Connery
Biography
Sir Thomas Sean Connery (August 25, 1930 - October 31, 2020) was a Scottish actor and producer who won an Academy Award, two BAFTA Awards (one being a BAFTA Academy Fellowship Award), and three Golden Globes, including the Cecil B. DeMille Award and a Henrietta Award.
Connery was the first actor to portray the character James Bond in film, starring in seven Bond films (every film from Dr. No to You Only Live Twice, plus Diamonds Are Forever and Never Say Never Again), between 1962 and 1983. In 1988, Connery won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in The Untouchables. His films also include Marnie (1964), Murder on the Orient Express (1974), The Man Who Would Be King (1975), A Bridge Too Far (1977), Highlander (1986), Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989), The Hunt for Red October (1990), Dragonheart (1996), The Rock (1996), and Finding Forrester (2000).
Connery was polled in a 2004 The Sunday Herald as "The Greatest Living Scot" and in a 2011 EuroMillions survey as "Scotland's Greatest Living National Treasure". He was voted by People magazine as both the “Sexiest Man Alive" in 1989 and the "Sexiest Man of the Century” in 1999. He received a lifetime achievement award in the United States with a Kennedy Center Honor in 1999. Connery was knighted in the 2000 New Year Honours for services to film drama.
On October 31, 2020, it was announced that Connery had died at the age of 90.
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Phoebe Dynevor
Biography
Phoebe Harriet Dynevor (/ˈdɪnɪvər/; born 17 April 1995) is an English actress. She is known for starring in the films The Colour Room (2021), Fair Play (2023), and Inheritance (2025), as well as the first two series of the period drama Bridgerton (2020–2022). She earned a BAFTA Rising Star Award nomination in 2024.
Dynevor began her career as a child actress in the BBC One school drama Waterloo Road(2009–2010). She went on to have recurring roles in the BBC series Prisoners' Wives (2012–2013) and Dickensian (2015–2016), and the TV Land comedy-drama Younger (2017–2021), as well as a main role in the Crackle crime series Snatch (2017–2018).
Description above from the Wikipedia article Phoebe Dynevor, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
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Adrianna So
Biography
Adrianna So (born Malak So Shdifat, May 7, 1992) is a Filipina actress known for her role as Pearl in Gameboys.
So was born Malak So Shdifat in Zarqa governorate, Jordan and moved to the Philippines at age five. She started her television career in 2012 when she joined TV5's now-defunct reality show Artista Academy. She became part of the Final 6 and went on to appear in various drama series on TV5. In 2017, she signed with The IdeaFirst Company and changed her stage name to Adrianna So, stating that it is close to her heart.
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Dennis Farina
Biography
Donaldo Gugliermo "Dennis" Farina (February 29, 1944 – July 22, 2013) was an American actor. Often typecast as a mobster or police officer, he is known for roles such as FBI Agent Jack Crawford in Manhunter, mobster Jimmy Serrano in the comedy Midnight Run, Ray "Bones" Barboni in Get Shorty, Cousin Avi in Snatch, and Walt Miller in New Girl. He starred on television as Lieutenant Mike Torello on Crime Story and as NYPD Detective Joe Fontana on Law & Order. From 2008 to 2010, he hosted and narrated the television program Unsolved Mysteries on Spike TV. His last major television role was in HBO's Luck, which premiered on January 29, 2012.
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Carven
Biography
Marie-Louise Carven (31 August 1909 – 8 June 2015), born Carmen de Tommaso, was a French fashion designer who founded the house of Carven in 1945. She was noted for her designs for petite women, her use of lightweight fabrics such as lace and pink gingham, and for being one of the first couturieres to launch a prêt-à-porter line.[5] She was the first Paris designer to patent a push-up bra.
Marie-Louise Carven was born Carmen de Tommaso on 31 August 1909 in Châtellerault, France. However, she strongly disliked her given name, and when she founded her business, she assumed the name by which she is better known. Carven showed an interest in fashion design from a young age by making outfits for her pet cat.
As a young woman, Carven studied architecture and interior decor at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris.
In the 1940s, she employed the Romanian Jew Henry Bricianer in her shop in Paris despite antisemitic Vichy laws. When the police came for Bricanier, she hid him in the building where her shop was, and allowed him to continue his work. As well, she allowed four members of Bricanier's family to live with her own relatives; this enabled them and Henry to survive until the end of World War II.
She had a chateau in Chantilly, where she kept kangaroos and peacocks, and a summer house on the Riviera.
Carven died in Paris on 8 June 2015, aged 105.
In 1945, at the age of 34, Carven opened her fashion house on the Champs-Élysées. The name Carven combined Carmen, her given name, with the last name of her aunt Josy Boyriven, who introduced her to couture. The 5'1" Carven focused her line on petite women, "because [she] was too short to wear the creations of the top couturiers, who only ever showed their designs on towering girls."
Carven soon became known as "the smallest of big couturiers." The signature piece from her first collection was a full skirted, green and white striped summer dress. Green and white stripes became the signature of the House of Carven. The material had been found in the attic of a chateau and was likely originally purchased for the summer uniforms of housemaids prior to World War I. Her early clients included Leslie Caron, Martine Carol, Zizi Jeanmaire, and Édith Piaf.
Carven was an inventive marketer. In 1946, she publicized the launch of her first perfume by parachuting hundreds of sample bottles across Paris. In 1950, Carven created a collection inspired by Gone with the Wind to coincide with the film's French release. She toured France with the collection, staging fashion shows at movie theaters.
In 1950, she became one of the first couturiers to develop prêt-à-porter. Her preference for simple materials such as pink gingham and broderie anglaise eased her transition to ready-to-wear.
In 1955, she launched Carven Junior.
Carven was one of the first fashion houses to stage runway shows around the world. The designer's travel inspired her to use diverse materials such as madras, batik, and raffia in her collections. In the 1950s, Carven was one of the first Western designers to use African textiles.
Carven designed uniforms for the 1976 French Olympic team, Parisian traffic wardens, Eurostar staff, and over 20 airlines. ...
Source: Article "Marie-Louise Carven" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
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Steph Du Melo
Biography
Steph Du Melo (Steven Dumelow, born 14.7.1961) is a British filmmaker whose work spans directing, editing, writing and producing within the independent and genre film space. He was the founder of MeloMedia Films Ltd, a UK-based production company committed to “producing high quality, thought-provoking feature films”. Du Melo began his professional life in the world of music and sound as a composer and pop star. His first film production role was as an orchestral recordist on Tom Waller's Monk Dawson (1998), on which his friend and collaborator Mark Jensen was composer. This early technical experience placed him close to the engine room of film production, developing both the discipline and craft awareness that would later feed into his directing and producing work.
In 1998 Du Melo co-founded the production company Renaissance 2000 Films. In 1999, they produced the Electronic Press Kit for the film The Criminal (directed by Julian Simpson). EPK production—interviews, behind-the-scenes footage, marketing material—giving Du Melo first-hand exposure to both the creative and commercial demands of feature-film promotion at the dawn of the DVD era, when EPKs were becoming essential tools for studios and distributors. Conceived as an ambitious independent film outfit, Renaissance 2000 developed a slate of projects with commercial potential across genre for TV and film. However, like many early-2000s independent ventures, they struggled against the realities of financing, development delays and distribution barriers. Most of the slate ultimately failed to reach full production.
The company’s defining project would become Fable, a self-funded, fully independent feature that entered production but was never fully completed. Du Melo, who co-led the project creatively, suffered a severe mental health breakdown during the process, which halted the film and ultimately caused the collapse of the company. This period marked a profound turning point in his professional life. While Fable did not reach completion, it stands as a formative moment—illustrating both the immense pressures placed on independent filmmakers and the personal cost that creative ambition can sometimes exact.
After a period away from the industry, Du Melo eventually returned to film work under a new professional identity, channelling his experiences into low-budget independent productions. His production company, MeloMedia Films, serves as the base from which he has developed independent feature films. His choice of genre and subject matter shows a leaning towards thriller and horror tropes, often with an investigative or social dimension (for example, missing persons, abduction, contagion) but his films have received largely poor reviews. For instance, a review of As a Prelude to Fear remarks that while the film taps into genuine anxieties (abduction, missing persons), it ‘adheres so closely to the standardised narrative formula of the genre’ and thus feels somewhat conventional. The same review notes Du Melo’s intention to connect the story to broader social issues (e.g., the number of missing persons) though the execution was viewed as less than fully successful. Similarly, C.A.M. was described as stepping into “red zones” of pandemic-conspiracy-thriller territory and leaning too heavily into found-footage aesthetics.
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Gerardo Preciado
Biography
Gerardo Preciado is a Mexican Filmmaker, Musician and Comic Book Creator. Preciado recently completed NARCO SHARKS, the sequel to the beloved over the top 80's trashploitation comedy NARCO SHARK and is currently working on NARCO SHARK 3, as well as several prequels and sequels set in the 'Narco Shark Home Video Universe'.
Gerardo is also known as electronic one man band ANCIENT ORDER OF THE DROIDS, which releases mainly soundtracks to imaginary horror films.
He also co-created and writes for the independent comic book labels MOONHEAD PRESS (with artist Daniel Bayliss), and OLD SKULL COMICS (with artist David Marquez) where he publishes stories in a variety of genres ranging from horror to science fiction and superhero satire.
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Toby Radloff
Biography
Toby is perhaps best known for his appearance in the 2003 film American Splendor about Cleveland comic book writer and R. Crumb collaborator, Harvey Pekar. If you’ve seen the film or read the comic book series, you already know that Toby was a friend of Pekar’s and they met in 1980 while working together as file clerks at Cleveland’s VA Hospital. Radloff became a recurring character in Pekar’s American Splendor comic book series for which the film was named.
Radloff was subsequently featured in a handful of vignettes for MTV starting in 1987 and aired, according to Toby, in conjunction with the release of Revenge of the Nerds II. As an actor, the guy’s a true weirdo, and totally hilarious. He’s appeared in several outsider films, including Killer Nerd and Bride of Killer Nerd made in 1991 and 1992 respectively. Both are distributed by Troma Films.
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