Eric R. Williams is a proud native of Atlanta, Georgia. He began formal training in Drama & Musical Theatre in the Visual & Performing Arts Magnet Program at Tri-Cities High School in East Point, Georgia, a critically acclaimed public school rooted in the performing arts and boasted notable alumni such as OutKast's Big Boi & André 3000, Xscape, D. Woods of Danity Kane, SNL's Keenan Thompson, Broadway stars Saycon Sengbloh, Sahr Ngaujah, Jahi Kearse, Joaquina Kalukango & many others. Eric graduated Magna Cum Laude with his BFA in Theatre from Howard University & made his professional acting debut in the Regional Premiere of the Rock 'n' Roll musical Passing Strange at The Studio Theatre in Washington, DC. Eric made his New York City professional debut in the Public Theater's Shakespeare In the Park production of Into The Woods opposite Academy Award Winner Amy Adams, Tony Award Winner Donna Murphy and Tony Award winner & Emmy-nominated Denis O'Hare. He went on to tour the US and Japan with the national tour of the 2009 Apollo Revival of Dreamgirls. Eric has since been performing regionally and in various workshops of new pieces in and out of New York, as well as appearing in various film projects, television & web series.
Eric R. Williams received his undergraduate degree from Northwestern University, and his MFA from Columbia University's School of Film. He is married and has a daughter named Alex. In addition to writing and directing the feature length films "Snakes & Arrows" and "Breaking News" Eric R. Williams has written an un-produced Columbo made-for-TV movie for Universal Studios and developed the pilot "Don't Try This at Home" for American Movie Classics. His script "Crystal Messiah" won the Writers Guild of America award for Best New Work in 2000, and was later developed in the Film Independent Producers Lab. Three of his scripts for "Voices from the Heartland" were recognized with an Ohio Arts Council Award for Individual Excellence in Screenwriting in 2009. In 2008, Mr. Williams co-wrote and co-directed an Ohio-based educational web series called "What's the Problem?" which received a regional Emmy Award in Interactive Media. He co-produced two international documentary series in 2010: the television series "Pepperpot" in Guyana, and a web series "Tropical Disease: Chagas" in Ecuador. Mr. Williams is a professor at Ohio University's McClure School of Emerging Communication Technologies, where he has received the University Professor Award for Excellence in Teaching (2007), the Honors Tutorial College Distinguished Mentor Award (2009), and was a finalist for the Presidential Teaching Award (2014). His non-fiction work has been funded by the U.S. State Department, the National Institute for Health, the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. Department of Education. In 2015, Mr. Williams began working with the Game Research and Immersive Design (GRID) Lab at Ohio University where he began working as a producer/director/writer of Virtual Reality Cinema (cine-VR) and other emerging technologies. In 2020, his cine-VR work was a semi-finalist for the Real World XR Awards' Best use of Sound & Music in XR for his piece "Lost Broken Alone" (Directed by Williams; Sound Recording and Design: Jordan Herron; Music by Moby). The following year, his VR experience "For the Love of God" won the Best Virtual Reality Award in the New York Nil Gallery International Media Festival. Mr. Williams is the co-founder and owner of a digital production company called The Blue Arm. You can learn more about him at www.WilliamsOnStory.com
Eric Radomski is known for Batman: The Animated Series (1992), Spawn (1997) and Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993).
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Eric Ramey is an actor, known for Criminal Minds (2005), Grey's Anatomy (2005) and House of Lies (2012).
Eric Ray Anderson is an actor, known for Twin Peaks (2017), Z Nation (2014) and The Librarians (2013).
Eric Reaume is an actor and producer, known for Post Mortem, America 2021 (2013), Puzzled (2010) and Kill Dolly Kill.
Writer/director Eric Red was born as Eric Joseph Durdaller on February 16, 1961 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and was raised in Manhattan. He specializes in hard, edgy pictures that have tough, no-nonsense tones and frequently address the darker aspects of human nature. Red attended the AFI Conservatory, which he graduated from in 1983. Eric was forced to work as a cab driver in New York City for a year after he went broke getting national distribution for his short movie "Gunmen's Blues." The tide of good fortunate turned Red's way when his brutal and challenging script for "The Hitcher" was turned into a terrific and terrifying film which has deservedly become a cult favorite. (The story for "The Hitcher" was inspired by an actual incident in which Eric picked up a creepy hitchhiker while driving cross country to Texas.) Next up was the beautifully chilling and stylish vampire doozy "Near Dark." Eric subsequently collaborated again with "Near Dark" director Kathryn Bigelow on the exciting "Blue Steel." Red hit another one out of the ballpark as both the writer and director of the grim and gripping thriller "Cohen and Tate." This particular triumph was followed by the excellent "Body Parts" (Red received a Saturn Award nomination for Best Director for this movie), the so-so werewolf outing "Bad Moon," and the nifty "Undertow." In addition, Eric wrote and co-produced the gritty made-for-cable-TV Western "The Last Outlaw." Red also wrote and created the comic book series and graphic novel "Containment." His latest features are the supernatural thriller "100 Feet" and the made-for-TV item "Night of the Wild." Eric's hobbies include film, books, comics, Cuban cigars, and gymnastics. He lives in Los Angeles, California with his wife Meredith Casey.
Eric Reiman was an actor, known for The Adventures of Long John Silver (1955), South Seas Adventure (1958) and The Power and the Glory (1941). He died on August 18, 1975 in Lawson, New South Wales, Australia.