Raymond Gregoire is an actor, known for Nightscape (2012).
Raymond Griffiths is known for Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999), Game of Thrones (2011) and Through the Dragon's Eye (1989).
Raymond Gérôme was born on May 17, 1920 in Koekelberg, Belgium. He is known for The Day of the Jackal (1973), The Man from Acapulco (1973) and Au théâtre ce soir (1966). He died on February 3, 2002 in Les Lilas, Seine-Saint-Denis, France.
Raymond H. Blong is an Actor/Stuntman and Fight Choreographer with a Martial Arts background. He studied Than Vo Dao. In English Seven Mountains Spirit Fist Kung Fu for over 15 years, reaching the level of Master. He also studied other forms of Martial arts, giving him over 28 years in Martial Art experience. Raymond was recruited by the Fearless Hyenas Stunt team and positioned as a team Captain to add his martial art style and experience to the team. Raymond has also taken a seminar with Grand Master Zhao Chang Jun on Hong Kong Film Fight Choreography.
Raymond Hardy is known for Out of the Unknown (1965), Shining Sex (1976) and Tendre et perverse Emanuelle (1973).
The son of a physician, Raymond Hatton entered films in 1909, eventually appearing in almost 500 other pictures. In early silents he formed a comedy team with big, burly Wallace Beery. He was best known as the tobacco-chewing, rip-snorting Rusty Joslin in the Three Mesquiteers series. He was also in the Rough Riders series and appeared as Johnny Mack Brown's sidekick as well. His last Western was, fittingly, Requiem for a Gunfighter (1965).
Raymond Hawkins is known for Cardinal Matter (2016).
Raymond Hosni is an actor, known for J'ai perdu mon corps (2019), Autour de la maison rose (1999) and Khalass (2007).
Raymond Humphries is an actor, known for Almost Paradise (2020), Salvador (2017) and The Paper Plane Man (2016).
Birmingham-born Raymond Huntley was one of those instantly recognisable, mannered types that popped up in classic British films of the 1940's and 50's. Tall and austere, he had a somewhat mean, sour-faced look, accentuated whenever staring with icy disdain from behind horn-rimmed spectacles. This, and his trademark dry delivery, made Huntley such perfect casting for an extensive array of ever-so-superior, humourless civil servants, mean-spirited bank managers, dullish clubroom snobs, smug business types, dour undertakers or sinister cold war spooks. Earlier in his career, Huntley essayed rather more overtly menacing characters, effectively typecast during the war years as Nazi officers ('Pimpernel' Smith (1941)) or German spies (Inspector Hornleigh Goes to It (1941)). It is hard to pick out two outstanding performances above all others, but he was arguably at his best as the local bank manager Wix in Passport to Pimlico (1949), emphatic in his greed to reap whatever benefits from the Burgundian declaration of independence; as the irascible boffin Laxton-Jones in School for Secrets (1946); and as Henry Chester, made resentful by his illness, in the Sanatorium segment of Trio (1950). Towards the end of his career, Huntley achieved his greatest popularity when he was cast as the grumpy family solicitor, Sir Geoffrey Dillon, in TV's Upstairs, Downstairs (1971). Educated at King Edward's School, Raymond Huntley made his theatrical debut with the Birmingham Repertory Company in 1922. By the age of twenty-one, he played a septuagenarian farm labourer and was consequently hired as a comedian by a North Country revue for a starting salary of ten pounds a week. Huntley was reputedly the first actor to play Dracula on stage (in Hamilton Deane's hit 1927 London adaptation of the original novel), though it is fair to point out that an earlier reading of the play took place on May 18th, 1897, at the Lyceum Theatre, arranged by none other than the author Bram Stoker himself. In any event, Huntley's superb handling of the character established the direction his future career would take.