Beefy, Philadelphia-born Charles Hallahan was often cast as cops, both good and bad, mainly because the map of Ireland was written all over his face. A graduate of Rutgers University, he earned a Master of Fine Arts degree from Temple University in his hometown. After spending some time in regional theater, he headed west to Los Angeles to break into films and television. He spent a good deal of time on stage in L.A., and quickly began racking up television and movie credits. He was a regular on the detective series Hunter (1984) - as, what else, a cop - and turned in a standout performance as a corrupt, racist detective in a story arc on Hill Street Blues (1981). He also appeared in such films as Silkwood (1983), Kidco (1984), Executive Decision (1996) and Dante's Peak (1997). He died of a heart attack in Los Angeles in 1997.
A respected stage actor -- he trained at the New York Academy of Dramatic Arts -- since the 1920s, birdlike Charles Halton's thinning hair, rimless glasses and officious manner were familiar to generations of moviegoers. Whether playing the neighborhood busybody, a stern government bureaucrat or weaselly attorney, you could count on Halton to try to drive the "immoral influences" out of the neighborhood, foreclose on the orphanage, evict the poor widow and her children from their apartment, or any other number of dastardly deeds, all justified by "I'm sorry but that's my job." His 40-year film career ended with High School Confidential! (1958), after which he retired.
Explorer, Academy Award winning Film Producer, Sailor, Diver, Musician From a Pan American Airways family, Charles has lived all over the world and traveled in over 60 countries. He studied English at Roanoke College and Environmental Microbiology at University of Vermont. Charles co-founded The Fox Theater and the recording/touring band, The Samples in Boulder, CO. A waterman at heart, Charles moved from London to Antigua, West Indies in 1991. Charles is a PADI Dive Master, Technical Diving Institute Nitrox Diver, IANTD Re-breather diver, Royal Yachting Association Yacht Master, and private pilot. Charles worked with treasure hunters Scott Mitchen and Tony Kopp in the Caribbean where they discovered the French Fleet of 1678 in Islas Las Aves, Venezuela. In the mid 1990's he used side scan sonar in Lake Superior to map valuable Old Growth Timber also with Mitchen and Kopp. Charles is filmmaker known for his work as producer and as himself on the 2009 Academy Award winning documentary, The Cove (2009), Racing Extinction (2015), The Big Fix (2012) and Vanishing Sail (2015). Charles served as a Sail Master for the marine department on the Pirates Of The Caribbean movie franchise. Always pursuant to new technology, Charles introduced Thermal Imaging filming in The Cove and remains an Infrared Training Center Level 1 Thermographer. The eve after winning the Oscar for The Cove, Charles conceived and led a covert operation to bust the Santa Monica restaurant, The Hump, for serving endangered species SEI Whale meat. He covertly filmed and busted another restaurant for the same illegal service in Seoul, South Korea in conjunction with KEFM (Korean Federation Environmental Movement), Dr. Scott Baker, and the Seoul Police. His work with Dr. Scott Baker and KEFM is published in the scientific journal, Biology Letters. He went undercover again in China and filmed shark fin, manta ray gill, and Whale Shark oil smuggling operations. He is also an artist and paints from his vast collection of thermal images described in his talk at TEDx Maui.
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Charles Harder yet.
Charles Felton Harrelson is an American actor born in Tampa, Florida. After graduating from the University of South Florida with a B.A. in Criminology (the first in his family to graduate from college), he decided to study acting. His love for movies and actors ultimately led him to this path. Charles is known for portraying "Quinn" on Fear The Walking Dead, and "Noah" on the hit SyFy movie Swamp Shark.
An all-district athlete at Columbus (Texas) High School, Charles Harris attended college on a football scholarship. Encouraged to audition for a play by his college speech teacher, Harris discovered that he enjoyed acting. Over the next decade, he appeared in over forty college and regional theater productions, performing with such classic Hollywood stars as Pat O'Brien, Linda Darnell, John Kerr, and Carole Cook and such stars-to-be as Larry Pine and David Selby. After completing a PhD in English, Harris set aside acting and entered academia, where he professed for over three decades, chaired his department for fifteen years, and wrote the usual quota of scholarly books and articles. Upon his retirement from university life, he was encouraged by his daughter, the actor/playwright Kymberly Harris, to try his hand at film. Harris has become a familiar figure in the Chicago independent film world, acting in numerous films, Web series, and TV commercials.
Charles Harris is known for The Killer Robots! Crash and Burn (2016), Robotica Destructiva (2023) and The Killer Robots and the Battle for the Cosmic Potato (2009).
Charles Haughey was born on September 16, 1925 in Castlebar, County Mayo, Ireland. He was married to Maureen Lemass. He died on June 13, 2006 in Kinsealy, County Dublin, Ireland.
Charles Hawkins is an actor and assistant director, known for Gang Smashers (1938), The Duke Is Tops (1938) and Midnight Shadow (1939).
Charles is a Vancouver based actor with a wide variety of characters and abilities under his belt. His special skills and physical abilities (ranging from Singing/Dancing to an assortment of Impersonations, Circus Skills and Stunts) has offered him a number of unique film/TV appearances. He also runs a production company, where he creates costumes and props as well as provides other performance artists for events and Film/TV.