Arthur Rose is an actor, known for Dolphin Island (2021).
Art Brown is a Los Angeles based Voice Artist, Singer, Comedian, Writer, Director, Musician, and Film-maker, specializing in Animation Voices and Audiobooks. Originally from Brooklyn NY, Art was a lyricist with the BMI Lehman Engels Musical Theatre Workshop in NY, has written and performed Standup Comedy, various Cabaret Acts and Classic Musical tours around the country. Art's most recent live tour (B.C. - Before Covid) was in "Old Jews Telling Jokes" where audiences laughed their heinys off in Burbank and Palm Springs. He's the author of "Vegetarian Dining in NYC", and "Everything I need to know, I learned from Cartoons!" The latter also available on Audiobook. Art's audiobooks and VoiceOver reels can be found at www.ArtBrownVO.com
Arthur Sandifer is an actor, known for That Dangerous Age (1949).
Arthur Sanigou is known for Dealing with Christmas (2023), Clique (2013) and La vengeance au triple galop (2021).
Arthur Sanya Muiruri was Born in Nairobi Kenya and for as long as he can remember he always loved film. He has worked as a Production Assistant on the Constant Gardener. As a Set manager and Unit Manager for film SOmething Necessary and Sense 8 Season 2. He has also most recently worked on the Film Rafiki as an Assistant Location manager, A Production manager on Supa Modo and as Supporting Actor Nicholas Jennings on Disconnect. He Continues to work in Film
Arthur Schwerin is an actor, known for The Amusement Park (1975).
Arthur Senzy is known for A Few Good Men (1992), Apollo 13 (1995) and In the Line of Fire (1993).
Arthur Shawcross was born on June 6, 1945 in Kittery, Maine, USA. He is known for his work on Most Evil (2006), 48 Hours (1988) and Viewpoint '93 (1993). He was married to Penny and Rose. He died on November 10, 2008 in Fallsburg, New York, USA.
Though not as well known as his nearly decade-older brother Barry Fitzgerald, Shields was a talented actor with well over twice the film roles in his career. Fitzgerald was already a well established player at the renowned Dublin Abbey Theater when Shields, also bitten by the acting bug, joined in 1914. He performed but was also out front directing plays. Already he had dabbled in the new medium of Irish film (1910) with two notable examples (1918). There was more to the seemingly mild-mannered Shields than met the eye. His family was Protestant Nationalist and he himself fought in the Easter Uprising of 1916. And he was in fact captured and imprisoned in a camp in North Wales. Late in 1918 he came to the United States and first helped bring Irish comedy and drama to Broadway. He would continue to appear on Broadway for some 24 plays until 1941, especially reviving two Abbey Theater favorites from the hand of Sean O'Casey, "The Plough and the Stars" and "Juno and the Paycock", the latter being produced and staged by him in 1940. Still not settled, Shields was back in Dublin through most of the 1920s but returned to Broadway almost full time in 1932 moving through the repertory of Irish plays. When John Ford finally convinced his brother - and some other Abbey players - to come to Hollywood to do the 1936 film version of "The Plough and the Stars", Broadway veteran Shields was asked to take the pivotal part of Padraic (Patrick) Pearse, perhaps the most important leader of the Easter Rising. By early 1939 he was finished with his concentration on Broadway and found Ford eager to offer him a part in his Revolutionary period adventure Drums Along the Mohawk (1939) as the matter-of-fact pioneer minister with a good shooting eye Rev. Rosenkrantz. Ministers, reverends, priests, and other assorted clerics would be a Shields staple throughout his career - and he always managed to breath an individual humanity into each and every one. From then on through the 1940s he was in demand as character actor - and not just Irish roles as Fitzgerald with his gravelly, prominent brogue, found himself. Along with the aforementioned men of the cloth, Shields was provided a steady offering of the gamut of Hollywood's character storehouse-Irish and otherwise. And among them were parts for some of Ford's most memorable films: How Green Was My Valley (1941) and especially The Quiet Man (1952). Here again, he was a cleric but a uniquely sympathetic one - the lone Protestant Reverend Dr. Playfair - whom John Wayne affectionately calls "Padre" in the vastly Catholic village of the film. He alone knows the former identity of Wayne and convinces the latter of his final struggle to go on with his new life in Ireland. Enough said - with a wonderful cast of Ford stalwarts and native Irish (including Fizgerald), this was Ford's long awaited crowning achievement. Though Shields was taking on the occasional film through the 1950s, most of his time was going to television. Along with TV playhouse roles he became a most familiar face of episodic TV with a variety of roles (even the old Mickey Mouse Club Hardy Boy Adventures), especially in the ever-popular TV Western genera. Aside from his numerous appearances in plays throughout his career, all told Arthur Shields screen appearances approached nearly 100 memorable acting endeavors.
Arthur Shurypa is an actor, known for #Selfieparty (2016) and Svinhery 2 (2019).