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Bud Wolfe was born on June 10, 1910 in New York City, New York, USA. He was an actor, known for The Crimson Ghost (1946), The Invisible Monster (1950) and Canon City (1948). He was previously married to Chloe Elrod, Mary Lou Dix and Sally Haines. He died on April 13, 1960 in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Bud Yorkin was born on February 22, 1926 in Washington, Pennsylvania, USA. He was a producer and director, known for Blade Runner 2049 (2017), Blade Runner (1982) and An Evening with Fred Astaire (1958). He was married to Cynthia Sikes and Peg Yorkin. He died on August 18, 2015 in Bel Air, Los Angeles, California, USA.
This TV/radio personality, actor, and recording artist was born and raised on the south side of Chicago and began his on-air radio career at a young age. On Thanksgiving Day 1994 Buda blessed the airways under the moniker "Spank Boogie/Buda" at Chicago's first hip hop radio station 106 Jamz. He has been credited for being one of the originators of the Chicago hip hop scene by Hip Hop Weekly magazine. Buda's addiction to fame lead him on a journey to control the airways at major market radio stations around the country including 107.5 WGCI Chicago, V100 Milwaukee, 101.3 KGOT Anchorage, Power 92 Chicago, 100.3 The Beat Columbia, Z92.3 Killeen, Power 104 Hartford, 97.9 KISS Jacksonville, and Detroit's Hit Music Channel 955. Club appearances, radio imaging, hosting events, commercial production, and voice overs are just a few of the talents deliverable from Buda. You may have heard him on a national radio commercial, seen him at an event in your city, or heard him on the microphone in your favorite club. Buda's addiction to fame was always present as a child and the presence of a music mogul emerged before he became a radio personality. Performing in talent shows, song writing, and music production lead him to release his first major CD release in 2000. He also toured the orient performing in Beijing, China and Tokyo, Japan. No stranger to the big screen Buda appeared on various television programs, magazines, and movies such as Know Your Heritage, Backstabbers (Trust), Fox 2 News Detroit, Ebony Magazine, and Wendy Williams "Queen of Media." In April of 2011 Buda relocated to Los Angeles to pursue a full time acting career, immediately landing roles and securing his position as a working actor. thEntertainmentcompany (T.E.C) is the brainchild of Buda along with his sister and label mate celebrity chef and recording artist "Lovely" Who has appeared on Fox TV's "Hell's Kitchen," Logo TV's "Ru Paul's Drag U," and Food Network TV's "Food Network Star." He holds many offices within the T.E.C empire including owner, president, artist, and manager. Specializing in music, cuisine, television, radio, and film. T.E.C has pledged to create new innovative concepts for the next generation.
Buda Lira is an actor, known for Bacurau (2019), Lamparina da Aurora (2017) and Aquarius (2016).
Brilliant, distinguished American director, particularly of Westerns, whose simple, bleak style disguises a complex artistic temperament. The adopted son of a wealthy hardware retailer, Boetticher attended Culver Military Academy and Ohio State University, where he excelled in football and boxing. Following his schooling Boetticher, something of an adventurer, went to Mexico and transformed himself into a formidable professional matador. His school chum, Hal Roach Jr., used his film connections to get Boetticher minor jobs in the film industry, most importantly the job of technical adviser on the bullfighting romance Blood and Sand (1941). By studying the work of the film's director, Rouben Mamoulian, and from editor Barbara McLean, he gained a thorough grounding in filmmaking. After an apprenticeship as a studio messenger and assistant director, he was given a chance to direct, first retakes of scenes from other directors' films, then his own low-budget projects. For producer John Wayne Boetticher filmed his first prominent work, a fictionalization of his own experiences in Mexico, Bullfighter and the Lady (1951), although the work was re-edited without Boetticher's approval by his mentor, John Ford (the director's cut was restored several decades later). Following a number of sprightly but inconsequential programmers in the early 1950s, Boetticher formed a partnership with actor Randolph Scott which, with the participation of producer Harry Joe Brown and writer Burt Kennedy, led to a string of the most memorable Western films of the 1950s, including 7 Men from Now (1956) and The Tall T (1957). He directed a sharp gangster film, The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond (1960), then, with his wife Debra Paget, left for Mexico to film a monumental documentary on famed matador Carlos Arruza. The travail of the next seven years, which Boetticher detailed in his autobiography "When In Disgrace", included near-fatal illness, divorce, incarceration in jails, hospitals and an insane asylum, and the accidental deaths of Arruza and most of the film crew. The film, Arruza (1972), was both an exquisite documentary and a testament to Boetticher's immutable drive. Though he returned to Hollywood to form a partnership with Audie Murphy, they completed only one film together before Murphy's death in 1971. Since then Boetticher completed another documentary and had announced several feature films in preparation. He died at age 85.
Budd Buster was born on June 14, 1891 in Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA. He is known for Lone Texas Ranger (1945), Battle of Greed (1937) and Cavalry (1936). He was married to Mary. He died on December 22, 1965 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
Budd Diaz is an actor and comedian, known for I Think You Should Leave, Stone Quackers, The People's Couch, and Take My Wife. He has appeared in music videos for Broken Social Scene, Lumeria, Peach Kelli Pop, and Upset. He co-created the stand up comedy show Power Violence. He was born and raised in Santa Maria, CA.
Budd Fine was born on September 10, 1894 in Hartford, Connecticut, USA. He is known for Battling Butler (1926), Oh, Yeah? (1929) and The Pooch (1932). He died on February 9, 1966 in West Los Angeles, California, USA.