Ernie Charles grew up in a family of five in rural Ohio, where he was crowned as the County Fair King. He attended Heidelberg University in Tiffin, Ohio and received a Computer Science Degree. He loved playing football and baseball, but also found a love for acting during college. Upon graduation he moved to New York City where he trained at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and at Carnegie Hall with the Robert X. Modica Meisner Studio. He performed in numerous theatre shows. While pursuing his love for acting, he did some modeling. On display at the New York Mercantile Exchange Museum there is still a life size replica of him as a pipeline worker. Ernie currently resides in Los Angeles.
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Ernie Colquette is an actor, known for Memories of Reality (2021).
Ernie Dingo was born on July 31, 1956 in Western Australia, Australia. He is an actor and writer, known for Crocodile Dundee II (1988), Bran Nue Dae (2009) and Heartland (1994).
Ernie Foort is an actor, known for Run (2020), The X Files (1993) and Ripley's Believe It or Not!: The Riddle of Master Lu (1995).
Ernie Gallagher is known for Space Truckers (1996), Love & Rage (1999) and The Belly of the Whale (2018).
Ernie Gilbert is an Emmy and Annie award-winning art director, designer, animator, actor and musician, known for his work on Puppy Dog Pals, The Fairly Oddparents, Kamp Koral, The Fresh Beat Band of Spies, and T.U.F.F. Puppy. Ernie studied Theatre and Music at the University of Michigan, and Character Animation at The California Institute of Arts. He Can be heard providing the singing voice and ukulele playing for Chippington Skylark III, in the Fairly Oddparents episode "The Good Old Days!"
Ernie González Jr. is an actor, known for Euphoria (2019), Indebted (2020) and Carol's Second Act (2019).
Ernie began his career in television and film with the roles of Harry Butkis in It Takes Two and Claude in HBO's The High Life, produced by David Letterman. He has since been featured in dozens of productions, including Friends, Grey's Anatomy and Supernatural. Ernie won a best supporting actor award for playing Larry in Call Me Fitz opposite fellow Canadian Jason Priestley. Current recurring roles include Lazlo in Disney's Raven's Home, and Little Oink in Moonshine.
As a child growing up in Benton Harbor, Michigan, Ernie Hudson wrote short stories, poems and songs, always thinking that his words might one day come to life on stage. After a short stint in the Marine Corps, he moved to Detroit where he became the resident playwright at Concept East, the oldest black theatre in the country. In addition, he enrolled at Wayne State University to further develop his writing and acting skills and found time to establish the Actors' Emsemble Theatre, where he and other talented young black writers directed and appeared in their own works. After graduating with a B.A. from Wayne State, he was rewarded a full scholarship to the M.F.A. program at the prestigious Yale School of Drama. While performing with the school's repertory company, he was asked to appear in the Los Angeles production of Lonne Elder III's musical "Daddy Goodness," which led to his meeting Gordon Parks, who gave Hudson the costarring role in his first feature film, Leadbelly (1976). Unfortunately, all that followed "Leadbelly" was a year of "bit parts and some harsh lessons about Hollywood," which led Hudson to enroll in another academic doctorate program at the University of Minnesota. He did not complete the program. Through his experience, he learned another vital lesson: "There are those who spend their lives studying it and those who spend their lives doing it." Hudson definitely wanted to be in the second group. Keeping in mind this self-revelation, Hudson accepted the starring role of Jack Jefferson in the Minneapolis Theatre In The Round's production of "The Great White Hope," a role that he put "everything he had into," including shaving his head. A series of starring and guest roles followed on such television shows as Fantasy Island (1977), The Incredible Hulk (1977), Little House on the Prairie (1974), Diff'rent Strokes (1978), Taxi (1978), One Day at a Time (1975), Gimme a Break! (1981), The A-Team (1983) and Webster (1983), as well as costarring roles in the TV movies White Mama (1980) with Bette Davis, Roots: The Next Generations (1979), Women of San Quentin (1983), California Girls (1985), Mad Bull (1977) and Love on the Run (1985). Other feature film credits include The Jazz Singer (1980), The Main Event (1979), Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone (1983), Penitentiary II (1982), Going Berserk (1983), Joy of Sex (1984) and, of course, the mega-hit Ghostbusters (1984).