Robin Douglas was born on June 28, 1953 in New York City, New York, USA. She is an actress and producer, known for Homeward Bound II: Lost in San Francisco (1996), The L Word (2004) and The X Files (1993). She has been married to Ross Douglas since May 27, 1990.
Robin Driscoll is known for Mr. Bean (1990), Bean (1997) and Mr. Bean's Holiday (2007).
Robin Duke was born on March 13, 1954 in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. She is an actress and writer, known for Groundhog Day (1993), Second City TV (1976) and Saturday Night Live (1975). She is married to Hendriik Riik. They have one child.
Robin Dunn is known for The Body as Boundary Project (2010), Meet Me Under the Mistletoe (2023) and Christmas Bake-Off (2023).
Robin Dunne was born on November 19, 1976 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He is an actor and writer, known for Sanctuary (2008), Just Friends (2005) and The Big Hit (1998). He has been married to Farrah Aviva since July 15, 2016. He was previously married to Heidi Lenhart.
Robin Duran is known for Más que hermanos (2017), Hands of Stone (2016) and Stars at Noon (2022).
Robin Dyke was raised in the Louisiana & Texas as the All American Girl. After college, she quickly married a Cleveland, OH native. After living there for 10+ years, she now resides in Atlanta, Georgia. Today, you can find Robin managing her family of 6, volunteering with charities, consulting for fortune 500 companies, acting in Feature Films, Television and Stage, and behind the camera collecting content and gathering research for her documentary series.
Robin Eberly is known for Family First (2022), Before it Happened (2023) and Confound (2019).
Robin Entreinger was born in 1980 in the south of France. Being the son of a cinema manager in a small city, he spent time in the projection booth and gathered film knowledge. After passing the A-levels, he began pursuit of a film-making degree, where he learned about being cameraman and cinematographer. To make rent while studying, Robin worked as a projectionist. In 2001 he moved to Lyons where he worked as a projectionist for Pathé, also as a cameraman and cinematographer on corporate films or short films. In 2007, he worked as a cameraman on a feature film shot around Lyons. This is when he decided to buy a camera and start directing. During the summer of 2011 he shot his first feature film, Victims, on a tiny budget. At a screening at the Cannes Film Market, the direction of the Strasbourg Fantastic Film Festival decides to have a competition screening. Victims received very good reviews and genre magazines will went on to promote it (Mad Movies, l'Ecran Fantastique). In the meantime, Robin had already shot his second film, a horror comedy: Sadik 2. Sadik 2 would be screened at the 2013 FrightFest, London's horror film festival, and then at the Razor Reel fantastic film festival in Belgium. In 2013, he temporarily gave up horror and made Eta Carinae, a drama which concentrates on grief and the link between men and the cosmos. Eta Carinae will be released in France in 2019. In January 2014 he shot Dreamland. Set in Japan, it tells the story of a lonely photographer who deals with panic attacks. The film is a mix of drama, romance and thrilled, and stars the Japanese actress Hyunri. The film was screened at two independent film festivals during 2015, both is the U.S. During the summer of 2014, he co-directed the horror movie Abduction 101 with Steve Noir (the film is now available on VOD platforms). In 2015, he shot a documentary on French whiskies, and then got back to genre cinema by shooting The Darkest in 2016, a fantastic film in which night and darkness have a major part. That same year, he also shot his first short film, We Kill Everything, in Japan, with actor Valentin Bonhomme, who played in all his films, and the Japanese actress Rumiko Kimishima. In 2017, Robin went back to Tokyo accompanied by two French actresses, Chloé Imbroglio and Claire Suchet (The Darkest) to shoot Shibari, his second short film. In 2018, he shot his new feature film in Portland, Oregon USA: Troubles. Director / producer - Feature films Victims - 2011 (theatrically released in France in September 2018) Sadik 2 - 2012 (VOD 2014) Eta Carinae - 2013 Dreamland - 2014 (VOD 2016 / DVD/Bluray 2019) Abduction 101 - 2014 (VOD 2018 on Amazon Prime) The Darkest - 2016 (VOD 2018 on Amazon Prime, theatrically released in France in Novembre 2019) Troubles - 2019 Director / producer - Short films Nuits Blanches - 2011 We Kill Everything - 2016 Shibari - 2018 Director of photography Flare by Yuki Otsuka - 2013
Robin F. Baker is an actor, director, producer, writer, and award-winning animator born in Aiken, South Carolina to Dorothy Ann Abney and Willie Lee Baker. He was raised in The Bronx and received a Regents diploma from LaGuardia High School, earned an Associate's (AAS) degree from Brooklyn's New York City College of Technology and a Bachelor's (BFA) degree from the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan. Despite his formal art education and successful career in New York City's graphic design and advertising industry, he always wanted to be an actor. After being asked to play the lead in an NYU student film entitled "Blue in Green" by Mia Taper in 2014, Robin began the transition to becoming a full-time professional actor. He quickly began to embody a wide range of on-screen comedic and dramatic characters in various feature films, film shorts, music videos, commercials, industrials and voice-overs. Robin even landed an atypical role as a Dutch Cop on CBS Television's MacGyver (2016), where he was able to use his foreign-language skills due to his years as a temporary European resident. Some of his latest feature work involves playing Robin Harley in the horror Red Letters (2019) and Stan, a washed-up murder tour operator in the horror-comedy feature 6:66 PM (2017) -- both directed by Jim Klock Robin is also very active on the independent short-film circuit and has recently played the role of Patrick, Jr. -- a middle-aged, adopted prodigal son dealing with the stark, personal realities of his estranged older sister and their demented elderly father in the award-winning Two Peas in a Pod (2019), written by Chantey Colet and directed by Collins Abbott White. He was also able to reprise his linguistic abilities as Presidential Chief of Staff Donald Ryans in A New Age: Clash of Civilizations (2017), directed by Kiyun Sung, where he spoke Korean to his old friend, Right State Chancellor Yoon Taek-soo, played by Joomin Hwang. Robin has also periodically donated his time and talent to the students and faculty at NYU Tisch's Sight and Sound Studio and has actively participated in the post-graduate work of its alumni. One of his favorite collaborators is writer/director Mark Depasquale, who tapped Robin as the lead in his indie action-comedy short Troubleshoot (2018), where Robin portrays the role of a hitman who has more than just a little trouble "executing" his task. Some of Mr. Baker's latest projects have been behind the camera as director, producer, editor and composer (Obi Aké) in the new Amazon Prime series Deceptives (2020), written by and starring Catherine Crumber as Det. Michelle Simmons and co-starring Gisane Vincent as Det. Jackie Brower. He also has a few screenplays in the works and enjoys his slow-cooker approach, which he feels allows more "flavor" and imagination to seep through.