West Hunter is an American born actor from Kutztown PA. He studied acting in NYC at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts summer ENCORE program. Here he worked with Meisner technique, Stanislavski method, and on camera technique. He has training in improvisation from Second City and Ampersand theater in Milwaukee. He currently (2021) lives in Milwaukee WI and works as an actor and improviser in the Milwaukee and Chicago area.
Hunter Wieczorek is an actor, known for Blood Mercury (2014), Angel of Reckoning (2016) and Hellcat's Revenge (2017).
Hunter Wilson is an actor, known for The Epoch, SEAL Team (2017) and Rest Stop (2017).
Hunter Woelfle is a director and actor, known for Out of Time (2013), Oceanwise (2019) and As He Follows (2017).
Hunter Womack is an actor and producer, known for Free Ride (2013), Your Pretty Face Is Going to Hell (2013) and The Following (2013).
Huntington Daly was raised in Winston-Salem, NC and is one of five children having two brothers and two sisters. He attended R.J. Reynolds High School before moving on to the University of Tennessee where he studied Theatre. Daly is known for his role of, Stephen, on the EMMY nominated show, Only Children. He studies at the famous Groundlings Theatre and Stan Kirsch Studios.
Montreal-born Huntley Gordon was educated in both Canada and England, and upon completing his education took a job with the Bank of Montreal, later starting his own stock trading firm. However, he had had a taste of "the stage" in amateur productions, and soon gave up the business life for that of an actor, moving to New York and eventually managing to get small parts in Broadway productions. As luck would have it, one day he ran into a friend who was on his way to the Lambs Club to offer an actor who was living there a part in a film being shot by Vitagraph in New York City. Gordon said that he would take the part, and he was soon in front of the cameras. Director Ralph Ince took Gordon under his wing and secured him a contract with Vitagraph. Gordon became a reliable leading man and character actor in silents and, unlike many of his contemporaries, easily made the transition into sound films. He made his last film in 1941. He died of a heart attack at his home in Van Nuys, CA, in 1956.
Huntly Plantz was born in St. Petersburg, Florida, on January 28, 2009. He learns quickly and is very creative. He is an only child and enjoys relaxing with friends and family, tennis, and video games. He has traveled the world and has many more adventures he wants to explore. Huntly's passion for acting started when he was eleven, and his quick wit, pleasant personality, and ability to memorize lines have resulted in more opportunities. His first part was by chance. Since that magical moment, he has been working towards his goal of learning and developing his acting skills through acting coaches, camps, and directors guidance through increasingly more interesting and challenging roles. He has been selected for commercials, voice-overs, web series, TV, and movie projects. Huntly will continue pursuit of his acting career by working hard and doing his best to prepare for each new opportunity. He knows success comes with perseverance, and he is driven to succeed.
Huntun Batu was born on October 18, 1979 in Hulunbuir, Inner Mongolia, China. He is an actor and assistant director, known for Mongol (2007), The First Aggregate (2012) and Zhi sha (2013).
The 14th of 16 children born to an air conditioning repairman, Henry Richard Hall (he got the name "Huntz" from a brother who said his large nose made him look German) was anything but the tough street kid he played in the East Side Kids/Bowery Boys films. He made his stage debut at the age of 1 in a play called "Thunder on the Left"; after graduating from a Catholic grammar school, he attended New York's famous Professional Children's School, was a boy soprano with the Madison Square Quintette, and appeared in an experimental 1932 television broadcast. Actor/director Martin Gabel got him an audition for the play "Dead End", and Hall got the part because he could imitate a machine gun to playwright Sidney Kingsley's satisfaction. Hall appeared in a total of 81 East Side Kids/Bowery Boys features and serials, more than any other actor. In 1940 he married 18-year-old dancer Elsie May Anderson (they divorced in 1944). During WWII Hall enlisted in the Army, and after his discharge returned to Hollywood, where his first jobs were in war films playing soldiers (for his impressive work in A Walk in the Sun (1945) he received the New York Theatre Critics Circle Blue Ribbon Award). In 1948 Hall found himself in the same kind of jam as did Robert Mitchum -- getting arrested for possession of marijuana, but he was acquitted by a jury. After the trial Hall married showgirl Leslie Wright. In the early 1950s, Hall and former Bowery Boys actor Gabriel Dell teamed up and for a "Hall and Dell" nightclub act that was so successful it cost both men their marriages; in 1953 Hall's and Dell's wives both sued for divorce, claiming the men thought more of the act than they did of them. In 1954 Hall was arrested for fighting with the manager of a building where he was attending a party; apparently the party was too noisy and the manager told the occupants to quiet down. Hall took offense at this, a fight ensued and Hall was arrested for assault, for which he paid a $50 fine and was put on probation. In 1959 he was arrested on a drunk driving charge. Having stayed out of trouble for quite some time now, Hall has been content in retirement, with occasional film and television work (not that he needed the money; in addition to owning 10% of the Bowery Boys pictures, Hall made some wise oil and gas investments that paid off handsomely).