A Southern California native, born to Belinda, a flight attendant, and Robin, a pilot; Robert started his career in entertainment when he was 15 years old at the AIA Actors Studio in Burbank, CA., where a talent agent from Cavaleri and Associates first discovered him. Fast forward to present day and Robert has accrued well over 100 Movies, TV shows and Video Game credits on his resume as both an Actor and a Stuntman. He also is a regular player on the stage through out the L.A. and Orange County area. A Jack Of All Trades, Robert has a number of small projects that he's Directed and/or Produced over the years, as well as, working as Camera Operator or Director of Photography or AD or UPM, among all the other various on set roles. He can be found both in front of and behind the camera, often at the same time, but he is always at the forefront of the crazy game that we call entertainment.
Robert Dill is known for Unsolved Mysteries (2020).
Robert Dix was born on May 8, 1935 in Los Angeles, California, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for Forbidden Planet (1956), Five Bloody Graves (1969) and Young Jesse James (1960). He was married to Lynette Avery Allen, Jeanette P Dunn, Darlene Lucht, Anna Mae Slaughter and Janet Lake. He died on August 6, 2018 in Tucson, Arizona, USA.
Robert Dobson is an actor, known for Last Shot (2020) and Kidnapped (2021).
Robert Louis Dobson, Jr. is an American actor and writer, born in the small town of Dobson, North Carolina. Robert has been acting since child-hood church, elementary, and high school plays and began writing poems intently at the age of 10. After graduating from high school, Robert entered the US Army at the age of 16. After 21 years in the Army Robert began working in the Federal Government. Robert began modeling while in college with John Casablanca Modeling School but soon thereafter realized it was time to aggressively pursue his dream of becoming actor and moved to Los Angeles, CA.
Robert Dobyns is known for Babezilla vs the Zombie Whorde (2022).
Robert Dodds is an actor, known for Repo Men (2010) and Doc (2001).
Robert Doherty is a composer and actor, known for Sanctuary (2016), Reminiscence (2011) and Coen City's Within the Hollow Ground (2010).
Robert Don was born on 6 October 1980 in Bridgeport, Connecticut, USA. He is an actor and writer, known for Angel of Sorrow (2012), The Talent (2011) and Mega Piranha (2009).
Robert Donat's pleasant voice and somewhat neutral English accent were carefully honed as a boy because he had a stammer and took elocution lessons starting at age 11 to overcome the impediment. It was not too surprising that freedom from such a vocal embarrassment was encouragement to act. His other handicap, acute asthma, did not deter him. At the age of 16 he began performing Shakespeare and other classic roles in a number of repertory and touring companies throughout Britain. In 1924 he joined Sir Frank Benson's repertory company, and later he was with the Liverpool Repertory Theater. His work was finally noticed by Alexander Korda, who gave him a three-year film contract. Three minor films were followed by his role as Katherine Howard's lover, Thomas Culpepper, in the hit The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933). Donat's style of acting, whether comic or dramatic, was usually reserved, with the subtleties of face and voice being his talents to complement the role. A top draw in Britain, he went to Hollywood for The Count of Monte Cristo (1934), but he did not care for the Hollywood scene--the fishbowl lifestyle of the movie star. "Cristo" gave him the opportunity for Captain Blood (1935), but he eventually declined. (With a nod to hindsight, it is hard to think of anyone but a fresh-faced Flynn doing the role.) Although he would have contracts with MGM, Warner Bros. and RKO through the remainder of the 1930s, he begged off many a film role or broke commitments, ostensibly because of health problems, though, along with being finicky about roles, he was also such a conscientious actor that lack of confidence sometimes stymied his forward progress. Hollywood usually had to shoot in England if it wanted him badly enough. And that was not a problem after the box office reception given The 39 Steps (1935), the big hit for Alfred Hitchcock. There was a hint of whimsy in Donat's face that worked especially well with the sophisticated comedic elements that crept into several of his dramatic roles. His portrayal of individualist Canadian Richard Hannay--which registered with North Americans both above and below the 49th parallel--in "Steps" was the first of such popular characters. Some of Hitch's famous on-the-set practical jokes ensued on the first day of shooting "Steps." The first scene was the escape on the moors from the master spy's henchmen by Donat and Madeleine Carroll handcuffed together. Donat and Carroll had not met before this, and Hitchcock handcuffed them together hours before filming so that they could get very well acquainted. He insisted he had misplaced the key when in fact he had slipped it to a studio security officer for safekeeping. Hitchcock attempted to land Donat for three other roles, Sabotage (1936) and Secret Agent (1936) and Rebecca (1940), but illness, commitments, and more illness, respectively, supposedly kept Donat from accepting each. Hollywood would be treated in kind, for Donat was more dedicated to stage work. Hollywood did get him for The Citadel (1938), for which he was nominated for a Best Actor Oscar. He won the Oscar the next year for perhaps his best known role in Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939) (MGM's with Greer Garson). Since 1939 was one of the most competitive film years in Hollywood history, Donat's reward for his mild Mr. Chipping was something of a stunner. This was the year of Gone with the Wind (1939), and Clark Gable as Rhett Butler seemed a shoo-in for best actor. But there is something of a myth that since both pictures were from MGM and "Wind" had so many nominations (including best actor, actress, and picture), MGM head and strongman Louis B. Mayer used his weight to spread the wealth toward "Chips". Unlike other British actors who came to work in America during World War II, Donat stayed in Britain. He did mostly theater but also some British films--only four--with one for Korda and one for Carol Reed. Only six more films were allotted Donat after the war and into the 1950s, all but one British productions. He starred, directed and co-wrote The Cure for Love (1949) and starred in The Magic Box (1951), a well-crafted and delightful (if a bit fictionalized) salute to the history of the British film industry. By 1955, all of Donat's acting efforts required a bottle of oxygen kept off stage and at the ready as his health continued to turn toward the worse. The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958), a Twentieth Century Fox production shot in the UK, was Donat's final film. His fragility was poignantly obvious on screen, and he died shortly after the film was finished. He received a posthumous Special Citation from the USA National Board of Review and was nominated for a Best Actor Golden Globe. It was a career for Robert Donat that should have gone on, yet it was filled with many notable screen memories just the same.