Billy Crystal

William EdwardBillyCrystal is an American actor, writer, producer, comedian and film director. He gained prominence in the 1970s for playing Jodie Dallas on the ABC sitcom Soap and became a Hollywood film star during the late 1980s and 1990s, appearing in the critical and box office successes When Harry Met Sally. and City Slickers. Additionally, he has hosted the Academy Awards eight times.

Crystal was born in the Doctor’s Hospital in Manhattan and grew up in Long Beach, New York, the son of Helen, a housewife, and Jack Crystal, a record company executive and producer of jazz records, who owned and operated the Commodore Record store. His uncle was a musician and songwriter Milt Gabler, and his brother, Richard Crystal, is a television producer. Crystal grew up in a Jewish family that he has described as “large” and “loving”. After graduation from Long Beach High School, Crystal attended Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia, on a baseball scholarship, having learned the game from his father, who pitched for St. John’s University. Crystal never played a game at Marshall because the program was suspended during his freshman year and he didn’t return as a sophomore, staying back in New York with his future wife. He then went on to Nassau Community College, and later attended New York University where he graduated with a B.F.A. from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts in 1970. He was also the Editor-in-Chief of the BG News from 1969-70.

Billy Crystal and his wife Janice have two daughters, actresses Jennifer and Lindsay, and are now grandparents. They reside in Pacific Palisades, California.

Crystal returned to New York and performed regularly at The Improv and Catch a Rising Star. He studied film and television direction under Martin Scorsese at New York University. Crystal’s earliest prominent role was as Jodie Dallas on Soap, one of the first gay characters portrayed on American television. In 1976, Crystal appeared on an episode of All in the Family. He also was on the dais for the Dean Martin Celebrity Roast of Muhammad Ali on February 19, 1976 where he made dead-on impersonations of both The Champ and sportscaster Howard Cosell. He was scheduled to appear on the first episode of Saturday Night Live, but his sketch was cut. He did do a stand-up bit later on that first season as “Bill Crystal”, on the April 17, 1976, episode. After hosting a show years later, in 1984, he joined the cast. His most famous recurring sketch was his parody of Fernando Lamas Fernando, a smarmy talk show host whose catch phrase, “You look. mahvelous!,” became a media sensation. Crystal subsequently released an album of his stand-up material titled Mahvelous! in 1985, as well as the single “You Look Marvelous”, which peaked at #58 on the Billboard Hot 100 during the same year. Also in the 1980s, Crystal starred in an episode of Shelley Duvalls Faerie tale theater as the smartest of the three little pigs.

Billy Daniels

William Boone “Billy” Daniels was a singer active in the United States from the mid-1930s to 1986, two years before his passing.

He was popular in Europe after he headlined at ‘The London Palladium’ in 1952, having broken the house records. He toured the Moss Theatre circuit of the UK in the 1950s as ‘America’s most exciting singer’ He first toured the United States with the Erskine Hawkins Band in 1936 as their featured vocalist. He sang every day of 1938 on New York radio, for 12 different sponsors. ‘It was me or the horse racing’, Daniels remarked. His forte was as a nightclub entertainer and he was the biggest cabaret draw in New York throughout the 1950s alongside the comedian Jimmy Durante. In 1958 Daniels was the first entertainer to sign a long term contract to appear in Las Vegas for 3 years at The Stardust. He had performed in musicals on Broadway early in his career a minor role to the famous Bill ‘Bojangles’ Robinson the legendary tap dancer in a short lived musical ‘Memphis Bound’ in 1945. More notable was the long running, over 700 performances, of ‘Golden Boy’ with Sammy Davis Jr. in 1964 directed by Arthur Penn. Daniels toured the US in 1975 with Pearl Bailey in the all black Hello, Dolly!. In London’s West End he headlined a 1978 presentation of Bubbling Brown Sugar. He appeared on television in the US and UK and Australia and Canada throughout the 1950s and 1960’s. He was popular in Australia where he first toured with The Andrews Sisters in 1954.

Daniels was born in Jacksonville, Florida. His father was a railroad mailman, his mother a school teacher and organist. Daniels had a heritage of Portuguese sailor, Native American African American and pioneer white frontiersman Daniel Boone. Daniels moved to New York Harlem from Jacksonville in 1935. He originally moved to New York to attend Columbia University to become a lawyer, but was side-tracked, during the Depression. Daniels grandmother was a seamstress in Harlem for the Ziegfeld Follies and encouraged her grandson to sing without a microphone, like the others to diners in the club where he was a busboy, a singing waiter. He served bandleader Erskine Hawkins and was hired.

Billy Dee Williams

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Billy Dee Williams is an American actor, artist, singer, and writer, best known for his role as Lando Calrissian in the original Star Wars trilogy.

Williams was born in New York City, New York, the son of Loretta, a West Indian-born elevator operator from Montserrat, and William December Williams, Sr., a Texas-born caretaker. He has a twin sister, Loretta, and grew up in Harlem, where he was raised by his maternal grandmother while his parents worked at several jobs. Williams graduated from Manhattan's School of Performing Arts, where he was a classmate of Diahann Carroll, who coincidentally played the wife of his character Brady Lloyd on the 1980s prime-time soap Dynasty.

He first appeared on Broadway in 1945 in The Firebrand of Florence. He returned to Broadway as an adult in 1960 in the play version of The Cool Word.

He appeared in A Taste of Honey in 1961.

Bill Goodwin

Bill Goodwin was for many years the announcer and regular character of the Burns and Allen radio program, and subsequently The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show on television from 1950-51. Upon his departure, he was replaced by Harry von Zell.

Goodwin was known for frequently promoting the item sold by the sponsor of the show. He was very effective on radio in doing ‘integrated commercials,’ in which the advertisement was deftly woven into the show’s storyline. Goodwin was best known for his amiable and fun-loving personality, for his persona on air as a ‘ladies’ man,’ and for joking around about Burns’s appearance and age. Ironically, he died over 35 years before Burns.

Goodwin occasionally hosted other TV and Theatre shows, including Penny to a Million and Dollar a Minute. His last job as announcer was for NBC Radio’s The Bob Hope Show. He also acted in several movies, including The Jolson Story and The Big Beat with fellow Burns and Allen regular, Hans Conried.

He played the role of Sherman Billingsley in The Stork Club and that of the hotel dick in Hitchcock’s Spellbound and appeared with Doris Day in Tea for Two. His last major role was as the narrator for the animated television cartoon Gerald McBoing-Boing.

Bill Haley

Bill Haley was one of the first American rock and roll musicians. He is credited by many with first popularizing this form of music in the early 1950s with his group Bill Haley & His Comets and their hit song “Rock Around the Clock”.

Bill Haley was born in Highland Park, Michigan. Because of the effects of the Great Depression on the Detroit area, his father moved the family to Boothwyn, Pennsylvania, near the town of Chester, when Bill was seven years old. Haley’s father played the banjo, and his mother was a technically accomplished keyboardist with classical training. Haley told the story that when he made a simulated guitar out of cardboard, his parents bought him a real one.

The anonymous sleeve notes accompanying the 1956 Decca album “Rock Around The Clock” describe Haley’s early life and career thus: “Bill got his first professional job at the age of 13, playing and entertaining at an auction for the fee of $1 a night. Very soon after this he formed a group of equally enthusiastic youngsters and managed to get quite a few local bookings for his band.”

The sleeve notes continue: “When Bill Haley was fifteen he left home with his guitar and very little else and set out on the hard road to fame and fortune. The next few years, continuing this story in a fairy-tale manner, were hard and poverty stricken, but cramful of useful experience. Apart from learning how to exist on one meal a day and other artistic exercises, he worked at an open-air park show, sang and yodelled with any band that would have him and worked with a traveling medicine show. Eventually he got a job with a popular group known as the “Down Homers” while they were in Hartford, Connecticut. Soon after this he decided, as all successful people must decide at some time or another, to be his own boss again – and he has been that ever since.? .

Bill Handel

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Radio personality Bill Handel of KFI.640 was honored with the 2,385th star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Leron Gubler, President and CEO of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, presided over the ceremony. Guests included KFI Sports reporter Rich Marotta and news anchor Gary Hoffman.

6640 Hollywood Boulevard on June 12, 2009.

BIOGRAPHY

William Wolf Handel was born in Brazil in 1951. At the age of five, he immigrated to the United States with his parents, Leo and Nechama Handel. Growing up in the San Fernando Valley, young William learned English without the benefit of a bilingual education program, and became one of the world's leading reproductive law experts.

In 1989, Bill began doing a Saturday morning legal advice show on KFI. Bill's law show, "Handel on the Law", is a unique combination of marginal legal advice, and Handel's outrageous remarks. It didn't take long for KFI to realize that this politically incorrect, self – proclaimed "Latino Jew" had the tell-it-like-it-is attitude listeners were looking for. Bill soon was given the coveted weekday morning show time slot.

The Bill Handel Morning show quickly became the top morning show in the market and "Handel on the Law" now goes out over 160 radio stations nationwide.

Whether you're talking about Big Brother, Big Business, Big Legal Problems, or Big Macs, you'll rarely find Bill without an opinion. His rapid – fire commentary gives listeners the information they want in the way they want it.

Bill Handel is an energetic, highly entertaining, yet smart alternative to pseudo-intellectual, boring, talk radio. For more than a million talk radio listeners – waking up just wouldn't be the same without Bill Handel.

Despite his busy schedule Handel finds time to work with various charities such as the Susan G. Komen for the Cure, City of Hope and Make a Wish Foundation.

Last July Handel celebrated the morning show's 15-year anniversary. He can be heard on KFI.640 on weekdays from 5 a.m. to 9 a.m. and on Handel on the Law on Saturdays from 6am to 11 am.

Bill Hay

Bill Hay was an American radio announcer who was famous for his many years of work on the Amos ‘n’ Andy show with Charles J. Correll and Freeman F. Gosden. Gosden and Correll had a show similar to Amos ‘n’ Andy called Sam ‘n’ Henry at radio station WGN in Chicago, but after a dispute in 1927, they took the program’s concept and WGN announcer Bill Hay across town to WMAQ. The Amos ‘n’ Andy team created the first syndicated radio show in history. The sponsor of Amos ‘n’ Andy, Pepsodent, contractually stipulated that no one but Bill Hay was ever to announce their show.

Bill Keene

Bill Keene was a television and radio personality who became famous in the Los Angeles, California market as a traffic and weather announcer. He was particularly known for his colorful humorous traffic reports which included numerous puns and he became a fixture in Los Angeles broadcasting.

His Los Angeles broadcasting career began in 1957 at KNXT-TV as a weather reporter. He is credited with helping pioneer the station's hourlong news format. During the same period he also reported the weather on the sister radio operation KNX. Later he hosted the daytime television variety show "Keene at Noon" which was later called "The Bill Keene Show."

In 1976 he started working full-time at KNX where he became one of the first regular radio reporters in Los Angeles.

Puns became a regular part of his broadcasts. For example, when a ladder was reported on the freeway he would announce ?Watch out for rung way drivers? and ?Don?t worry, the highway patrol will be taking steps to remove that ladder.?

Bill Leyden

William “Bill” Leyden was a World War II veteran serving in the Marine Corps and a television game show host and announcer who emceed six game shows, including It Could Be You, Your First Impression, and You’re Putting Me On. In addition, he hosted movies on KTTV, and in fact played small roles in a handful of films, including Jerry Lewis’ The Patsy. After returning home following the war, Leyden worked as a radio announcer on KMPC in Los Angeles and later served announcer for the syndicated radio series The Liberace Program before moving over to television, where he hosted several game shows, the most successful of which was It Could Be You.

During his run on It Could Be You, Leyden was touted by announcer Wendell Niles as “the man who will amaze you with what he knows about you”, partly because Leyden was often helped onstage and in the audience by well-concealed TelePrompters and “a team of spies and operatives” who investigated potential contestants.

Bill Maher

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COMEDIAN BILL MAHER HONORED WITH 2,417th STAR ON THE HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME in the Category of Television

Emcee: Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, President/CEO Leron Gubler
Guest speakers: Seth MacFarlane and Larry King
at 1634 Vine Street, next to the W Hotel at Hollywood & Vine
Tuesday, September 14, 2010 at 11:30 a.m.

Bill Maher was born in New York City and raised in River Vale, New Jersey. After graduating from Cornell University, he got his start doing stand up in New York and his break came when he worked as the host at New York's Catch A Rising Star Comedy Club in 1979. He still performs at least fifty dates a year in Las Vegas and in sold-out theaters all across the country.

For the last seventeen years, Bill Maher has set the boundaries of where funny, political talk can go on American television. First on "Politically Incorrect" (Comedy Central, ABC, 1993-2002), and for the last eight years on HBO's "Real Time," Maher's combination of unflinching honesty and big laughs have garnered him twenty-six Emmy nominations. In October of 2008, this same combination was on display in Maher's uproarious and unprecedented swipe at organized religion, "Religulous," directed by Larry Charles ("Borat"). The documentary has gone on to become the 7th highest grossing documentary ever.

In addition to his television program – which has featured such regular visitors as Vice President Joe Biden, Ben Affleck, Robin Williams, Arianna Huffington, Alec Baldwin and Michael Moore – Maher has written four bestsellers: True Story, Does Anybody Have a Problem with That? Politically Incorrect's Greatest Hits, When You Ride Alone, You Ride with Bin Laden and most recently, New Rules: Polite Musings from a Timid Observer.

Three of his nine stand-up specials for HBO – 2007's "The Decider," 2005's "I'm Swiss," as well as his most recent, the hilarious, "Bill Maher … But I'm Not Wrong," – have been nominated for Emmy awards.

Maher's charitable involvement includes: The Race to Erase MS, Global Green, The Humane Society, Hollygrove, Disabled American Veterans, PETA and many others.

ABOUT THE HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME – www.WalkOfFame.com
The Hollywood Walk of Fame is an internationally-recognized Hollywood icon. With about 24 induction ceremonies annually broadcast around the world, the constant reinforcement provided to the public has made the Walk of Fame a top visitor attraction. The Hollywood Chamber of Commerce continues to administer the Walk as the representative of the City of Los Angeles. The Walk is a tribute to all of those who worked so hard to develop the concept and to maintain this world-class tourist attraction. Fans of the Hollywood Walk of Fame will be thrilled to know that The Official Hollywood Walk of Fame application is now available. The application which can be downloaded from the iPhone store, is the best resource for information and news about all of the 2,400+ stars on the Walk of Fame. Hollywood Walk of Fame is also celebrating a fabulous black tie gala in the grand ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center on Wednesday, November 3, 2010 which will conclude the year-long celebration of the Walk of Fame 50th. The Gala Committee is pleased to have Walk of Fame honorees representing the five creative categories as honorary co-chairs for this important occasion. Sir Tim Rice for Live Theatre, Tim Robbins for Motion Pictures, Ryan Seacrest for Radio, Celine Dion for Recording, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus for Television. For more information, please visit www.walkoffame50.com

The Hollywood Walk of Fame and the Hollywood Sign are registered trademarks of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce.