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Louis Vincent Goulven Salou (23 April 1902 – 12 October 1948) was a French stage and film actor.
Louis was born in Oissel and died in Fontenay-aux-Roses.
The 1940s was a decade that began on January 1, 1940, and ended on December 31, 1949.
The Negro American League was one of the several Negro leagues created during the time organized American baseball was segregated. The league was established in 1937, and disbanded after its 1962 season.
Jerome Palmer Cowan was an American stage, film, and television actor.
Francis Pierlot was a stage and film actor with over 90 film credits between 1914 and 1953.
James Basevi was a British-born art director and special effects expert.
Football club de Nancy was a French association football team playing in the city of Nancy, Meurthe-et-Moselle. The team was founded in 1901 and dissolved in 1968.
Cyrus Willard Kendall was an American film actor. He appeared in more than 140 films between 1935 and 1950. Kendall's heavy-set, square-jawed appearance and deep voice were perfect for wiseguy roles such as policemen and police chiefs, wardens, military officers, bartenders, reporters, and mobsters.
William Haade was an American film actor. He appeared in more than 250 films between 1937 and 1957. He was born in New York City and died in Los Angeles, California.
Olin Ross Howland was an American film and theatre actor.
Chester Lamont Clute was an American actor familiar in scores of Hollywood films from his debut in 1930. Diminutive, bald-pated with a bristling moustache, he appeared in mostly unbilled roles, consisting usually of one or two lines, in nearly 250 films.
Oliver George Wallace was an English composer and conductor. He was especially known for his film music compositions, which were written for many animation, documentary, and feature films from Walt Disney Studios.
Marcel Herrand was a French stage and film actor best remembered for his roles in swashbuckling or historical films.
Jack Rice was an American actor best known for appearing as the scrounging, freeloading brother-in-law in Edgar Kennedy's series of short domestic comedy films at the RKO studio, and also as "Ollie" in around a dozen of Columbia Pictures's series of the Blondie comic strip.
Roger Pigaut was a French actor and film director. He appeared in 40 films between 1943 and 1980.
The 323d Air Division is an inactive United States Air Force unit. Its last assignment was with the Western Transport Air Force at Travis Air Force Base, California, where it was inactivated on 8 May 1960.
Aubrey Mallalieu was an English actor with a prolific career in supporting roles in films in the 1930s and 1940s.
Barney Sarecky was an American film producer and screenwriter, from the late 1930s into the 1950s. The younger brother of producer/screenwriter Louis Sarecky, he had a much more prolific career, writing or producing almost 75 films. Beginning as an associate producer, he would continue in that role until late in his career, when he would move up into the producer role, beginning with 1947's Trailing Danger. In the early 1950s he would move from the big screen to the smaller screen, working as the associate producer on the highly successful television series, Adventures of Superman. He worked on two small television movies in the mid-1960s, and he was an associate producer on the short-lived television series, The American West, in 1968, shortly before his death on August 10.
William Harris Ruhl was an American character actor of the 1930s, 1940s, and early 1950s.