Ben Greenfield is an actor, known for The Remains (2016), Call Time (2012) and Wake (2010).
Ben Greenman is known for Quest for Craft (2021), Next at the Kennedy Center (2022) and Mike Judge Presents: Tales from the Tour Bus (2017).
Ben Gregor is a director and writer, known for Fatherhood (2018), The Midnight Beast (2012) and Britannia (2017).
Combining his passion of film, theatre and photography, Ben Gregory-Ring thoroughly enjoys his work as a Unit Stills Photographer. Based in the UK, Ben's past clients have included SKY & BBC, as well as a number of independent feature length & short films, music videos & TV pilots. During this time, Ben has photographed high profile talent such as Idris Elba, Joanne Froggatt, Tom Riley, Stephen Mangan & Joe Sims.
Ben Grimm-Wilson is known for Babylon (2022), Air (2023) and Fear Street: 1994 (2021).
Ben Grogan is known for Upper Middle Bogan (2013), Where the Wild Things Are (2009) and Charlotte's Web (2006).
Ben Groh is known for Mutt (2023), God's Time (2022) and The Peek-A-Boo Man (2021).
Ben Gunther is known for Socket (2007), No Man's Land: The Rise of Reeker (2008) and Bled (2009).
Ben Guppy is known for Starro Surprise: A Superhero Horror Picture (2014), Sins of Our Father (2017) and Nation of the third Eye (2018).
American actor who started as a boy in silent films and worked for three and a half decades, mainly in small parts. The eldest child of American stevedore George E. Hall and his English wife Constance L. Fletcher, Ben Hall began making appearances in films when he was little more than ten years old. After a handful of movies, his family moved to Weehawken, New Jersey, and in 1918, Ben took work as a bank clerk in Manhattan. But by 1920, Ben and his mother had moved to Los Angeles (where they were joined later by his younger brother George Jr.). Hall worked as a property man for the studios for a time, but eventually began to get small roles and was eking out a living as an actor again by 1926. He became a minor but fairly frequently-used member of the "John Ford Stock Company," and did eight films for John Ford between 1929 and 1946. Most memorable among these bit roles was probably that of the barber who slicks down and perfumes Wyatt Earp's hair in My Darling Clementine (1946). Hall left acting in 1949, though he lived for another 36 years.