Galadriel Stineman became a familiar face to many after her several season arc as Cassidy on ABC's The Middle. She's also well-known as superhero Gwen Tennyson in the live-action Ben 10 film, and as Ashley on PS4's smash hit video game Until Dawn. Galadriel has guest-starred and recurred on countless hit shows including Glee, Shameless, NCIS: LA, Bones, True Blood and many more. Most recently, you could spot her in memorable roles on This Is Us, The Kids Are Alright, 9-1-1 and the comedy feature Blowing Up Right Now. In her spare time, Galadriel loves to read everything she can get her hands on, garden and write. You can often find her exploring National Parks; camping and hiking with her family. Galadriel is a long-time supporter of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, where she raises awareness and speaks at events.
Galassia Grassetto is an actress and filmmaker who grew up living between Paris and Mexico City. Her Italian father was an engineer and her mother worked for a Mexican cinema magazine. By the time she was four years old, Galassia was already fluent in English, Italian, Spanish, and French. During her youth she attended a British high school in Paris where she was raised to speak in a British Accent. Galassia is dedicated to ocean conservation because her upbringing was marked by vivid memories of marine life. As a young diver, she witnessed drastic environmental changes and became alarmed at the rate at which the oceans were dying. Her mission is to champion protecting ocean life, and she is especially avid in the protection of sharks and fighting the disastrous shark fin trade. As an artist, she seeks to create films that have a positive environmental message. To tell stories that illuminate and bridge the gap between us and nature. Galassia moved to California to pursue acting and filmmaking and landed her first feature film in director Michael Leone's "#WhenTodayEnds." She then went on to write and produce the short film "Betting on Amanda". She is now pursuing acting and writing environmentally conscious films. She founded her own production company Mar a Mar with this mission in mind. Galassia is also an avid athlete and a scratch golf player.
Galatea Ranzi was born on January 24, 1967 in Rome, Lazio, Italy. She is an actress, known for La grande bellezza (2013), Fiorile (1993) and La vita che vorrei (2004). She has been married to Marco Andriolo since 1987. They have three children.
Galathée Salze-Lozac'h is known for Welcome on Board (2020) and Petit Biscuit: Burnin (2020).
Galatéa Bellugi is known for Keeper (2015), L'apparition (2018) and Junkyard Dog (2023).
Galba Nogueira is an actor, known for Inferninho (2018), O Clube dos Canibais (2018) and Greta (2019).
Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia is known for The Platform (2019), Rich Flu (2024) and La casa del lago (2011).
Gale Anne Hurd was born on October 25, 1955 in Los Angeles, California. After graduating from Stanford University, she joined New World Pictures as executive assistant to Roger Corman, the company president. She worked her way up through various administrative positions and eventually became involved in production. She formed her own production company, Pacific Western Productions, in 1982 and went on to produce a number of box-office hits including The Terminator (1984), Aliens (1986) and The Abyss (1989). All were directed by James Cameron, whom she later married and divorced. She also later married and divorced Brian De Palma. She is currently the recording secretary for the Producers Guild of America.
Gale Harold was born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia. After studying photography and printmaking at the San Francisco Art Institute, Harold began studying acting at the suggestion of writer and producer Susie Landau Finch, who at the time was working at American Zoetrope. After three years of training and theatre work, Harold was cast and starred for five years as "Brian Kinney", the lead character in the Showtime adaptation of the British series "Queer As Folk". Harold's film credits include Wake, Particles of Truth (Tribeca Film Festival), Rhinoceros Eyes (Toronto Film Festival), Fathers and Sons, The Unseen, and Falling For Grace. Along with executive producer David Bowie and producer Mia Bays, Gale co-produced the film Scott Walker: 30th Century Man, directed by Stephen Kijak. The film's world premiere was at the London Film Festival, and debuted internationally at the Berlin International Film Festival. The film's U.S. premiere was at the South By Southwest Film Festival. Harold appears as Connor Lang in Rockne S. O'Bannon and Kevin Murphy's SYFY series, "Defiance". Gale recently had regular roles on the series "The Secret Circle" and 'Hellcats". He has recurred on Emmy and Golden Globe award winning shows including "Deadwood", "Desperate Housewives", and "Grey's Anatomy". He has made guest appearances on "Street Time" "The Unit", "Law and Order SVU", and "CSI: NY". Harold's stage credits include Tennessee Williams' Suddenly Last Summer opposite Carla Gugino and Blythe Danner for the Roundabout Theatre Company, Williams' Orpheus Descending directed by Lou Pepe at Theater/Theatre. Harold's performance was called "brilliant" by the LA Times. The play received the McCulloh Award For Revival from the Los Angeles Dramatic Critics Circle 2011. He has also performed in Austin Pendelton's Uncle Bob at the Soho Playhouse, Gillian Plowman's Me and My Friend at The Los Angeles Theatre Center, and various productions with A Noise Within Repertory Company.
Born on July 29, 1910, to R.L. and Isabel Rutter in Spokane, Washington, Gale Page was christened Sally Perkins Rutter in the beginning. Coming from a political family, her uncle, Miles Poindexter (1868-1946), was a U.S. senator from the state of Washington who later became an ambassador to Peru. Her great-grandfather was Joseph Gale (1807-1881), the first governor of Oregon. A one-time radio actress and singer with Ted Weems' Orchestra, she appeared on radio soaps such as "Masquerade" (as blues singer Gertrude Lamont) and as Gloria Marsh on "Today's Children." Spotted for films by Warner Bros, she moved to Hollywood in 1938 and her moniker immediately changed by the studio to the more marquee-friendly "Gale Page." A lovely, wholesome-faced, curly-haired brunette, Gale was a brief fixture in films nominally consigned to play pleasant, decorative roles in such potboilers as Crime School (1938) (her debut), Indianapolis Speedway (1939), and They Drive by Night (1940). She was handed the role of her career as one of musical sisters in the classic tearjerker Four Daughters (1938) co-starring with the three Lane sisters (Priscilla Lane, Rosemary Lane, Lola Lane) when Universal passed on casting their fourth sister, Leota Lane. She went on, with the others, to co-star in the three sequels Daughters Courageous (1939), Four Wives (1939) and Four Mothers (1941). Gale appeared in only 16 films during her career, including the action adventure Heart of the North (1938); the Humphrey Bogart crime drama You Can't Get Away with Murder (1939); the musical comedy Naughty But Nice (1939); the action drama Indianapolis Speedway (1939), the domestic drama A Child Is Born (1939), the film noir They Drive by Night (1940); the William Saroyan classic The Time of Your Life (1948). Gale additionally won the lead femme role as the altruistic wife of Knute Rockne All American (1940) starring Pat O'Brien in the title role and Ronald Reagan whose famous catchphrase ("Win just one for the Gipper") showed up here. After completing a secondary role in the film noir Anna Lucasta (1949) starring Paulette Goddard, Gale abandoned the screen for family life. She reappeared just once in a movie a few years later with the soapy Shirley Booth vehicle About Mrs. Leslie (1954). She also was sporadically seen on several episodes of the TV anthology Robert Montgomery Presents (1950), as well as guest appearances on "The United States Steel Hour," "Hawaiian Eye," "Sam Benedict" and, her last, "The Eleventh Hour" in 1964. Page was first married to Frederick Tritschler, with whom she had a son. Following their 1939 divorce, she married Count Aldo Solìto de Solis, a pianist and composer. Their son, Luchino Solito de Solis Jr., was featured on Broadway in a juvenile role in the 1956 production of "Waiting for Godot." Gale died of lung cancer on January 8, 1983, in Santa Monica, California, at age 72.