From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Steven Geray, born Istvan Gyergyay (10 November 1904 – 26 December 1973) was a film actor who appeared in over 100 films and dozens of television programs. Geray appeared in Spellbound (1945), Gilda (1946), In a Lonely Place (1950), All About Eve (1950), Call Me Madam (1953) and To Catch a Thief (1955). He was born in Ungvár, Austria-Hungary (now Uzhgorod, Ukraine) and educated at the University of Budapest. He made his first stage appearance at the Hungarian National Theater under his real name and after nearly four years he made his London stage debut (as Steven Geray) in 1934, appearing in Happy Week-End!. He began appearing in English-speaking films in 1935 and moved to Hollywood in 1941. He appeared alongside his wife, Magda Kun, in the 1935 film Dance Band. Geray was cast as the lead in a low-budget film noir So Dark the Night (1946). Even with its limited budget, it received great critical reviews and enabled its director Joseph H. Lewis to later direct A-pictures. Geray continued to work on television and in films into the 1960s. Among them a guest appearance on Perry Mason in 1962 as extortionist and murder victim Franz Moray in "The Case of the Stand-in Sister," three episodes of The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show as French dress designer Gaston Broussard in 1956, including the over the top "A Paris Creation" and various doctor roles on The Danny Thomas Show. Geray spent some time in the late-1960s in Estes Park, Colorado, where he directed local theater (The Fantasticks). He owned and ran a bar in Estes Park from 1969 to 1970.
Birthday: November 10, 1904
Death: December 26, 1973
May 19, 1995
April 09, 1966
February 17, 1933
April 25, 1946
October 17, 1946
November 08, 1945
August 03, 1950
July 01, 1939
September 19, 1956
August 12, 1953
April 15, 1955
November 27, 1942
October 24, 1944
June 23, 1944
October 10, 1946
November 10, 1950
May 12, 1951
November 23, 1945
February 15, 1955
February 02, 1942
August 16, 1944
August 19, 1952
December 22, 1948
January 15, 1948
July 29, 1952
August 12, 1943
July 07, 1950
September 01, 1954
February 06, 1947
March 25, 1953
May 17, 1950
February 08, 1954
July 01, 1947
December 01, 1943
October 27, 1942
October 16, 1942
July 24, 1944
November 27, 1947
March 25, 1959
September 23, 1955
November 07, 1955
November 09, 1945
August 01, 1944
March 07, 1954
February 20, 1947
June 24, 1943
March 07, 1939
March 26, 1950
November 22, 1950
August 23, 1937
September 10, 1949
February 08, 1951
July 28, 1949
May 31, 1943
April 15, 1948
January 26, 1952
June 22, 1951
April 23, 1959
October 01, 1951
May 01, 1943
April 03, 1942
December 26, 1953
March 02, 1945
March 26, 1953
August 07, 1952
March 18, 1946
March 22, 1949
January 06, 1942
June 01, 1944
November 09, 1950
April 06, 1954
November 15, 1945
July 01, 1935
October 01, 1949
November 04, 1932
September 26, 1941
August 11, 1949
July 15, 1947
January 29, 1954
June 28, 1937
December 01, 1940
December 30, 1948
June 08, 1936
January 01, 1935
May 20, 1944
July 14, 1953
December 13, 1956
October 23, 1933
April 28, 1942
May 31, 1952
October 30, 1943
April 29, 1945
May 15, 1942
January 16, 1942
July 31, 1958
June 20, 1942
May 31, 1943
July 03, 1943
June 09, 1964
November 18, 1949
September 26, 1952
January 20, 1938
January 01, 1956
July 15, 1943
November 13, 1966
December 29, 1933
September 09, 1954
September 09, 1966
September 20, 1963
October 04, 1954
September 18, 1965
October 01, 1962
September 21, 1957
February 01, 1953
October 02, 1960
September 13, 1964
September 25, 1961
October 05, 1951
October 07, 1954
September 19, 1952
October 05, 1959
September 24, 1958
October 31, 1955
September 07, 1956
September 30, 1957
October 01, 1952
October 05, 1956
August 03, 1951
September 03, 1956
September 27, 1961
April 08, 1956
April 09, 1954
January 01, 1952
October 03, 1952
September 16, 1963
September 25, 1952
September 29, 1953
September 14, 1964