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The following is a list of celebrity inventors and their patents. (For the purposes of this article, an inventor is a person who has been granted a patent.)After Google released a patent search [1] online in December 2006, a website called Ironic Sans, [2] made the public aware of a number of celebrity patents found through the new patent search engine.
Andrew Dice Clay (born Andrew Clay Silverstein; September 29, 1957) [1] is an American stand-up comedian and actor. He rose to prominence in the late 1980s with a brash, deliberately offensive persona known as "The Diceman".
Nicholas Anthony Phillip Clay (18 September 1946 – 25 May 2000) was an English actor. [1] [2] Early life
Dylan Christopher Minnette (born December 29, 1996) [1] is an American actor and musician. He began his career as a child actor and received recognition for his role as a younger version of the character Michael Scofield on Prison Break. He then won a Young Artist Award for his role as Clay Norman in the TNT series Saving Grace.
AFI defines an "American screen legend" as "an actor or a team of actors with a significant screen presence in American feature-length films (films of 40 minutes or more) whose screen debut occurred in or before 1950, or whose screen debut occurred after 1950 but whose death has marked a completed body of work."
Glen Vernon Actor who performed in blackface in Hollywood Varieties (1950) with fellow actor Edward Ryan [107] Ted Waldman, comedy harmonica player [108] David Walliams, as a minstrel, and as character Desiree Devere in Little Britain [81] George Walker [21] Sean Waltman [109] Betty White, in The Golden Girls [110] [111] Billy Whitlock [58]
Clay Clement (May 19, 1888 – October 20, 1956) was an American stage, [2] film, and TV actor. He appeared in more than 80 films between 1918 and 1947. Clement was one of the earliest members of the Screen Actors Guild. [6] He was born in Lebanon, Ohio and died in Watertown, New York.
Gumby was created by Art Clokey in the early 1950s after he finished film school at the University of Southern California (USC). [1]Clokey's first animated film was a 1953 three-minute student film, titled Gumbasia, a surreal montage of moving and expanding lumps of clay set to music in a parody of Disney's Fantasia. [10]