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  1. Harold Ramis
    American actor, comedian, and filmmaker

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  1. Nov 19, 2021 · Placing Egon at the heart of the film offered a way to bridge the ‘84 “Ghostbusters” — co-written by Ramis and Dan Aykroyd — with a new younger generation that hadn’t yet been born ...

  2. Harold Ramis. Writer: Ghostbusters. Born on November 21, 1944 in Chicago, Illinois, Harold Allen Ramis got his start in comedy as Playboy magazine's joke editor and reviewer. In 1969, he joined Chicago's Second City's Improvisational Theatre Troupe before moving to New York to help write and perform in "The National Lampoon Show" with other Second City graduates including John Belushi, Gilda ...

  3. Feb 25, 2014 · Harold Ramis was born in Chicago on Nov. 21, 1944, to parents who worked long hours at the family store, Ace Food and Liquor Mart. He loved television so much, he said, that he got up early on ...

  4. Feb 24, 2014 · Harold Ramis, left, Dan Aykroyd, and Bill Murray in a scene from the 1984 film \"Ghostbusters,\" which Ramis co-wrote. Today. In a 2004 profile of Ramis, Tad Friend of the New Yorker wrote, " What ...

  5. Feb 25, 2014 · Harold Allen Ramis, actor and director, born 21 November 1944; died 24 February 2014. Explore more on these topics. Harold Ramis; Comedy films; US television; Robert De Niro; Ghostbusters;

  6. Feb 25, 2014 · CHICAGO (AP) — Harold Ramis, the bespectacled "Ghostbusters" sidekick to Bill Murray whose early grounding in live comedy led to blockbuster movies such as "National Lampoon's Animal House," ''Caddyshack" and "Groundhog Day," died Monday. He was 69. Ramis, who suffered for several years from an autoimmune disease that caused inflammation and damage to his blood vessels, died at his home in ...

  7. Feb 24, 2014 · Harold Ramis, the Chicago actor best known for his roles in “Ghostbusters” and “Stripes,” died of a rare autoimmune disease early Monday morning. Ramis was the head writer and performed ...

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