Steve Race is known for Console Wars (2020).
Steve Race is one of the top up-and-coming Directors in the entertainment industry. After finishing his collegiate work at Florida Southern College with a bachelor's degree in Film and Television Production in 1996, he made his way out to Los Angeles to pursue a career in show business. He landed at A Louis J. Horvitz Production working as a Director's Assistant to Mr. Horvitz, who is known as one of the most prolific Directors in Television, winning numerous Emmy Awards. Alongside his mentor, Steve worked on such shows as the 1999 and 2000 Academy Awards (Oscar's), 1999 Emmy awards, Peoples Choice Awards, Net Aid Live, and countless other Television specials. In 2001, Steve ventured out and started Directing a number of projects on his own. When the Latin Grammy's wanted to throw an event to launch the First Annual Latin Grammy Award's they called Steve and hired him to Produce and Direct the 15 camera event hosted by Daisy Fuentes called, Latin Style. In 2003, he was asked to Direct the First Annual Visual Effect Society Awards where Lord of the Rings swept, winning in all 12 categories. Steve got involved in Comedy as well that year, teaming up with Code Black Entertainment to produce and direct 10 volumes of the very successful Latino Comedy Fiesta series. Next Steve moved on to Direct a 10 camera Comedy DVD hosted by Brett Butler, called Brett Butler presents, The Southern Belles of Comedy. Next, Steve and his producing team that includes Henry Winkler started developing a documentary series entitled Firefighter's the series. Firefighter's follows the men and women of the Los Angeles City Fire department. In 2011 Steve made his film Directorial debut with the feature film I'm In Love With A Church Girl starring Jeff Ja Rule Atkins and Adrienne Bailon. Also that year Steve became a member of the Director's Guild of America. Steve's soon started work on one of his passion projects, the feature film entitled, The Story of My Family in which Steve penned the screenplay. He will also be producing and directing it as well. A coming of age film, it looks at the modern day family dynamics in the ultimate cultural melting pot of the San Fernando Valley, CA, Also in the works is an NFL film based on New York Giant Super Bowl Champion Chase Blackburn. The film is an inspiration story about following your dreams and never giving up. Steve also has just completed his baseball screenplay called The Past. The Past follows the Character Andre Walker a modern day professional baseball player that gets hit in the head with a baseball transporting him back to the 1940's where he has to earn his way back to the future. Other work Steve is involved in is producing and directing video content for US Medical Innovations. The content includes shooting major cancer surgeries for research all over the world that is being used in the fight against cancer.
Multi-Award winning Director, Steve Rahaman was born on the Caribbean Islands of Trinidad and Tobago in October 1977. Upon moving to New York, he spent his early childhood years in Brooklyn, but now resides in Queens, NY. His love for film began at the early age of nine. He found his passion in writing short stories and entered his work into academic writing competitions, which in turn won him various scholastic awards. In 2005 Steve's growing enthusiasm for film-making led him to the decision to purchase a video camera, which he still uses today for background work. That same year Steve wrote and directed in his first film, "Follower," a story about a man who loses his son and begins a hear voices which tell him his son is still alive. Although it has never been released to the public, this film fostered Steve's passion and allowed him to begin exploring different genres of film. Over the years, Steve has grown into a very promising player in the independent motion picture industry. He writes and directs his own feature films and serves as his own director of photography, cinematographer, photographer, music composer, music arranger, casting and film editor. In May 2005, Steve co-founded his own film and music company, Rahaman Studios Limited LLC, Falling Leaves Productions LLP. He now heads a few subsidiary companies,Rahaman Studios Limited LLC (Production and Distribution), Falling Leaves Films (Production). As a writer, Steve sets out to mirror the adversities and triumphs we see in real life and has written such scripts as his current project, "Hands That Hold Us" and his recent award winning hit "To Be King". To Be King has gone on to win 8 Major awards, including best picture at the New York International Film Festival and the Metropolitan Film Festival. Steve has won the "Best Director" award at both festivals as well. "To Be King" has had the honor of screening in The Youth Training Centre (YTC) of Trinidad & Tobago. In addition to those award Steve has won the prized "Mario Puzo Screenwriting award from the Long Island Film Festival. "Blood Line," a recent release was featured on the Rick Leventhal Show on Fox News. He has won various awards in both New York and Los Angeles for his bloody mafia series "Blood Line" and praise from critics for "Queens Bound", a prequel to the award- winning film Christmas Day. He has earned the reputation of selling out screenings for every film he has released. In addition to his full length feature films, Steve has shot various short films such as "Ten Till Midnight," "Stained," "One Mistake," "Waiting Room" and "Stranger In The Park," which are available in his horror series package "Evil Deeds" and "Evil Deeds 2". He has also produced other films such as "Truth," and various stage shows for local performers in the New York City area. When he is not working on films, Steve dabbles in music. He directed music videos for artist such as Marcel "Law" Rudolph and Charles Fermer. In 2012, Steve lent a supporting hand to his community by working with the founders of local groups to produce and direct a short documentary on the closing of a local landmark entitled "Racino : The end of an American dream." The documentary has gone on to screen at the Queens Museum and many other community fund raising events. His film company also produces Conversation Corner, a show dedicated to taking viewers from behind the scenes to the big screen of all Rahaman Studios Limited and Falling Leaves Production films.
Noted for his dangerous, chameleon-like portrayals while possessing the scariest-looking pair of eyes in the business, leathery-looking Steve Railsback has mesmerized us over the years with a number of weird, often warped roles both on film and television. While never achieving the degree of stardom deserved, he, like the equally infamous and unpredictable Dennis Hopper, always commands interest whether the material is good or inferior. Born on November 16, 1945 in Dallas, Texas, he was raised in Wichita Falls. Participation in a local college production of "Cinderella" at the age of 7 spurred his interest in acting. After graduating from high school, he took a job as a shoe salesman and eventually made enough money to leave his native Texas and relocate to New York in order to pursue acting in 1967. As a student of Lee Strasberg and the Actors Studio, Railsback was forced to work menial jobs in order to initially survive, but he eventually became a regular fixture in the New York theatre scene in the late 1960s/early 1970s, appearing in such stage productions as "The Bluebird", "Orpheus Descending" and "This Property Is Condemned". While working out at the Studio, he caught the attention of renowned director Elia Kazan, who noticed his strong potential, and offered the fledgling actor a showy role in the low-budget film The Visitors (1972). However, he returned to the theatre with roles in "The Petrified Forest", "One Sunday Afternoon" and "The Cherry Orchard" before making his Broadway debut in the short-lived José Quintero-directed production of "The Skin of Our Teeth" starring Elizabeth Ashley in 1975. Following a second film role with James Woods in Cockfighter (1974) and the title role in the PBS piece Charlie Siringo (1976), Steve delivered one of the most shockingly vivid lead roles ever present in a miniseries with his all-consuming reincarnation of cult leader and mass murderer Charles Manson in Helter Skelter (1976). While the new guy on the block was unjustly ignored at Emmy time, Hollywood could not help but pay attention to this electrifying performer. Thanks primarily to Railsback, the miniseries was the highest-rated television movie at the time until Roots (1977) came along the following year. Eager to avoid the threat of being typecast in "psycho" parts, Steve complemented this infamous role with a much more humane performance in the miniseries From Here to Eternity (1979), tackling the role of Pvt. Robert E. Lee Pruitt (made memorable on screen by the late Montgomery Clift) and making it completely his own. His next big movie role, as a fugitive who happens upon a film set in the bizarre and brilliant black comedy The Stunt Man (1980) with the equally compelling Peter O'Toole, assured Hollywood that his stunning Charlie Manson portrayal was no fluke. More cutting-edge parts in a variety of genres came his way throughout the 1980s, but without the quality of production to back them up. Such films as the mystery Deadly Games (1982); the Australian sci-fi thriller Turkey Shoot (1982); the horror film Trick or Treats (1982); the animal adventure The Golden Seal (1983); the cocaine abuse drama Torchlight (1985); the bizarre British sci-fi horror film Lifeforce (1985); the John Candy/Eugene Levy action comedy Armed and Dangerous (1986); the rock-and-roll drama Scenes from the Goldmine (1987); and the ho-hum thriller dramas Distortions (1988), The Survivalist (1987) and Nukie (1987) more often than not wasted his unique gifts. While falling into quirky low-budget or direct-to-video fare for some time, Railsback has also dabbled in writing, producing and directing on occasion, such as the Vietnam POW story The Forgotten (1989). At the turn of the century, Steve came to attention once again with a showy role as he delved inside the complex mind of another schizophrenic madman. In the Light of the Moon (2000), about infamous serial killer/cannibal Ed Gein (in which he also served as executive producer) once again showed Hollywood that the actor was a master at the game of weird. Into the millennium, Railsback has appeared in mostly minor films, with roles in Zigs (2001), Slash (2002), Neo Ned (2005), King of the Lost World (2005), Plaguers (2008), Ready or Not (2009), Follow the Prophet (2009), Infiltrators (2014), Wild in Blue (2015), Gone Are the Days (2018) and It Wants Blood! (2019). On television, he has had occasional roles tailored to his off-beat, strange ways guesting on such series as "The Practice," "Family Law," "The District," "The Handler," "Supernatural," "The Mentalist," "Femme Fatales" and "Decker."
Steve Rankin was born in Eureka, Illinois, USA. He is known for Men in Black (1997), Blue Streak (1999) and L.A. Confidential (1997).
At age 8 in Dallas, Steve Rash began making movies with his father's 8mm Kodak. His interest in film blossomed in high school when he worked as a press photographer. He studied Music at Texas A&M and TV/Film at The University of Texas, before landing his first professional job as camera operator at WFAA. Rising through production ranks with ABC Sports, he shot NCAA events, NFL football and The Olympics. In the 70's, Steve photographed and directed seminal music videos for the TV series Sump'n Else; then, through syndicated music programs like The Now Explosion and Music Connection, created the marathon concept that became MTV. His pioneering music videos starred Billy Joel, BB King, Jimi Hendrix, Ray Charles, Kenny Rogers, The Who, etc. Other TV credits include dozens of nationally syndicated musical variety programs. Drawing upon his music video experience, Steve Rash developed his first feature film in 1978, which critics labeled, "the definitive rock 'n roll movie:" The Buddy Holly Story was nominated for three Academy Awards and won the Oscar for Best Music. Subsequent films include Under The Rainbow, Vanishing America, Can't Buy Me Love, Queens Logic, Son-In-Law, Eddie, Held Up, Good Advice, Crooked Arrows; and DVD sequels to Zenon, American Pie, Bring It On, and Road Trip.
Steve Raulerson is known for The Punisher (2004), The Waterboy (1998) and tt0242193.
Steve Ray is an accomplished radio personality who ventured into film work as an Assistant Director, Actor, Voice Over Artist & Stunt Double. He was heard on over 130 stations worldwide on the Westwood One Radio Networks "Oldies Channel" & overseas he was the National Program Director for a multi-lingual service in both the People's Republic of China and at ICRT in Taipei, Taiwan. He was also a Contributing Writer for the International Editions of PLAYBOY as a Music Reviewer and has done exclusive interviews with Sting, Paul McCartney, Gloria Estefan, Mariah Carey and many other contemporary music artists, both in print and on-the-air. After spending 20 years in Los Angeles he lives in Washington, D.C. His talent as a vocal mimic landed him work as a prosthetic (latex) double for Dan Aykroyd, Randy Quaid and Larry Drake among others. He continues to appear in feature films & television projects, in addition to his work behind the scenes in a production capacity. He is most noted for mentoring actors and filmmakers new to the business with cold reading, script breakdown, scene study and film & television production techniques for the actor.
Steve Ray is known for Bisbee '17 (2018).
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