Born in 1965 in Chalfont St Giles, in Buckinghamshire, England, Stuart has had a varied career from footballer, being on the payroll of several clubs including Gillingham FC; Reading FC and Swindon Town, to author. He has had 32 books published and has been asked to write further publications. He was an IT Trainer and having under taken several professional courses on presenting, found himself in demand for appearing in eLearning productions. Then whilst on a holiday in Los Angeles whilst at Universal Studios he was approached to fill in for an actor on the film Godzilla because he fitted the American uniform they had available and the rest they say is history. He comes from a film background, distantly related to the 1940's actor Stuart Latham and Hammer films actor Phillip Latham, his uncle worked for Hemdale Films and his Grandfather on his Mother's side worked for Rank Films at Denham Studios for over 25 years. Connections also exist via the Carry On Films with Roger and Joan Cherrill. Joan being a guest at his first wedding in 1987. He enjoys watching Football, Rugby and Ice Hockey which led to his involvement with Aces TV and Drop the Puck.
Stuart Dallas is known for Match of the Day 2 (2004), Premier League Season 2020/2021 (2020) and The FPL Show (2016).
Stuart is an award winning writer, comedian, actor and director. Since 2007 Stuart Daulman has performed in a wide array of sketch shows, plays, solo performances and a number of film and tv productions. Appearances recently on Australian TV such shows as Utopia, Rosehaven, The Weekly with Charlie Pickering, Hamish and Andy's True Story, Fancy Boy and Anne Edmond's ABC/Guesswork comedy series Edge of the Bush. Stuart hosts a regular podcast with his mother, After Dinner with the Daulmans, where the hosts candidly talk about our battle with Stuart's Father's Alzheimer's disease. It is available to listen on iTunes and Spotify. 2017 saw Stuart Daulman and Fancy Boy pick up an Australian Writers Guild Award in the Best Writing in the Comedy - Sketch or Light Entertainment category for Episode 4 of the series. Over the past few years he has continued to regularly gig across comedy rooms in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. Over the years Stuart has worked with and performed with some of Australia's most prominent names in comedy such as Aunty Donna, The Chasers, Celia Pacquola, Hamish Blake, Andy Lee, Ronny Chieng, Becky Luckas, Anne Edmonds, Peter Helliar, Aaron Chen, Luke McGregor, Wayne Hope, Dave Callan and Ryan Shelton. International acts include Neil Hamburger, James Acaster and Kyle Kinane. Past live works have included MC at the 2015 and 2017 Splendour In The Grass Festival in Byron Bay, The Comedy Store in Sydney, Drive and Weekends on triplej radio, Falls Festival Tasmania, Comedy Club for Kids and the Moosehead Award with Fancy Boy. Stuart was a State Finalist at RAW Comedy. In 2013 a sketch group he worked with for 8 years (Wizard Sandwiches) won the People's Choice Award at the Melbourne Fringe Festival. He recently graduated with Honors from the Victorian College of the Arts with a Masters in Screenwriting, and has recently performed his solo comedy show The Stuart Daulman Farewell Reunion Show at the 2021 Melbourne International Comedy Festival. A repeat season at the 2021 Melbourne Fringe is in the works.
Stuart Dew enters his fourth season as Gold Coast's Senior Coach in 2021. Dew had an illustrious playing career, winning premierships with Port Adelaide (2004) and Hawthorn (2008) in his 206 games before retiring at the end of 2009. Once his playing days had finished, Dew transitioned quickly into coaching, spending eight years an assistant at the Sydney Swans under Paul Roos and John Longmire. He started as a development coach before eventually becoming Longmire's senior assistant coach. Dew was an integral figure in Sydney's success during that period, with the club winning the 2012 Premiership and reaching the Grand Final again in 2014 and 2016.
Stuart Douglas is known for The Venom Interviews (2016).
Stuart Edge was born on March 27, 1989. He is a producer and director, known for Body Shaming Bully (2017), Magic Trick or Treat (2017) and Secret Angel Pays for Groceries (2017).
Stuart Elliott is a documentary and drama director known for Stolen: Catching the Art Thieves (BBC), Crusades: Crescent and the Cross (History), Age of Empires IV (Microsoft) and Days that Shook the World (BBC) as well long running series Who Do You Think You Are? and A House Through Time. He has directed films across the world for most major outlets.
Stuart Elzy is known for Flakka Zombie Drug (2023), I Thought You Knew (2022) and The POET.
Stuart Erwin was an American actor, often working as a voice actor in radio and animation. He was once nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. Erwin was born in Squaw Valley, Fresno County, California, in 1903. Squaw Valley is a census-designated place, the location of a post office which has operated on-and-off since 1879. It is located 30 miles (48 kilometers) to the east of the county seat: Fresno. Despite their similarity n names, it has no connection to the Squaw Valley Ski Resort, which is located in Placer County, California. Erwin attended school at Porterville High School, located in Porterville, California. Porterville was at the time a local center for the mining industry, primarily known for the extraction of magnetite from nearby mines. Erwin latter attended the University of California. He started performing on stage as an actor while still a college student. During the 1920s, Erwin mainly appeared on repertory theatre in Los Angeles. In 1928, Erwin made his film debut in the biographical film "Mother Knows Best". The film was largely based on the life of actress and singer Elsie Janis (1889-1956), and depicted her relationship with the stage mother who managed her career since childhood. The film was mainly notable as the first "talkie" (sound film) produced by the film studio Fox Film (1915-1935), using the Movietone sound system. Erwin regularly appeared in theatrical films during the late 1920s and early 1930s, but was infrequently cast on major roles. His first memorable role was that of oil-industry businessman and radio-station owner Leslie McWhinney in the musical comedy "The Big Broadcast" (1932). In the film, McWhinney is both the employer and a close friend to singer Bing Crosby (1903-1977). The film was Crosby's first starring role as an actor, and he depicted a fictionalized version of himself. Erwin gained a starring role in the comedy film "Palooka" (1934), an adaptation of the popular comic strip "Joe Palooka" (1930-1984) by cartoonist Ham Fisher (1900-1955). Erwin was cast in the role of Joe Palooka himself. Palooka was depicted as a professional boxer, but with a kind heart, a hero's instinct to protect others, and rather limited intelligence. In the film, the role of the middle-aged Knobby Walsh, Palooka's Irish-born manager and the mastermind behind his rise to fame, was played by Jimmy Durante (1893-1980). In 1936, Erwin had another starring role, as hillbilly Amos Dodd in the comedy "Pigskin Parade". In the film, Amos is an uneducated farmer from Arkansas, but has an amazing talent for American football. So he gets recruited as a college football player by a Texas-based university. The role met with critical praise, and Erwin was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. However, the Award for that year was won by rival actor Walter Brennan (1894-1974). In radio, Erwin had a recurring role in "Phone Again Finnegan" (1946), and played multiple roles in the anthology series "Lux Radio Theatre" (1934-1955), "Cavalcade of America" (1935-1953), and "The United States Steel Hour" (1943-1953). From 1950 to 1955, Erwin starred in the television sitcom "The Stu Erwin Show". The series lasted for a total of 130 episodes, and cast Erwin in the role of a high-school principal who has to to also raise his own children. After the sitcom's end, Erwin frequently appeared as a guest star in other television series. In 1963, Erwin played the role of football coach Wilson in the science-fiction comedy film "Son of Flubber", The film was a commercial success, earning about 22 million dollars at the North American box office. It was the 7th most commercially successful film of 1963, being outperformed by "Cleopatra" (1st), "How the West Was Won" (2nd), "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World" (3rd), 'Tom Jones" (4th), "Irma la Douce" (5th), and "The Sword in the Stone" (6th). "Son of Flubber" itself outperformed the horror film "The Birds" (8th), the spy film "Dr. No" (9th), and the drama film "The V.I.P.s" (10th). In 1964, Erwin played the role of police chief Loomis in another science-fiction comedy film, "The Misadventures of Merlin Jones". This film earned only 4 million at the box office, but was considered successful enough to receive a sequel, called "The Monkey's Uncle" (1965). Erwin was not asked to appear in the sequel. "The Misadventures of Merlin Jones" was Erwin's last film role. From 1965 to 1967, Erwin was limited to playing guest star roles in various television series, such as "Gunsmoke", "Bonanza", and "Lassie". In December 1967, Erwin suffered a myocardial infarction ("heart attack") and died in Beverly Hills. He was 64-years-old. He was survived by his wife June Collyer (1906-1968), who died due to pneumonia in March 1968. The bodies of both Erwin and Collyer were cremated. Their ashes were interred at the Chapel of the Pines Crematory, in Los Angeles.
Stuart has been an animation professional since 1988, and since then has worked on features, ads, long and short form series, pilots and developing his own concepts. Studios have included Disney, Warner Brothers, Amblimation, Cosgrove Hall, Mattel, Jellyfish, and most recently Moonbug Entertainment. After numerous shows as animator, layout artist, and storyboard artist, Stuart has been a series and feature director since 1999: he is currently Senior Animation Creative at Moonbug, directing and writing 48 episodes to date of "Arpo" on its own Youtube channel, among other various projects on the slate. He also has a large box full of fantastic show concepts just waiting for a greenlight...