Scott McLean Harrison is an actor, known for Follow Your Heart (2019). He was raised in Poteau, Oklahoma and later attended the University of Oklahoma where he received a degree in broadcast journalism. His work as been seen on film, television, and the Broadway stage. He happily resides in Northwest Arkansas.
Scott McMillion is an actor, known for Walking Out (2017) and Hidden in America (2012).
Scott McNeil was born on September 15, 1962 in Brisbane, Australia. He is known for Dragon Ball Z (1989), Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed (2004) and Beast Wars: Transformers (1996).
Scott McQuaid is a British writer and director for stage, screen and audio theatre. He grew up in Essex, England, and spent most of his childhood making camcorder movies with the kids in his neighborhood. The first chapter of Scott's life circled around martial arts, which stemmed from his love for it in movies - particularly, in Bruce Lee's 'Enter The Dragon', and John Carpenter's 'Big Trouble In Little China'. His love for martial arts led him to Hong Kong cinema. And shortly after graduating school, he moved to Hong Kong, where he began his career, volunteering on film sets as a production assistant, and occasionally appearing as an extra. During this period of 1995 to 1998, McQuaid worked on sets with renowned Hong Kong film directors such as Tsui Hark, Herman Yau, and Benny Chan. His career would then take a detour as he began focusing on becoming a proficient fighter in a rare Indonesian martial art 'Silat Harimau'. McQuaid became a dedicated student in the art, relocating to Southeast Asia - living in Sumatra, Philippines, and Malaysia. During this time, he still continued to study the craft of directing, earning a Bachelor's degree in Performing Arts, and eventually a Master of Fine Arts in Filmmaking. He also juggled working at several cinemas as an usher, to put himself through college and university, all the while having the opportunity to study film on the big screen every evening at work. McQuaid fast became an acclaimed figure in Silat Harimau, earning the title of Guru, and then Pendekar, meaning warrior, as well as the hero title of Wira. He is also one of only two foreigners to win a title at the Mahaguru Championship in Malaysia. He became a historian on this Indonesian combat system, documenting his findings and teachings with publications in various martial arts magazines, holding seminars across the UK, Europe, and the United States, promoting the art, before ending this journey by making a documentary film on silat, which took over seven years to produce, and was shot in six countries. After more than two and half decades practicing martial arts, Scott retired...Well, perhaps, semi-retired, as he's never too far from a punching bag. McQuaid was ready to fully embrace his directing career in the second chapter of his life. After writing and directing small skits across England, he was hired as the Resident Director by the Cempaka Performing Arts Company in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Since then, he has directed numerous plays and musicals, winning consecutive BOH Cameronian Arts Awards, including the Best Director award, and was also recognized by Malaysia Book of Records with an achievement award for producing an original musical written and directed by himself. In 2016, McQuaid started his own theatre company, Pop Up Theatre, where he began writing and directing his own brand of black comedy plays for the stage, that would be performed all around Kuala Lumpur and Singapore. In 2017, he launched his indie movie company, Plastic Monkey Films. And after producing a handful of short movies that screened at various film festivals, he set out to make his first feature film. On a shoestring budget and an intense 22-day shoot, McQuaid wrote, directed, and produced the self-aware B-movie, 'Space Ninjas'. The movie debuted at the Horror-on-Sea Film Festival and was immediately picked up by Amazon Prime and Apple TV with worldwide distribution in 2019. When the pandemic hit, Scott had just started shooting his second movie, which can be described as an unworldly, dark fairy-tale. During the lock-down period, McQuaid shifted his focus to audio theatre, writing and directing various podcast plays, including original Sherlock Holmes adventures, where the detective tackled true crimes in a factual fiction series. These audio plays quickly earned a loyal and dedicated following, streaming across the globe on Audible, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and YouTube. As lock-down restrictions began to ease, Scott also explored virtual theatre, blending his knowledge of film and theatre to create works that would stream on his Pop Up Theatre YouTube channel. In mid-2021, Scott became an author, publishing his first book, featuring a collection of his black comedy plays, in the aptly titled book, 'Scott Forgot The Title', available on Amazon, Book Depository, Indie Bound, Google Books, Dymocks, and more. McQuaid is back at work on his delayed second movie, which is already generating interest within the industry, and he continues to create innovative, pop-cultural, genre-defying cinema.
Scott McQuillin was raised in Victoria, BC as the oldest of two children. He is the son of a very supporting mother who still resides in BC. Originally Scott wanted to be a professional soccer goalkeeper, he was told he was too tall but he proved everyone wrong as he began traveling the world by the age of 13 chasing that dream. He went on to represent Canada being part of the National Team by age 17 and drafted to the Canadian Soccer League by the age of 18. He continued playing soccer until he was 25 years old . Unfortunately for medical reasons he had to walk away. Scott has always had a strong interest in the film and theatre arts, especially Broadway shows. While he always ended up in management roles no matter what career he was in, Scott's love for acting was always deep. After moving to Nova Scotia in 2011. He began to dabble in the local Annapolis District drama group. In 2016, he sought out the film industry and has had roles in such things as Trailer Park Boys, Mr D, The Mist and, This Hour Has 22 Minutes. Scott is pursuing acting in any and all aspects of the film/tv/theatre industry.
Scott David Mechlowicz was born in New York City, to Susan (Lehrman) and Morris Mechlowicz. He was raised in Plano, Texas. He graduated from Plano Senior High School and after one semester of university in Texas, he studied at and graduated from UCLA in 2003. His career began with Neverland (2003), a short film, then the teen-comedy film EuroTrip (2004), followed by an independent film, Mean Creek (2004). He resides in New York City, New York.
Scott Mena is an actor, writer, editor and filmmaker. He received praises for his performance as "Mrs. White" in Shoestring Theater's Clue: The Musical winning the Silver Sandal Award for Most Comedic Performance. He has performed countless theater productions as East, Lendell, Chad, and Danny in Almost Maine, Clown 1 in The 39 Steps, Dracula / Renfield in Dracula: A Tale Told by Mina Harker, Dr. Einstein in Arsenic and Old Lace, Gollum in The Hobbit, and many more. Scott's seven short films have been official selections to numerous film festivals. Director of the award-winning short films A Walk to Breathe, No Vuelvo, Talking to Myself, and 12:36. He also develops, direct, film, and edit ads for non-profit organizations and other companies with Mena Productions.
Scott Mendonca is known for Surface (2022), The Order of the Black Eyes (2022) and Always Amore (2022).