Tony was born and raised in New Haven, Connecticut. He attended Southern Connecticut State University and graduated in 1974. While an undergraduate student at Southern Connecticut State University, he performed in several productions at Albertus Magnus College, an all-girls college (until 1985) in New Haven, Connecticut. After that, he went on to attend Temple University in Philadelphia, graduating in 1977 with a Master of Fine Arts Degree. Tony taught theater classes at Southern Connecticut State University, including a course in Stage Speaking, during the Spring semester of 1978. In 1978, he decided to make the move to Los Angeles to find work in film and television. Though this move was originally meant to be temporary, he lives there with his wife to this day. Tony is a theater-trained actor, and he has a long history of stage performances. Some of these include: "American Buffalo" as "Teach"; "Othello" as "Iago"; "Filumena" as "Domenico"; and "Taming of the Shrew" as "Petruchio". He speaks Spanish and Italian. Some of his interests include: Italian cooking, museums, art galleries and yoga. His favorite play is "Taming of the Shrew" and his favorite Stargate SG-1 (1997) episode is "Threshold". Tony's favorite charities are: Doctor's Without Borders, Habitat for Humanity, and the American Red Cross.
Tony Amoni is known for The Ninth Gate (1999), The Truth About Charlie (2002) and Eden Log (2007).
Tony Amos is known for The Director's Cut (2024), Best Buds (2020) and Nightcall (2019).
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Tony Andrews is known for Untrapped: The Story of Lil Baby (2022).
Award-winning entertainment public relations executive Tony Angellotti has implemented, supervised and/or executed the publicity campaigns for more than 200 motion pictures, as well as scores of television projects, entertainment companies, and filmmakers. He has headed the publicity departments of two motion picture companies, served as an executive at a leading public relations agency, as a partner in a prestigious boutique agency and as the owner/founder of his own agency. The Angellotti Company was founded in 1997, following Angellotti's partnership in Weissman/Angellotti. TAC plans and executes publicity strategies for films, filmmakers, production companies, industry events and notably Golden Globe and Oscar campaigns, with well over 300 nominations, including Best Picture winners Dances with Wolves, Shakespeare in Love, The English Patient, A Beautiful Mind, and Green Book. Angellotti has assisted Universal exclusively with all its awards campaigns since 2000 (over 100 nominations), with such best picture nominees as 1917, Green Book, Get Out, Les Miserables, Frost/Nixon, Munich, Ray, Seabiscuit, Erin Brockovich and nominees First Man, Straight Outta Compton, Steve Jobs, Bridesmaids, King Kong, Cinderella Man, American Gangster, United 93, Children of Men, Bourne Ultimatum, Steve Jobs, and Billy Elliot, among others. He has also managed Disney/Pixar's animation awards campaigns, beginning in 2001, including Oscar-winners Toy Story 4, Coco, Zootopia, Inside Out, Big Hero 6, Frozen, Brave, Toy Story 3, Up, Wall-E, Ratatouille, The Incredibles, Finding Nemo, Spirited Away, and nominees Wreck It Ralph, Ralph Breaks the Internet, Frankenweenie, Monsters, Inc, Cars, Princess and the Frog, Bolt, Howl's Moving Castle, and Lilo & Stitch, among many others. TAC has also represented numerous motion picture campaigns including Book Smart, Sorry to Bother You, Free State of Jones, Blade Runner 2049, Zero Dark Thirty, Prisoners, and scores of others. Angellotti also spearheaded Miramax Films' awards campaigns exclusively from 1991 through 2000 (more than 100 Oscar nominations during this time), including best picture nominees Chocolat, Cider House Rules, Life is Beautiful, Good Will Hunting, Il Postino, Pulp Fiction, The Piano, and nominees Malena, Talented Mr. Ripley, Sling Blade, Wings of the Dove, Mrs. Brown, and all Miramax films during this time. He assisted Miramax with all its foreign language awards campaigns, including winners Life is Beautiful, Kolya, and nominees Iran's Children of Heaven, Brazil's Four Days in September, Red and Queen Margot, Japan's Shall We Dance and Hong Kong's Farewell My Concubine. TAC has also represented scores of additional foreign language films, including Angelina Jolie's First They Killed My Father, 2011 Globe-nominated Chinese The Flowers of War, directed by Zhang Yimou, 2010 Italian entry La Prima Cosa Bella, 2001foreign language winner No Man's Land, The Last Kiss, (Italy) Artemesia (France), Lower City (Brazil), Keys to the House, The 100 Steps (Italy), Burnt by the Sun, and dozens of others. He also worked previously on the Oscar campaigns for such films as best picture Field of Dreams, Secrets & Lies, GoodFellas, as well as Presumed Innocent, and Reversal of Fortune among many others as well as on numerous important feature films including and films for every major independent company. Angellotti has also represented dozens of documentaries, including We Steal Secrets from Alex Gibney, Catfish, The Kid Stays in the Picture, New York Doll, Uncovered: The War on Iraq, the award-winning Superstar: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol, Paris Is Burning, Erroll Morris's Mr. Death, Michael Moore's The Big One, and Barbara Kopple's American Dream. TAC later has also represented numerous IMAX format films, including Dolphins (Oscar nominee), Caves, and Jim Cameron's Ghosts of the Abyss. The Company has represented scores of "indie" release campaigns such as It's Kind of a Funny Story, Hot Fuzz, The Illusionist, Pride and Prejudice, Shaun of the Dead, Door in the Floor, all Kevin Smith's films, Gods and Monsters, Shadow of a Vampire, Hamlet, The Red Violin, Sliding Doors, and Mrs. Brown. The Company also represents and has represented production entities and creative talent, such as directors Brad Bird, Kathryn Bigelow, Marc Forster, Gary Ross, Peter Berg, Oliver Stone, Kevin Smith; Mira Nair; producers/production companies Pixar, Mark Boal, Davis Entertainment, Alcon Entertainment, Misher Films, Larry Gordon, Sidney Kimmel Entertainment, and the USC School of Cinematic Arts, among many others. Angellotti served as vice president of worldwide marketing and public relations for Empire Entertainment, responsible for worldwide publicity and promotions for the Los Angeles and Rome-based film company, which involved the marketing of the company's product at the major foreign film markets and festivals. Previously he was director of worldwide publicity and promotions at New World Entertainment, responsible for supervising corporate, film, and television. Prior he was a V.P. at ICPR, one of the largest entertainment publicity agencies at that time. Angellotti is a member of AMPAS and several of its committees. He also recently won the prestigious Les Mason Award from the ICG Publicists Guild for excellence in entertainment publicity. He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley with a B.A. in English Literature and journalism minor.
Tony Angelo is an actor, known for The Dark Military (2019) and Looking for America: A Saipan Story (2007).
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Tony Anselmo was born on February 18, 1960 in Salt Lake City, UT, and formed an early fascination with all things Disney sparked by a screening of Mary Poppins (1964) at the age of five. His family moved to Sunnyvale, in northern California, when he was seven, and he continued to actively study Disney and animation. He began drawing, built a light table of his own, and began creating animation with a Super 8 camera. He attended Marian A. Peterson High School in Sunnyvale, and began to cultivate his talents with night art classes at local colleges, and began regular correspondence with the artists who animated the Disney films, including Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston, Eric Larson, and Milt Kahl. With the support and encouragement of his Disney Animation correspondents, Anselmo was able to attend California Institute of the Arts on a Disney Family Fellowship. He began his studies in the Character Animation Department at CalArts in the fall 1978. The school had a standard four-year degree program, but because of its close connection with the Disney Studio, the students' work was subject to the scrutiny of studio executives. Anselmo was selected to transfer to the Studio after only his second year. On September 1, 1980, he reported for work to the Disney Animation department in Burbank, CA. In subsequent years, Anselmo contributed to the animation of 20 Disney animated features, including The Black Cauldron (1985), The Little Mermaid (1989), Beauty and the Beast (1991), The Lion King (1994), Tarzan (1999), and The Emperor's New Groove (2000). One of the Disney stalwarts that Anselmo frequently encountered during his early days at Disney was Clarence Nash, the original voice of Donald Duck. Anselmo asked Nash to show him his vocal technique. From time to time, the two continued their informal "training" in performing Donald's dialogue. When Nash passed away on February 20, 1985, Anselmo inherited the role of Donald Duck as Nash had wished. Anselmo's first performance as Donald was on a television program titled DTV Valentine (1986) a special on The Disney Channel, and since then, Anselmo has voiced Donald hundreds of projects, including television, feature films, theme parks, and consumer products. Anselmo has also shared voice-over duties (with Russi Taylor) for Huey, Dewey, and Louie since 1999. He has voiced the nephews on Mickey Mouse Works (1999) and Mickey Mouse Works: Goofy's Extreme Sports: Rock Climbing/Hansel And Gretel/Donald On Ice/Mickey's Mechanical House (1999) (while Taylor voiced the nephews in DuckTales (1987), Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas (1999), and Mickey's Twice Upon a Christmas (2004), Mickey's Speedway USA (2000), and the remastered DuckTales: Remastered (2013),) He also lent his voice to minor characters in The Great Mouse Detective (1986), Mickey's Around the World in 80 Days (2005), and Phineas and Ferb (2007).
Tony Armstrong is known for Reef School (2022), Marngrook Footy Show (2007) and A Dog's World with Tony Armstrong (2022).