Todd grew up in Rhode Island where he began his acting career in theatre at the age of 5. He attended Emerson College in Boston where he majored in Acting for the theatre. Todd then moved to Chicago and performed with Second City Company before landing in Los Angeles to pursue a career in film and television. Todd has been in dozens of commercials and also performs as a musician in all the major clubs in Los Angeles. In 2007 he started Double Take Entertainment Group, an independent film and music company producing SAG signatory short films for film festivals.
Todd Essary is an American actor who grew-up in Austin, Texas. He began acting in the theatre, as a hobby, in 1997. Over the next 16 years -- including over a decade spent in New York City -- he took the stage playing numerous starring or featured roles in works ranging from the Classics, to plays by modern masters, as well as avant-garde pieces. By 2013, Todd had returned to Austin and was cast in his first film project, which eventually led him to envision acting onscreen as a career "for the second half of his life." Since that time, he has steadily forged ahead, always working, always finding his way to more significant projects, and usually being cast as a lead or supporting character. Having been a competitive athlete for most of his life, Todd affectionately refers to his time in front of the camera as "game day", and considers acting to be an outlet for that same sort of intensely focused energy. In addition to his Bachelor of Arts degree in biology from Texas Lutheran University, Todd's post-graduate studies have included exercise physiology, business and anthropology. The teachers Todd credits most for helping him cultivate his craft as an actor include Bonnie Cullum in Austin, Thomas G. Waites in New York City, and Craig Archibald in Los Angeles. Surfing, cooking, writing and working with horses are among his favorite pastimes. Todd recently returned to live in his hometown of ATX, where he's enjoying spending time at Barton Springs and going to blues concerts at the park.
Todd Farmer was born in November 1968. He is a writer and actor, known for Jason X (2001), My Bloody Valentine (2009) and Drive Angry (2011).
William Todd Field was born in Pomona, California, and began acting after graduating from high school in Portland, Oregon, where he was raised. A budding jazz musician as well, he skipped college in favor of a move east to New York to study acting. Once there, he began performing with the Ark Theatre Company as both an actor and musician. Field subsequently won a role in Woody Allen's nostalgic Radio Days (1987). Then had an independent Spirit Award-nominated turn in'Victor Nunez (I)''s Sundance Film Festival Grand jury Prize-winner Ruby in Paradise (1993). He also starred in Nicole Holofcener's_Walking and Talking (1996)_ which won the Grand Special Prize at the Deauville Film Festival. Other credits include Scott Ziehl's_Broken Vessels (1998)_ in which Field starred and produced, and'Stanley Kubrick''s final masterpiece, Eyes Wide Shut (1999) in which he played the mysterious "Nick Nightingale". In 1999, Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "Field has a deceptive facade of all-American clean-cut looks that allows him to suggest a wide range of emotions and thoughts behind such a regular-guy appearance; in "Ruby in Paradise" he expressed such uncommon decency and intelligence you had to wonder how Ashley Judd's hardscrabble Ruby could ever have considered letting him get away. In "Eyes Wide Shut" he's the likable med school dropout turned saloon piano player, and in Broken Vessels he's an increasingly raging sociopath. In all these roles Field has the precious gift of being able to surprise you and to command your attention on screen." However, it was precisely at this point in his career that Field decided to leave acting behind and try instead to make a name for himself as a writer/director. His first film When I Was a Boy (1993) was selected by the Film Society of Lincoln Center as part of their New Directors/New Films series and was shown at the Museum of Modern Art. His next film, Nonnie & Alex (1995) received both the Special Jury Award at the Sundance Film Festival and the Best Film prize at the Aspen Film Festival. The film was honored with a special citation from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences and Field was honored with the Franklin J. Schaffner Award for Excellence from the AFI, one of the highest honors the institute ever bestows upon a filmmaker. In 2001, Field made his feature writing/directing debut with In the Bedroom (2001), an intensely emotional portrayal of the repercussions of family tragedy on a New England couple. The film received five Academy Award nominations, three Golden Globe nominations, and Field was named both Screenwriter and Director of the year by the National Board of Review. Internationally acclaimed by critics, the film was named Best Picture of the Year by The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Wall Street Journal, New York Magazine, The New York Observer, and the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. In 2006, Field co-wrote and directed Little Children (2006). The film, starring Kate Winslet and Patrick Wilson, won numerous awards from the nation's top critics associations including writing awards for Field and Perrotta. The movie received three Golden Globe nominations including Best Picture of the Year, and was nominated for three Academy Awards.
Todd Emmanuel Fisher is an American actor, director, cinematographer, and producer of television films and documentaries. He has a professional background in architectural design and sound engineering, with experience designing and building sound stages, recording studios, and television facilities. He is also a business executive, known as the former CEO, President, CFO, and Treasurer of the Debbie Reynolds Hotel & Casino (DRHC), Debbie Reynolds Management Company, Inc. As of 2013, he continues to serve as the CEO and curator of the Hollywood Motion Picture Museum, which is housed at Debbie Reynolds Studios (DR Studios) in North Hollywood and at his ranch in Creston, California. (2016) He is CEO of the Hollywood Motion Picture Experience HMPE.
Fjelsted's art career began with critically lauded gallery works in the 1990s. After segueing into theater, commercial photography, and multiple disciplines for an FX company, in 2002 he wrote and directed animated short The Firefly Man (2003) which premiered at Telluride and sold to The Sundance Channel. Fjelsted moved to Los Angeles in 2003, and has since worked as a production designer for seventeen years. He has built character worlds for Netflix, HBO, Amazon, and Hulu, as well as for independent films premiering at Cannes, Sundance, Tribeca, and Berlin. In 2018, he won a Primetime Emmy and an Art Directors Guild Award for the production design of period comedy GLOW, and a second ADG Award in 2019. He was nominated again in 2020 for an Emmy and a third consecutive ADG Award.
Todd Fletcher is an actor, known for Lincoln (2012), 5th Passenger (2017) and Killing Lincoln (2013).
Todd Forester is an actor and writer, known for Jake Picks (2022), Desert Shores (2018) and Non-Stop to Comic-Con (2016).
Todd Fossey is the co-producer of, "Overnight" a critically acclaimed documentary that was an official selection of the 2004 Sundance Film Festival and was enthusiastically picked up by Thinkfilm for theatrical distribution in over 40 cities and 37 countries, received "Two Thumbs Up" from Roeper and Ebert, and was critically rated the number 3 documentary of 2004 behind "Super Size Me" and "Fahrenheit 911". "Overnight" was also the featured film in December 2005 on the Sundance Channel. Todd is the creator and host a lifestyle TV show called, "Uncommon Sense" on the science and application of the Mind-Body connection. His latest documentary (producer), "Frag" recently world premiered at The AFI International Film Festival. In addition to his film/television work, Todd is a Certified Clinical Hypnotherapist and Mind-Body Practitioner. He is a member of the American Counseling Association, American Hypnosis Association and the Association for Integrative Health Care Practitioners. Having started his private practice in Beverly Hills Todd is best known for his work with elite athletes and A-list celebrities. However, his passion is his innovative clinical work with psycho-emotional issues, medical hypnosis, biodynamics, and behavioral medicine or psychoneuroimmunology. In addition to his private practice, Todd currently ('09) maintains a busy speaking and lecture schedule on the subject of emotions and health. He has lectured at such prestigious institutions as the UCLA School of Dentistry and The Kansas City School of Medicine and Bioscience. Todd is a published author on the subject of Clinical Hypnosis and creator of the Axiom SRS self-care audio series and has appeared on many TV and Radio talk shows.
Todd Foster is an actor and producer, known for The Shasta Triangle (2019), Last Three Days (2020) and Simple Twist of Fate (2014).