Tom Berkeley is known for An Irish Goodbye (2022), Roy (2021) and The Golden West.
Tom grew up in Middleton, WI. He attended the University of Michigan where he graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Musical Theatre. After graduating, he moved to New York and appeared in multiple Broadway shows including the most recent revival of A Chorus Line, as Gregory Gardner. In 2013, Tom relocated to Los Angeles for several years to broaden his experience in the entertainment industry. In 2018, he returned to New York where he now resides.
Tom Berninger is an actor and director, known for Mistaken for Strangers (2013), Taking Woodstock (2009) and The National: Terrible Love (2011).
A native of Berkeley, Tom Bertino graduated from the California College of Arts & Crafts (now California College of the Arts) in 1981. Bertino began his professional animation career with independent producer/director Sally Cruikshank in 1978, and has worked for such studios as Nepenthe, DIC, Hanna-Barbera and Colossal pictures in a number of capacities including character design, storyboards, layout, voices and sound effects. In 1986, Bertino joined Industrial Light & Magic as supervisor of the rotoscope department. In 1993,he was asked to bring his traditional animation skills to the digital realm, leading to a successful career in computer animation for feature films and commercials. In 1995, Bertino was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Achievement in Visual Effects for the grounbreaking CG imagery he craeted for The Mask. He received a BAFTA nomination in the same category. Bertino's directorial debut was the short film _Work in Progress (2000/I)_, released in 2000.
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Tom Bettag was born on 11 October 1944 in Evansville, Indiana, USA. He is a producer, known for Koppel on Discovery (2006), ABC News Nightline (1980) and Life 360 (2001).
Tom Bever is known for To A Moral Certainty (2022).
Tom Bewilogua is known for Scissu (2009), 1000 Gramm (2011) and The Swelling (2016).
Tom Beyer won a prestigious Ovation Award in Los Angeles for his stage performance at the Mark Taper Forum in "The Cider House Rules," directed by Tom Hulce and adapted by Peter Parnell. He starred opposite Tony Award Winner Alice Ripley in "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" at Reprise! in Los Angeles. Jillian Armenante directed him in the premiere of her farce "In Flagrante Gothicto," in which he portrayed a 12-year-old french girl. (Garland Award, Best Ensemble in a Comedy.) He is an award-winning theatre director, and has received critical acclaim for his stage adaptations of classical works such as "The Canterbury Tales." He acted on many stages in Seattle, where he also produced and acted in an award-winning production of "Holy Days" written by Sally Nemeth, and spent three years as a company member of Seattle's Book-It Repertory Theatre, adapting literature into theatre. After a brief stint in his New York homeland, he moved to Los Angeles for "The Cider House Rules" and shortly thereafter was directed by Roger Rees in Shakespeare's "The Merry Wives of Windsor" at the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego. Tom is also a tap-dancer, a rusty classical organist, a dabbler on the piano, a marathon runner, and has a purple belt in Karate.
Tom Billett is known for Showtime (2002), Scorcher (2002) and Raising the Bar (2008).