TOM SWIFT
- NON-UNION
Résumé Print Résumé
FILM | ||
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Those Beyond Their Frames |
Watchman |
Dir. Andrew Brooks |
A View from the Bridge |
Lawyer Alfieri |
Dir. Eric Morton |
The Man Who Loved Flowers |
Flower Vendor |
Dir. Thomas Magnuson |
One Summer |
Old Man Anderson |
Dir. Ken Rogers |
Pan American |
LSD Guy |
|
TELEVISION | ||
Guilty or Innocent |
D.A. Howard Templeton |
Ganaway/Rubenstein Prods. |
THEATRE | ||
The Elephant Man |
Multiple Roles |
Dir. Robert Nigro, NYC |
Fiorello! |
Card Player/Ensemble |
Dir. Robert Nigro, NYC |
Greater Tuna |
Multiple Roles |
Dir. John Houchin, Vermont |
Bent |
Train Nazi |
Dir. Ted Swindley, Dallas |
Fiddler on the Roof |
Perchik, a student |
Dir. Ed de Latte, Dallas |
Sister Mary Ignacious... |
Gary |
Dir. Jac Alder, Dallas |
Edmond |
Multiple Roles |
Dir. Barry Chambers, Dallas |
Los Tequileros |
Capt. Wright, Texas Ranger |
Dir. Alexis Arredondo, Austin |
Outside Mullingar |
Tony Riley |
Dir. Michael Cooper, Austin |
The Baker's Wife |
Barnaby, a butcher |
Dir. Michael Cooper, Austin |
Picasso at the Lapine Agile |
Gaston |
Dir. Andy Berkovsky, Austin |
For Peter Pan/70th Birthday |
Father |
Dir. Karen Jambon, Austin |
Trade With Klan |
Rev. Gideon Heyward, Klansman |
Dir. Kathryn Sparks, Austin |
Fiddler on the Roof |
Tevye, a dairyman |
Dir. George Spelvin, Austin |
COMMERCIAL | ||
American Airlines-TV Spot |
VOC, Solo |
Dallas |
Nike Sportswear-TV Spot |
Lead VOC |
Dallas |
Bennigan's Restaurant |
Featured OC |
Dallas |
Curtis-Mathes Corp.-Indus. |
Featured, Showroom Sales Rep |
Dallas |
TRAINING | ||
Voice for the Stage |
NYC |
Robert Nigro |
Stage Acting |
SMU, Dallas |
Prof. Actors Training Program |
Film Acting |
Film Actors Lab, Dallas |
Adam Roarke |
Commercial Acting |
A Casting Place, Austin |
Donise Hardy, CSA |
Physical Characteristics / Measurements |
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Height: 5'4" |
Weight: 240 lbs |
I wrote, produced, directed, and appeared in "You Can't Do That, Dan Moody!", the reenactment of the 1923 "Ku Klux Klan Fogging Trial", in Georgetown, Texas. This marked the first successful prosecution of the KKK in the country, resulting in prison sentences for acts of violence. Always presented in the actual courtroom in which the trial was held, it premiered in 1998, had eight revivals, 100 performances, ending in 2023, the trial's 100th anniversary (the play's 25th), and was attended by 15,000 patrons.