Adam Benjamin Marcinowski was born in Tacoma, WA. His father is an artist and his mother, a teacher. He earned his BA in Communications/ Political Science from the University of Washington (Seattle) in 2000 and has his masters degree in education. For four years he dedicated himself to the gridiron as a member of the UW football team, playing with the likes of Corey Dillon, Brock Huard, Marques Tuiasasopo, Matt Fraize and many other greats. He has worked in theatre, film and television. His role as Solar Flare in Once Upon A Super Hero received critical acclaim on the big screen. You can find his work everywhere, from network television to radio. Marcinowski is known for his height and like many tall leading men in Hollywood, his stand-in always has an apple box.
Adam Marcus is an American film director, writer and actor. Marcus was born in Westport, Connecticut and attended Staples High School. He started his career at the age of fifteen, when he co-created the Westport Theatreworks Theatrical Company where he directed and produced over fifty shows in seven years. He then attended New York University where he won the coveted Best Picture Award at the Student Academy Awards in 1990 for his film, "...so you like this girl". In 1991, Marcus was called out to Los Angeles by filmmaker Sean S. Cunningham (the director of the original Friday the 13th) to work on producing and directing features. That same year, he co-produced Johnny Zombie (retitled My Boyfriend's Back) for Cunningham and Disney Studios. In 1993, Marcus wrote the story for and directed the ninth film in the Friday the 13th series, Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday for New Line. He was 23 at the time and the youngest director ever hired by the studio. The three million dollar feature went on to gross over eighteen million domestically and became one of New Line Video's largest releases ever. Marcus and his writing partner Debra Sullivan then turned their attention to screenwriting for Paramount (the adaptation of James Patterson's Virgin, later titled Cradle and All) and Fox (the original Black Autumn). In 1995, Marcus created the theater company Damn Skippy Theatreworks in L.A. In the Summer and Fall of 1998 Marcus directed the independently financed feature film comedy, Let It Snow (aka Snow Days). The picture marked the return of Bernadette Peters in a feature film after an eight-year absence from film work. The film screened at the Independent Feature Film Market (IFFM) in New York City where it was singled out as the most successful film at the market by Variety, Time Out IndieWire. Let It Snow had its world premiere at the American Film Institute's Los Angeles International Film Festival (AFI's LAIFF) in competition in the New Visions Category; the film won awards at the festival for Best New Writer and Best Editing. The film then went on to be an official selection of Sundance 2000 in the American Spectrum section where it was given two extra screenings and sold out all seven of its showings. Then came the New York/Avignon film festival and the Deauville festival in France, where the film received critical acclaim. Let It Snow received positive reviews from Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, Ain't It Cool News, The New York Times, and The Gore Score as well as a number of other publications worldwide. Marcus then turned to television, where he sold several series to Bright/Kauffman/Crane Productions, Imagine Television, NBC, Fox and The WB. In 2008, Marcus directed the feature film Conspiracy for Sony Pictures, which he co-wrote with Debra Sullivan. The film was shot in Santa Fe, New Mexico with Val Kilmer, Jennifer Esposito and Gary Cole. Marcus completed the pilot presentation Fitz and Slade and is co-writer, director and serving as executive producer on the web series Connected. In 2013 Marcus co-wrote the reboot of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre series, Texas Chainsaw 3D with partner Sullivan and Stephen Susco, which was the first number-one box office film in North America of the year. He co-wrote with Sullivan the feature film Cabin Fever: Outbreak and is directing and co-writing The Plantation, an adaptation of Val Lewton's RKO classic I Walked with a Zombie. Adam's script for Momentum (aka Gravity), co-written by Sullivan, is in production in South Africa. The film is directed by Stephen S. Campanelli and stars Olga Kurylenko and James Purefoy.
Adam Marino is a producer and director, known for Inheritance (2014), Beneath the Leaves (2019) and Ring Ring (2019).
Adam Mason was born in Cambridge in 1975. He graduated from the London Film School, and immediately began his film career. He directed and produced more than 90 music videos over the next seven years, as well as several award winning short films. In 2004 he started production on Broken, a feature film made for less than 5000 pounds, that ultimately went on to find distribution through The Weinstein Company and won many awards worldwide. That film got him spottedĀ in Hollywood, and a few months later he was directing The Devil's Chair, financed by Crystal Sky, which was officially selected for the Toronto Film Festival, won many festival awards and was distributed to great international acclaim through Sony. In the process of finishing that film he signed to CAA and moved to LA. He followed up the great success of The Devil's Chair with Blood River, a psychological thriller he shot in an authentic abandoned ghost town in the middle of death valley. In 2008 he directed a twenty part Dodge commercial for TNT. He is currently (2009) deep in post production on his next film, Luster, a subversive black-comedy take on the classic Jekyll & Hyde story. He is also developing a slate of feature and television scripts, and continues to work in music videos and commercials.
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Adam recently wrapped filming "Ford vs. Ferrari," starring Matt Damon and Christian Bale, a 20th Century Fox production directed by James Mangold, The true story of the battle between Ford and Ferrari to win Le Mans in 1966. Adam portrays race car driver, Lloyd Ruby. Adam is now co-starring in the Netflix series, "The Curious Creations of Christine McConnell,"-portraying the befuddled, but kindhearted, serial-killing boyfriend of McConnell. Part cooking show, part sitcom in the vein of the Addams Family and the Muppet Show set inside the enchanted home of Christine McConnell. Other recent credits include: "Christmas Harmony," starring Chandra Wilson and Kelley Jakle; "A Neighbor's Deception," (a Lifetime original); and CBS's NCIS appearing as Tall Tony. Other credits: NBC's "Days of our Lives"; as well as a slew of Christmas romantic comedies for Hallmark; Jenny Garth's husband in the ABC sitcom, "Mystery Girls", and his long-running portrayal of Scott Chandler in ABC's "All My Children." While filming the psychological thriller, "Would You Rather," he accepted the award for Best Feature Film at the St. Tropez International Film Festival for "The Preacher's Daughter." Adam lives in Los Angeles with his producer/actress wife, Virginia Novello
Adam Mayne is known for Don't Hug Me I'm Scared (2022).
Adam McArthur was born on November 28, 1982 in Alameda, California, USA. He is an actor, known for Jujutsu Kaisen (2020), Star vs. the Forces of Evil (2015) and Krampus (2015).
Adam McCaffrey is an actor and writer, known for 2Late (2014), The Gifted (2013) and Dark Love 2 (2014).
Adam McConvell is an actor and producer, known for Last Words (2017), Dry Fire (2021) and Guilty (2017).