Stephen Ford is a Swedish-American actor and director. After acting in shows like Teen Wolf, Switched At Birth and Private Practice he began his own production company, Ascender Productions. His career started at a young age when he began doing commercials and creating short films with his neighborhood friends. As his family was in the military, he moved around the United States a lot as a kid, growing up in Alaska, Alabama, California, Kansas and Florida. After relocating to Los Angeles as a teenager, he skipped around various Disney, Fox and Nickelodeon sitcoms. This led him to starring in the American adaptation of Kamen Rider Ryuki as the lead of CW's Kamen Rider Dragon Knight. Since then he has appeared in various indie films and hit television shows like ABC's Private Practice and Desperate Housewives, MTV's Teen Wolf and Freeform's Switch At Birth. He took a break from acting to focus on directing in 2014 and he partnered with the Warner Brothers YouTube company Machinima as their lead narrative show runner to create original narrative content based on video game properties like Ubisoft's Rainbow Six: Siege and The Division. When Machinima folded up shop, he created Ascender Productions. A small production company with a focus on creating high quality digital and narrative content.
Stephen Forsyth is a Canadian multidisciplinary artist working in a wide range of media: photography, music, video, motion pictures, poetry and choreography. After graduating from McMaster University and studying at the London School of Economics, Forsyth went on to composing, recording and performing his music in French and Italian and starring in 8 of his 10 European films, ranging from spaghetti westerns, political, espionage to romantic comedies. While living in Italy he also worked as a freelance photojournalist photographing and interviewing many artists including Vittorio De Sica, Valerio Zurlini, Merce Cunningham, John Cage, the Bread and Puppet Theatre, Buffy Sainte-Marie and Marc Chagall. After moving to New York City he continued working in a wide range of disciplines enabling him to create works of a unique personal vision. Live performances of his music and choreography and performance art have been presented in New York at the Joyce Theater, the Bottom Line, Reno Sweeney's, the Pyramid, Danceteria and others. Forsyth was co-founder of the Rebecca Blake Studio with photographic exhibitions at the Brooklyn Museum, The Nikon House, The Witkin Gallery, and others. Stephen Forsyth's photographic work can be found in the permanent collections of major institutions including the Museum of Modern Art, NYC, the George Eastman House Museum of Photography and Film and the Harvard Film Archives. Forsyth's musical production and composition with lyrics, "Step out of Love", choreographed by Margo Sappington was performed worldwide by Hubbard Street Dance Chicago for 10 consecutive years and newly remounted for their 25th anniversary. Forsyth has released 2 albums of his music and lyrics on which include for the first time after 25 years his rejected theme song for the James Bond movie Never Say Never Again (1983) sung by Phyllis Hyman. Forsyth was awarded a Canada Council Explorations Grant to create his award winning video work "Passages". In this work his piano compositions are the inspiration for a powerful weave of visuals, music and dance and PBS' Alive from Off Center (1984). Neil Seiling said of this work, "It is indeed one of the rare pieces that aspires to and pulls off a meeting of the performance world with television time and space." These last years saw the worldwide reemergence of legendary Italian film director Mario Bava's cult favorite Il rosso segno della follia (1970) starring Forsyth, which has since been remastered and released on Blu-Ray. With Forsyth's recent return to photography he has brought with him the experience he has so long curried and expressed in his video work and musical compositions. During the past years Forsyth has exhibited his photographs in Toronto at the Italian Cultural Institute, Fran Hill Gallery, Awol Gallery, Artscape Triangle Gallery, Redhead Gallery, 401 Richmond's Art in the Fall and Nuit Blanche. In 2016 he released a DVD titled "Stephen Forsyth, Piano Solos: Scenes from My Window" a synthesis of his piano solos, poetry and photography.
Stephen Francis is an actor, known for Rostered On (2016) and Bottled (2014).
Stephen Francis is known for Sexual Intrigue (2000), Corporate Fantasy (1999) and Passion Cove (2000).
Stephen Franklin is known for Enemy of National Security (2022), Picnics Are for Losers (2022) and Egghead & Twinkie (2023).
Stephen started off in a career in the legal profession before switching to work as an assistant stage manager at London's Royal Court which led to work as an assistant director on films by Karel Reisz and Lindsay Anderson He directed his first short in 1967 and his feature debut, Gumshoe, in 1971. The next 12 years were spent working in television before returning to film with My Bautiful Laundrette
Stephen Friedrich is known for Vice (2018), Sweet/Vicious (2016) and S.W.A.T. (2017).
Stephen Fry is an actor, known for Shark Attack 2 (2000).
Writer, actor, comedian, doer of good works, excellent good friend to the famous and not, Fry lives in his London SW1 flat and his Norfolk house when not traveling. Famous for his public declaration of celibacy in the "Tatler" back in the 1980s, Emma Thompson has characterised her friend as "90 percent gay, 10 percent other." Stephen Fry was born in Hampstead, London, to Marianne Eve (Newman) and Alan Fry, a physicist and inventor. His maternal grandparents were Hungarian Jewish immigrants, while his father's family was of English background. He grew up in Norfolk and attended Uppingham School and Stout's Hill. After his notorious three months in Pucklechurch prison for credit card fraud, he attended Queens College, Cambridge in 1979, finishing with a 2:1 in English in 1981/2. While at Cambridge, he was a member of the Cherubs drinking club, and Footlights with Thompson, Tony Slattery, Martin Bergman, and Hugh Laurie (to whom he was introduced by E.T.). His prolific writing partnership with Laurie began in 1981 with resulting Footlights revues for (among others) Mayweek, Edinburgh Festival, and a three month tour of Australia. In 1984, Fry was engaged to do the rewrite of the Noel Gay musical "Me and My Girl," which made him a millionaire before the age of 30. It also earned him a nomination for a Tony award in 1987. (Sidenote: It was upon SF's suggestion that Emma Thompson landed a leading role in the London cast of this show.) Throughout the 1980s, Fry did a huge amount of television and radio work, as well as writing for newspapers (e.g. a weekly column in the "Daily Telegraph") and magazines (e.g. articles for "Arena"). He is probably best known for his television roles in Blackadder II (1986) and Jeeves and Wooster (1990). His support of the Terence Higgins Trust through events such as the first "Hysteria" benefit, as well as numerous other charity efforts, are probably those works of which he is most proud. Fry's acting career has not been limited to films and television. He had successful runs in Alan Bennett's "Forty Years On," Simon Gray's "The Common Pursuit" with John Sessions, Rik Mayall, John Gordon Sinclair, and others. Michael Frayn's "Look Look" and Gray's "Cell Mates" were less successful for both Fry and their playwrights, the latter not helped by his walking out of the play after only a couple of weeks. Fry has published four novels as well as a collection of his radio and journalistic miscellanea. He has recorded audiotapes of his novels (an unabridged version of "The Liar" was released in 1995), as well as many other works for both adults and children.
Stephen Fu's a voice actor known for his work in anime & video games. After obtaining a B.S. in molecular biology & working in research for 5 years, he realized he wanted to pursue his lifelong dream of working in animation. He studied long form & short form improv to get over his stage fright. He has studied w/ coaches to improve his chances in getting work.