Alan Payne is known for Blockbusted (2018), Netflix vs. the World (2019) and The Last Blockbuster (2020).
Alan Pelz-Sharpe is an actor, known for The Folklorist (2012), Brute Sanity (2017) and Sunny Side Up (2017).
Alan Perez is an actor, known for Prey for Death (2015).
Alan Peterson is known for Hillary: The Movie (2008), Hype: The Obama Effect (2008) and Trek: The Movie (2018).
Alan Pflueger is known for Need for Speed (2014).
Alan Pietruszewski was born in December 1962 in Buffalo, New York, USA. He is an actor and producer, known for Greenland (2020), Greyhound (2020) and Devotion (2022).
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Alan Polsky yet.
Alan Adriel Pontes was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He is the oldest of three brothers born to radio host Adrian Pontes and hair stylist Natalia Guillen. His parents are of Portuguese and Italian descent. From an early age, Alan developed a love for the arts growing up in a musical family where his father played the saxophone and his mother played the guitar. By the age of ten, Alan's family relocated from Argentina to the US due to his father's involvement in the radio entertainment industry. His father's success lead the family to move to Texas and Georgia before settling down in Miami, Florida. In 2014, Alan was scouted by a South Florida commercial agent and started going out to auditions. Having booked his first commercial job within the first two weeks of being signed, he started developing a deeper interest in pursuing acting as a career. After two years of continued success with modeling and commercial jobs in Miami, Alan made the move to New York in order to transition into TV & Film while taking classes at Stella Adler Studio, aiming to refine his acting technique and further develop his skill set. In June of 2021, after having booked a national commercial campaign working alongside Bruce Willis, Alan finally made the decision to relocate to LA where he is now currently based.
Alan Poul is an American film and television producer and director with a long and distinguished record. Among the shows on which he has served as both Executive Producer and Director are "Six Feet Under," "The Newsroom," "Tales of the City," "Swingtown," and "The Eddy." Over the course of his career he has received an Emmy Award, a Golden Globe Award, two Producers Guild Awards, three Peabody Awards, and six GLAAD Awards. Other television producing credits include "My So-Called Life" (Producer), "MotherFatherSon" (Executive Producer), "The Pacific Century" (Producer, Emmy Award), and "Westworld" (Consulting Producer, Season 1). Additional television directing credits include "Rome," "Big Love," "Grace and Frankie," "The Big C," and the pilots for "GCB" and "Perception." In 2003 he was nominated for both the DGA Award and the Directing Emmy for the "Nobody Sleeps" episode of "Six Feet Under." Prominent in his television work has been his long association with author Armistead Maupin, resulting in his producing all four miniseries based on Maupin's "Tales of the City" books, including the most recent iteration which aired on Netflix in 2019. On the feature side, Poul's producing credits include Paul Schrader's "Mishima," Ridley Scott's "Black Rain," Bernard Rose's "Candyman," Scott Winant's "Til There Was You," Jean-Marc Vallée's "Los Locos," Skip Woods' "Thursday," and Fina Torres' "Woman on Top." He made his feature directing debut in 2010 with "The Back-up Plan," starring Jennifer Lopez and Alex O'Loughlin. Poul graduated from Yale University with a degree in Japanese Language and Literature, which led to his involvement in "Mishima" and "Black Rain." He is currently (2020) revisiting his Japanese roots as Executive Producer and director of HBO Max's upcoming "Tokyo Vice." He serves on the Boards of Directors of Film Independent and Playwrights Horizons, and on the International Outreach Committee of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS). Previous board service includes The Producers Guild of America, Outfest, and GLAAD.
Actor/writer/producer/musician Alan Powell is the co-founder and a principle of Monarch Media, a film and television production company based in Los Angeles. In his role at Monarch, he produced and co-wrote the screenplay for family musical "A Week Away," which Netflix will release in 2021. He is also producing the Chris Pratt comedy "The Black Belt," based on the Black List screenplay by Randall Green; an untitled country musical with award-winning duo Florida Georgia Line; military thriller "Havoc," hailing from South Korean filmmaker Byung-gil Jung; musical "The Road to Bethlehem," which is the directorial debut of Adam Anders ("The Prom"); and "Do the Birds Still Sing in Hell?," based on the acclaimed biography of a British WWII solider and prisoner of war. As an actor, Powell has worked in both feature films and television series. He was a series regular on the ABC military drama, "Quantico," and starred as an aspiring country singer in Samuel Goldwyn Films' "The Song." The multihyphenate, whose background includes founding the band Anthem Lights and subsequently founding the band's own music label, also co-wrote the music for the Netflix musical "A Week Away." He currently resides in Los Angeles, with his wife and five children.