Alan White was born in London, raised and educated in Australia. A winner of Rock Australia Magazine's Writers Contest, he began working as a freelance journalist while still in University. With degree in hand he won an Advertising Federation of Australia Graduate Scholarship and enjoyed a brief career as writing copy for Cole and Levi's, winning a few awards and playing in various underground rock bands. An offer to direct music videos lured the copywriter/musician behind the camera. In the next few years, Alan played director by day and musician by night. Directing videos for bands such as the seminal Hunters and Collectors and garage rock icons the Lime Spiders. At the time, his notorious "Homer Hudson" commercial campaign garnered a Who's Hot article in Rolling Stone, his band, The Faith's album was being showcased in the same issue. Eventually the day job won out. As a director of TV commercials, including high profile campaigns for Expedia, Mitsubishi and Nike, Alan has won every major award worldwide from the Canne Lions to the first Emmy for an outstanding commercial. In Australia he co-founded Black where his work began to attract international attention. Moving to the U.S., Alan became a founding director of @radical.media before partnering in 2005 at the highly regarded creative shop BOB Industries. The new millennium saw Alan direct for the big screen. Followinf hot on the heels of the critically acclaimed Erskinville Kings, starring Hugh Jackman, he directed Claudia Karvan and Bryan Brown to critical success in RISK, which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival. Alan has just completed his first American feature, Broken, starring Heather Graham, Jeremy Sisto, and Linda Hamilton- a tale of addiction set deep in the LA night- it is due for release in September 2007.
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Alan Whitehouse yet.
Alan Wilder was born on September 24, 1953 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He is an actor, known for Child's Play (1988), Home Alone (1990) and Public Enemies (2009).
A Tucson based indie filmmaker, Alan is in production on 10FT DOWN, the prequel to the feature length psychological thriller "8000 Feet Up" that he directed in 2022. He is also writing a feature screenplay based on the CIA exploits in Angola in 1975 and developing his feature film "Zero Saved", a gritty tale based on his experiences working for two plus decades as a paramedic in a busy EMS system. Alan Williams studied film production at the University of Arizona and, in 1993, his efforts would culminate in his film school opus, The Pigeon Sanctuary (1994). After graduating, he formed the short-lived production company, Guerilla Cult Cinema where he wrote his first feature screenplay "The Sandstorm." Alan would eventually dissolve Guerilla Cult to focus on writing, quickly finding himself in the spotlight when he was a finalist in the 1999 Arizona Film Office Screenwriting Competition with his second feature outing "The Matrix Alternative", later re-titled "The Sapien Index". Another feature screenplay, "Myth and Women" soon followed, leading to his being commissioned to write "Hearts and Diamonds" that, to his amusement, was to be developed into a soft-core film, whereabouts still unknown. In 2004, he would re-edit The Pigeon Sanctuary (1994) for a 10th anniversary screening and re-title the newer, shorter version "The Pigeon Sanctuary: Redux." While working as a paramedic technical consultant (uncredited) in "Cut Off", producer Gino Cabanas would challenge Alan to prove himself as an aspiring director and write and direct his own short. Nine months later, Alan met the challenge with his completed short "featurette," On a Clear Day (2007). In March of 2007, Alan's screenplays "Myth and Women" and "The Sapien Index" took 1st and 3rd place at the Peoria Film Festival. "The Sapien Index" went on to place in the Top 20 as a semifinalist in the 2008 Phoenix Film Festival Screenplay Competition. On a Clear Day (2007) would make appearances at several festivals in 2007 and it's success would inspire him to jump into his next project and in 2008 he wrote, directed and produced the experimental short The Human Condition (2008) which premiered at the 2008 Arizona International Film Festival, won Honorable Mention from The Accolade Competition and enjoyed success on the festival circuit. In 2011, his documentary on Tucson, Arizona's infamous 4th Avenue, The Avenue (2011), won the Best of Arizona at the 2011 Arizona International Film Festival. He would later become a Producer on the feature film "The Drama Club" (2017), directed the pilot for a series titled "You Only Live Twice" (2019) and was an Associate Producer on "Dustwun" (2020) which is currently garnering awards on the festival circuit. He lives with his wonderful wife and children in Tucson, Arizona where he and his wife own and operate Milo Fitness Factory.
Alan Williams is an actor and writer, known for The Cockroach That Ate Cincinnati (1996), Chernobyl (2019) and Vera Drake (2004).
Alan Wills is known for The Mechanic (2016), Date Night (2016) and Gone Sunshine (2016).
Alan Wong is known for Nobody (2021), King of Killers (2023) and Tanglin (2015).
Alan Wood is known for Inside Metal: The L.A. Metal Scene Explodes! (2016) and Inside Metal: The Pioneers of L.A. Hard Rock and Metal (2014).
Alan Yang is a producer and writer, known for Parks and Recreation (2009), Master of None (2015) and Forever (2018).
Alan York is known for The Biggest Little Farm (2018). He died in 2014.