Tom Dolemore is an actor, known for The Callback Queen (2013), Duets (2015) and Made in Chelsea (2011).
Donahue is a director and producer of narrative and documentary features and co-founder of CreativeChaos vmg, a production company located in New York City. His latest feature, This Changes Everything is an examination into gender inequality in Hollywood and includes interviews with Geena Davis, Meryl Streep, Taraji Henson, Reese Witherspoon, Cate Blanchett, Sandra Oh and Tiffany Haddish. Executive Producers include Geena Davis and Regina K. Scully. The film makes its world premiere at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival. His past feature documentaries include Hulu's Thank You For Your Service. Called "gut wrenching" and "important" by The New York Times, the film is an examination of failed mental health policy in the U.S. military. It includes interviews with Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, General David Petraeus, General Loree Sutton, General Peter Chiarelli, Gary Sinise, Sebastian Junger and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen. The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "If this film cannot spur politicians to act, nothing will." It is produced in association with the Sprayregen Family Foundation and Regina K. Scully & Artemis Rising Foundation (The Invisible War, The Hunting Ground). Donahue's Emmy-nominated HBO feature documentary, Casting By was hailed as one of the top five docs of the year by the National Board of Review and was reviewed as "outstanding!" by legendary critic Leonard Maltin. It won the 2014 Gracie Award for Outstanding Documentary of the Year from the National Alliance of Women in Media. Interviewees included Woody Allen, Al Pacino, Martin Scorsese, Diane Lane, Robert De Niro, Glenn Close, Clint Eastwood, Robert Redford, Robert Duvall, among many others. After premiering at the Toronto and New York Film Festivals, Casting By played in over 50 festivals worldwide and has been released in over 35 countries. In 2013, under pressure from the film's HBO release, the Academy created a branch for casting directors. In 2014, the TV Academy awarded the film's primary subject, Marion Dougherty with the Governor's Award, its highest honor. This year, its other subject, Lynn Stalmaster received an honorary Oscar, the first ever for a casting director. Donahue directed the feature documentary, Guest of Cindy Sherman, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival (5 stars, Time Out; "A work of art" -Variety) . It opened theatrically in March 2009 and was selected as a New York Times Critics Pick when it premiered on the Sundance Channel that year.
Tom Donald is an actor, known for I Melt with You (2011).
Tom Donatelli is known for Guns for Hire (2019), Mysteries at the Museum (2010) and Uncommon Courage: Breakout at Chosin (2010).
Tom Doran is an actor, known for The Sand Dune (2018).
Tom is an actor and model based in Durango, Colorado. He and his wife Carrie are also world renowned vintage clothing dealers. Tom has a keen interest in history, so historical period films have been the focus of his work. Along with acting and modeling, he has collaborated with film projects in the wardrobe and prop departments. As a lifelong Westerner, he is proficient in firearms and horsemanship. Tom has also costumed himself in all of the films, modeling and performances, as he has a wide range of period clothing from 1870's - 1970's.
Tom Drake was an American actor with a relatively lengthy career. Drake was born in 1918, in Brooklyn, New York. His real name was Alfred Sinclair Alderdice. He was educated at the Iona Preparatory School in New Rochelle, New York, and Mercersburg Academy in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania, He started his acting career in 1938, with theatrical performances in Broadway, New York City. He appeared in the plays "Run Sheep Run" (1938) and "Clean Beds" (1939), He initially used the stage name "Richard Alden", but later changed his stage name to "Tom Drake". In the early 1940s, Drake started appearing in theatrical films. Following a number of uncredited parts as an extra, his first film credit was in the film "The Howards of Virginia" (1940), as the character James Howard. The setting of the film was 18th-century Virginia. In the film, the protagonist Matt Howard (played by Cary Grant) is a war orphan. His father was killed in the Braddock Expedition (1755), a failed British campaign during the French and Indian War. The impoverished Howard gains the favor and political patronage of Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826), and uses this connection to acquire land and wealth, and build a new dynasty of plantation owners. But this family is undermined by the class difference and tensions between "new money" Matt and the "old money" heiress which he married. In 1942, Drake received his first taste of fame by starring in the hit Broadway play "Janie". Afterwards, he was signed to a full contract with the film studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Drake was 24 years old, but was found ineligible for military service in World War II; his medical exams diagnosed a heart disease. Drake's most memorable role during the War was the character John Truett in the musical "Meet Me in St. Louis". Truett was the boy next door, who served as the love interest for the character Esther Smith (played by Judy Garland). Following the War, Drake appeared in over 30 films and several television series. He broke out of typecasting in 1959, when playing gang leader Abe McQuown in the Western film "Warlock". By the early 1970s, Drake's career was in decline. His final film role was the character Dr. Adam Forrest in the horror film "The Spectre of Edgar Allan Poe" (1974), Drake died in 1982, suffering from lung cancer. He was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.
Tom had had over 500 appearances on national television as a stand up comedian. He was a frequent guest on the Late Show with David Letterman (1993)and has hosted the show in David's absence. He was an opening act for Smokey Robinson, Tony Orlando, Gladys Knight, Liza Minnelli, Sammy Davis Jr.and Frank Sinatra. He was Sinatra's opening act for 13 years. As an actor, Tom has had roles on television in Murder, She Wrote (1984), Columbo (1971), Touched by an Angel (1994), WKRP in Cincinnati (1978) and Family Ties (1982). Tom had roles on the HBO movies The Rat Pack (1998)and Lansky (1999). He has also been in the feature films Spaceballs (1987), Man on the Moon (1999) and Trouble with the Curve (2012). In 2013 he began appearing around the country in a one man show called "An Evening of Laughter and Memories of Sinatra".
Tom Druilhet was born on May 29, 1963 in Lafayette, Louisiana, USA. He is known for Polanski (2009), The Death of Socrates (2010) and Resurrection of Serious Rogers (2010).
Tom Dumican is best known for his critically acclaimed debut feature documentary, No Greater Law, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival, and was nominated for a 2019 Emmy and Grierson Trust Award. Filming all over the world for the likes of National Geographic, Apple TV+, Vice, and A&E, Tom has also been embedded with religious cults in the wilderness of Siberia and the jungles of the Philippines; filmed in the favelas of Brazil; journeyed around the US with the world's youngest preacher and worked undercover in Belarus documenting state oppression. His latest project is, Becoming You, a six-part documentary series for Apple TV+, narrated by Olivia Colman.