Dollhouse

FOX (ended 2010)

Cast & Crew

EDIT
  • Eliza Dushku

    Echo

    9.4
    Eliza Dushku was born in Watertown, Massachusetts, to an Albanian father and Danish mother, and raised in the LDS Church, the faith of her mother (though she is not actively practicing). She has three brothers, Aaron, Ben, and Nate, the latter of whom is also an actor. Eliza lives in the Los Angeles area with Nate, the oldest of her three brothers, whom she calls her "partner in crime." Eliza came to the attention of casting agents when she was 10. Along with her brother, she went to a commercial audition where she tripped on the stairs, got a blood nose, and became an instant drama queen. At 12, she was chosen at the end of a five month search throughout the United States for the lead role of Alice, opposite Juliette Lewis in the film That Night. In 1993, Eliza landed a role as Pearl alongside Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio in This Boy's Life, a role that she said opened a lot of doors. Eliza says that Dicaprio taught her how to deal with bullies and other high school dangers, for which she is grateful. The following year, she played the teenage daughter of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jamie Lee Curtis in True Lies. She also had parts as Paul Reiser's daughter in Bye Bye, Love, as Cindy Johnson with Halle Berry and Jim Belushi in Race the Sun, as well as roles in a television movie and a short film. Eliza took some time off from acting to finish her junior and senior years of high school. She was accepted to the George Washington and Suffolk Universities in Boston. After completing high school, Eliza returned to acting with the role of Faith, a Slayer much more troubled than the main character Buffy. Though initially planned as a five episode role, the character became so popular that she stayed on for the entirety of the third season. She has also made guest appearances in Buffy's spin-off, Angel. Because of her convincing role as a sociopath, she became an icon to many criminals. She was inundated with piles of fan mail from legions of prisoners. In 2000, she starred with Kirsten Dunst in the cheerleader comedy Bring It On, which was a surprising success at the box office that spawned a sequel. Kevin Smith invited her to be a part of his final adventure for his two characters, Jay and Silent Bob, in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, where Eliza co-starred with Shannon Elizabeth, Ali Larter, Ben Affleck, and others. After this, Eliza starred in Soul Survivors, opposite Ben Affleck's brother Casey, followed by a role in The New Guy. Eliza then returned to work with Robert De Niro and director Michael Caton-Jones in City by the Sea, playing James Franco's junkie girlfriend and mother of his child. The film garnered attention from a wider adult audience and several good reviews. 2003 saw the release of Wrong Turn, a horror film in which Eliza had the starring role, and The Kiss, an independent comedy-drama. Starting that same year, she also starred in a new Fox TV series, Tru Calling, where she played the main character, Tru Davies. On October 1, 2005, she announced at Wizard World Boston that shooting had begun for Nobel Son (to be released in 2006), in which she will star with Alan Rickman, Danny DeVito, Bill Pullman, and Peter Boyle. Eliza also announced that she would appear in a Broadway production entitled "Dog Sees God" in December of 2005.moreless
  • Harry J. Lennix

    Boyd Langton

    7.5
    Harry Joseph Lennix III was born in 1964, the youngest of four siblings on Chicago's south side. He attended Northwestern University, where he majored in Theater. After graduation he taught Music and English for several years while maintaining an active stage career and even fitting in a bit of Hollywood, starring in The Five Heartbeats and The Mary Thomas Story.



    In 1989 Lennix founded Legacy Productions with renowned Chicago director Chuck Smith, dedicated to mounting historically significant plays about the African American experience. He and Smith are on staff at the Goodman Theatre.



    Following the advice of his former ate and current manager, Lennix moved to New York to build his acting career, which he has done very successfully. Since then, he has appeared in a number of films and several television series in a guest or recurring role. In the sixth season of FOX' action drama hit series 24, Lennix played a prominent role as Walid Al-Rezani. In 2008, he was cast as Boyd Langton in Joss Whedon's sci-fi drama on FOX, Dollhouse.



    Lennix has directed and appeared in many theatre productions across the country. He received the first annual Ollie Award for his performance of Malcolm X at the Goodman, and two Joseph Jefferson Citations for his roles in Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and Caught in the Act. He directed the stage version of Townsend's The Five Heartbeats. which received three NAACP Theater Award nominations, and also starred as King Hedley II at the Mark Taper Forum. In 2001, Lennix was part of the first American company to be invited to the Royal Shakespeare Company in the production of Cymbeline For Steppenwolf he directed The Glass Menagerie.



    Other awards include a Black Reel Award for Best Actor for Keep the Faith, Baby -- and for which he received nominations for an NAACP Image Award and Golden Satellite Award. He also received a Golden Satellite for Best Supporting Role in a Drama for Titus and was nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award for Ray.



    Lennix serves on the advisory boards of Chicago's Congo Square Theater and The Robey Theater in Los Angeles. He is active in civic groups and sits on the Northwestern University Advisory Council.moreless
  • Fran Kranz

    Topher Brink

    8.0
    Franz Kranz is an upcoming actor from California. He started acting in high school where he participated in the school plays and he played Judas in their version of Jesus Christ Superstar. While attending Yale, Franz was in several sketch comedy groups. He has been in the notable films Donnie Darko, Training Day and Orange County. He has a role in the new Joss Whedon series, Dollhouse.moreless
  • Tahmoh Penikett

    Paul Ballard

    8.3
    Tahmoh Penikett is the son of former Yukon premier Anthony David John Penikett. He lives with his father and his twin sisters Sarah and Stephanie in Vancouver, British Columbia. Tahmoh graduated from the Victoria Motion Picture School and studied at the Lyric School of Acting in Vancouver. He is perhaps best known for portraying Karl "Helo" Agathon in the 2003 reimagined version of Battlestar Galactica, and Agent Paul Ballard in Joss Whedon's 2008 series Dollhouse.moreless
  • Enver Gjokaj

    Victor

    8.2
    Enver Gjokaj is a rising star who has had a steady career in both theater and TV after receiving his masters degree at Tisch. His theater work has gained him critical praise and his TV work has landed him a role in Joss Whedon's new series Dollhouse where he plays Victor. He is also starring in the film The Express.moreless
  • Dichen Lachman

    Sierra

    7.5
    Dichen Lachman comes from an Australian and Tibetan background. She lived in Nepal until she was 7, when she and her family moved to Adelaide, Australia. She attended Norwood Morialta High School and Annesley College in Adelaide .Dichen's mother, Tashi, runs a successful travel agency in Adelaide; and her father, Chris, works as a detective in the South Australian Police Force. In 2005, Dichen Lachman got her big break with her first television role as a regular cast member on the hit Australian series Neighbours, as Katya Kinski.moreless
  • Olivia Williams

    Adelle DeWitt

    8.1
    Olivia Williams is a British actress who has appeared in film, theatre and television productions in the UK and in the U.S. Olivia graduated with a degree in English Literature from Newnham College in Cambridge. She then took up drama for two years at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School. After working on stage in Stratford-upon-Avon and London, she toured the U.S. for a production of Richard III. Her screen debut was on the British TV movie Emma based on the Jane Austen novel of the same title. Her more prominent role was playing the wife of Bruce Willis in the 1999 suspense-thriller hit The Sixth Sense. She appeared in several British films before appearing, though uncredited, in another Hollywood blockbuster X-Men: The Last Stand as Dr. Moira MacTaggert in 2006. In 2008, she was hired to play Adelle DeWitt and manage a mysterious underground operation in Joss Whedon's scifi drama Dollhouse.moreless
  • Amy Acker

    Dr. Claire Saunders

    9.5

    As a child, Amy studied ballet, modern and jazz. she graduated with a degree in acting from Southern Methodist University.

    In 1999 she got a break when she landed a major role on the series Angel.

    In April 2003, Amy wed James Carpinello. The two welcoming their first child, son Jackson, in January 2005.

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  • Reed Diamond

    Laurence Dominic

    7.3
    Reed was born in Brooklyn and raised in Manhattan. Reed once considered a career on the force. He attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He then went on to study acting at Julliard, as did his Homicide: Life on the Street (HLOTS) co-star, Andre Braugher. Reed was a freshman at Julliard when his future HLOTS co-star Braugher was a senior. They had previously appeared on-stage together for Julliard production of Othello, with Andre as Iago and Reed as a servant.
    Reed is divorced from Frederika Kesten, who co-starred with him in HLOTS episode # 48, "Justice, Part Two." She played Janine, the ballistics expert. While filming Homicide, Reed fell in love with Michelle Forbes, better known as Dr. Julianna Cox, also formerly of HLOTS. After Reed and Michelle broke up, he dated Kristin Davis, of Sex and the City. As of 2007, Reed lives in Los Angeles with his wife, actress Marnie McPhail.moreless
  • Miracle Laurie

    Mellie

    8.5
    Miracle Laurie grew up in Huntington Beach, California in a family of entertainers where performing was encouraged. She started hula dancing at three, piano lessons at five and local theater by seven. She moved to Los Angeles after graduating college and began working several jobs while performing in plays and auditioning for roles. In addition to acting she dances and plays in "Uke Box Heroes," a ukulele cover band that she co-formed. She landed a role on Joss Whedon's Dollhouse in the 2008-2009 season, and her star is definitely on the rise.moreless
  • Liza Lapira

    Ivy

    7.0
    Liza Lapira hails from Queens, New York, but relocated to Los Angeles in 2004. In the last few years she has had guest/recurring roles in popular shows such as NCIS, Law & Order SVU, Huff, and Dollhouse, as well as supporting roles in the movies 21, Fast and Furious, and Repo Men. Her latest project is a starring role in Fox's new comedy, Traffic Light.moreless
  • Alexis Denisof

    Senator Daniel Perrin

    9.3

    A native of Salisbury, MD, Denisof grew up in Seattle, where he began his acting career in productions at the distinguished ACT (A Contemporary Theatre). Following high school, Denisof continued his training overseas when he was accepted at the prestigious London Academy of Music & Dramatic Arts. Upon graduation, he gained his first national exposure in a George Harrison rock video, which led to his feature film debut in the British film Murder Story. His other film credits include the Sundance Film Festival hit The Misadventures of Margaret opposite Parker Posey and Brooke Shields, True Blue and First Knight.

    While in London, Denisof enjoyed an equally prolific stage career, appearing as a member of the prestigious Royal Shakespeare Company in Hamlet, opposite Ian McKellan.

    Denisof is a veteran of several television projects including HBO's Hostile Waters and the television miniseries Noah's Ark, opposite Jon Voight and Mary Steenburgen.

    In 1997, Alexis was cast as the bumbling, arrogant replacement Watcher for Buffy Summers on the series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The character was supposed to be in only a few episodes, but Alexis was such a fan favorite that Wesley was brought back on the spin-off series Angel. Alexis became a series regular midway through the first season (1999) and remained through the final episode in 2004. When filming for the final season began, Denisof had Bell's Palsey, and filming was shot to not show the temporary paralysis.

    While working on the two series, Alexis met Alyson Hannigan, who played the character of Willow on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The two became friends quickly, and when everyone assumed that they were dating they decided to take the plunge. They were engaged after a year and were married on October 11, 2003. Their first child, Satyana Marie Denisof was born on March 24, 2009. It was announced December 16, 2011 that they are expecting another child.

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  • Tracy Bellomo

    Writer

    3.7
  • Elizabeth Craft

    Writer

    8.1
    Elizabeth Craft is a writer and producer. Elizabeth has worked on such productions as Lie to Me, Angel, and The Shield.
  • Steven S. DeKnight

    Writer

    8.0
    Everyone comes from somewhere and Steven S. DeKnight started life in the wilds of Southern New Jersey. "I grew up in a really tiny town in South Jersey called Millville about an hour from Atlantic City. Factory town, very small -it didn't even have its own movie theater so I'd have to bike a half an hour to the next town when I was little to catch a flick. My parents were both working class, factory workers. We weren't poor per se but it was definitely a living from paycheck-to-paycheck childhood." When asked if writing was his ambition from an early age, Steve laughs and answers with an emphatic, "Hell, no!" Acting was actually Steve's early passion. "I always loved TV and the movies and I did a lot of acting in high school." Post graduation, Steve was intent on pursuing a career in performing. "I decided to strike out to the West Coast - as far away from New Jersey as I could possibly get. I went to school in Santa Cruz, CA. I picked it because one, it had a film program and two - it had the nicest brochure I'd ever seen," he laughs. "Rolling hills, sheep, the ocean - it was gorgeous. I went there for four years and never actually did anything on the film side. I was a theater major: acting and playwriting." The acting dream lost much of its luster mid way through Steve's collegiate career. "I had intended to be an actor and then about half way through all the plays I was doing, I just realized I wasn't 6'2" and 190. I thought I could be a better writer so I started writing plays." Successful in his new endeavor, Steve graduated and went to UCLA to pursue his M.F.A. in Dramatic Writing. While honing his craft, Steve had another important epiphany about his career direction. "I realized that as much as I loved play writing, there were people better suited to the craft than I was. I was still more movie oriented and I didn't want to starve to death as a playwrite. That was a huge issue. I am passionate about my craft but I'm also a very hungry person and I like to eat," he chuckles. "I stuck around for an extra year to go through [UCLA's] screenwriting program. I was mentored by two fantastic people: Richard Walter and Lou Hunter, just a couple of great guys who really taught me how to write a screenplay." He adds, "Then I graduated and promptly couldn't get arrested for more years than I would care to admit." As is common for those pursuing the arts in Hollywood, Steve suffered through those proverbial "lean years." Steve explains, "I ended up taking a job as an ESL [English as a Second Language] teacher at a little Japanese school in the Valley. I didn't know a word of Japanese and I thought, 'I'll be here 6 months, maybe a year at most.'" Steve sighs, "Six and a half years later, I was still there. So, I just went to work everyday and at night churned out feature spec screenplays. The screenplays didn't do me a damn bit of good but I got a job on MTV's Undressed - my extra humble beginnings. Reflecting on the experience even Steve seems non-plussed. "We did 150 half-hours. It was an insane process. It really taught me how to write fast under pressure. In that job, you were always writing." Watching an episode of MTV's Undressed, the word "quality" isn't exactly the first thing to come to mind. So, was it hard for Steve to work on a show he admits he didn't like so much? Steve confides, "After the first season, it became a lot easier because I lost all artistic sense or anything resembling caring about what I was doing. There are only so many ways you can have people strip down to their underwear. Honest to God, towards the end if I had to write, 'She strips down to her bra and panties' one more goddamn time, I was going to go nuts! It was killing my soul." Steve's salvation wouldn't come until about a year and a half into the gig. "During one of the brief breaks between the seasons of Undressed, I decided what I needed was a new agent. I had a wonderful agent but it was an actor's agency." He explains, "She was the only literary agent there and she didn't know many people in television. I figured I needed to parlay this MTV thing into something fast before I was teaching English to the Japanese again," he adds. "So, I decided to write another TV spec. I was ping-ponging between an NYPD Blue or a Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I loved Buffy and it was a whole lot closer to my voice so I did one of those [scripts]. Unfortunately, I finished it during staffing season where all the writers [in Los Angeles] are trying to get jobs so no agency really wanted to talk to me during that period because they were busy with their own clients. I thought, 'What the hell! I'll send it to my current agent, maybe she has a cousin who works in TV somewhere.' So, I'm not kidding, she knows three people in TV and one of them was George Snyder who ran Mutant Enemy at the time. She sent it to George, he read it, really liked it and they called me." From an interview of cityofangel.commoreless
  • Jane Espenson

    Writer

    9.1
    Jane Espenson, who considers herself to have the "best job in the world," is a prolific TV writer and producer. Best known for her witty dialogue and touching character interactions, Jane first gained notoriety for the episode "Band Candy" on the third season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and quickly became a staff writer, producer, and fan favorite of the long lived series. A native of Ames, Iowa, Jane developed an early passion for TV. She attended college at UC Berkeley studying linguistics as an undergraduate and graduate student. While in graduate school, Jane got her foot in show business by submitting spec episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation. She became an ABC/Disney Writing Fellow in 1992 and began writing for several sitcoms, including Ellen. In addition to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Jane has also written for Angel, Firefly, Gilmore Girls, and Tru Calling. She served as Co-Executive Producer and writer of The Inside, a short-lived crime drama that was developed by Tim Minear for 20th Century Fox Television. On September 1, 2004, Jane, along with co-writer Drew Goddard, won a Hugo Award in the category of Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form for the Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode, "Conversations with Dead People."moreless
  • Sarah Fain

    Writer

    7.5
    Sarah Fain is a writer and producer. Sarah has worked on such productions as Lie to Me, Women's Murder Club, and Dollhouse.
  • Tim Minear

    Writer

    8.9
    Tim Minear is a popular writer, well know for writing, directing and producing for a number of popular series for television. His most recent, Wonderfalls, was cancelled after less than a season by Fox, the same fate that befell Firefly, his previous series. Tim was a signficant member of the Angel writing and directing crew for 3 seasons and became a fan favorite, known for bumping off characters with relish. Early in his career, he was the Story Editor for a season and a half on the syndicated series "High Tide" for which he wrote a number of episodes, under both his own name and the pseudonym Chris Baena. Tim Minear is remarkable as a very kind and fan-conscious writer who takes time from his busy schedule to answer e-mails, do interviews, and field questions on official fan boards as well as other news groups and discussion boards. He's also been a featured speaker at Drexel University, an X-Files Con, the Atlanta SF DragonCon 2000 and the Los Angeles Comic Con in 2003 with the Firefly crew and in 2004 with Wonderfalls producers and some of the unaired episodes. Work is pretty much finished on the writing of a screen adaptation of Robert Heinlein's "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress," and Minear's attention is now turned to reformulating a Fox series, "The Insider."moreless
  • Jed Whedon

    Writer

    7.1
  • Joss Whedon

    Writer

    8.5

    Born Joseph Hill Whedon, Joss spent his childhood in Manhattan before attending an all-boys high school in England. Upon graduation he returned to the United States and attended Connecticut's Wesleyan University where he received a degree in Film Studies. He then moved to Los Angeles, and after a year of being unable to find work in the industry he landed a job as a writer and story editor for the television show Roseanne. He had been seeking a career in movies, but this job was familiar to him because his father and grandfather had both written for the medium, making Joss arguably the world's first third generation television writer. It was during this time that he met Kai Cole, the woman who he later married.

    After a year working on Roseanne, and writing and co-producing a number of episodes of Parenthood, Joss sold his first movie script for Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Despite negative reviews and modest box office, the film went on to become a cult hit and Joss found himself much in demand as a writer and "script doctor" in Hollywood. Often uncredited, Joss wrote or worked on drafts of screenplays for such films as Speed, X-Men, and Alien: Resurrection. He was nominated for an Academy Award for his work on Toy Story.

    In 1997, Joss was approached by the brand new Warner Brothers Network (The WB) who requested that he submit some ideas for new programs. He had always been disappointed by the way his first film script was handled, so he suggested a TV version of Buffy the Vampire Slayer under the condition that he be allowed total creative control. The network agreed, and soon Buffy was being widely praised as one of the best shows on television. In 1999, Whedon launched the first spin-off of Buffy called Angel. It, too, was praised by fans and critics and quickly developed its own devoted following. Buffy the Vampire Slayer ran for seven seasons before the cast and creators decided to end the series. Angel however, was cancelled after five seasons, prompting one of the largest fan reactions in television history. Despite the massive efforts, however, the show did not return.

    In 2002, Joss moved to the larger networks with a new series called Firefly on Fox. The series was a futuristic science fiction with a western flair and was instantly hailed by critics and fans alike as one of the most original shows in years. Despite the positive reviews, however, Firefly never found an audience and was cancelled after only eleven episodes. Many blamed the network who gave the series an historically poor timeslot, did very little advertising, and aired the episodes out of order with the pilot as the last episode ever aired. Shortly after the series' cancellation was announced, Joss and Kai had a son, Arden, on December 18, 2002.

    Due to incredible sales of the Firefly DVD set and Joss' dogged persistence, Universal Pictures eventually offered him the chance to try his series on the big screen. Joss was given free rein to write and direct the silver screen adaptation of Firefly called Serenity which opened on September 30, 2005. During this time he was also tapped to write and direct a feature film version of Wonder Woman, which was planned to be released in 2006. This project fell through, but Joss was soon announced as the Director of Marvel Comics' super group film The Avengers, one of the biggest comic book film adaptations to date.

    During the post-Firefly period, Joss also expanded into the realm of one of his early inspirations, comic books. He has written a twelve-issue run of the new series Astonishing X-Men which was an instant critical and sales hit. Over the years he has also contributed to a number of other comic book projects involving his characters Buffy and Angel, including continuations of both series into further official "seasons" and a mini-series called Fray about a Slayer in the future of the Buffy world.

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  • James A. Contner

    Director

    8.5
  • Steven S. DeKnight

    Director

    8.0
    Everyone comes from somewhere and Steven S. DeKnight started life in the wilds of Southern New Jersey. "I grew up in a really tiny town in South Jersey called Millville about an hour from Atlantic City. Factory town, very small -it didn't even have its own movie theater so I'd have to bike a half an hour to the next town when I was little to catch a flick. My parents were both working class, factory workers. We weren't poor per se but it was definitely a living from paycheck-to-paycheck childhood." When asked if writing was his ambition from an early age, Steve laughs and answers with an emphatic, "Hell, no!" Acting was actually Steve's early passion. "I always loved TV and the movies and I did a lot of acting in high school." Post graduation, Steve was intent on pursuing a career in performing. "I decided to strike out to the West Coast - as far away from New Jersey as I could possibly get. I went to school in Santa Cruz, CA. I picked it because one, it had a film program and two - it had the nicest brochure I'd ever seen," he laughs. "Rolling hills, sheep, the ocean - it was gorgeous. I went there for four years and never actually did anything on the film side. I was a theater major: acting and playwriting." The acting dream lost much of its luster mid way through Steve's collegiate career. "I had intended to be an actor and then about half way through all the plays I was doing, I just realized I wasn't 6'2" and 190. I thought I could be a better writer so I started writing plays." Successful in his new endeavor, Steve graduated and went to UCLA to pursue his M.F.A. in Dramatic Writing. While honing his craft, Steve had another important epiphany about his career direction. "I realized that as much as I loved play writing, there were people better suited to the craft than I was. I was still more movie oriented and I didn't want to starve to death as a playwrite. That was a huge issue. I am passionate about my craft but I'm also a very hungry person and I like to eat," he chuckles. "I stuck around for an extra year to go through [UCLA's] screenwriting program. I was mentored by two fantastic people: Richard Walter and Lou Hunter, just a couple of great guys who really taught me how to write a screenplay." He adds, "Then I graduated and promptly couldn't get arrested for more years than I would care to admit." As is common for those pursuing the arts in Hollywood, Steve suffered through those proverbial "lean years." Steve explains, "I ended up taking a job as an ESL [English as a Second Language] teacher at a little Japanese school in the Valley. I didn't know a word of Japanese and I thought, 'I'll be here 6 months, maybe a year at most.'" Steve sighs, "Six and a half years later, I was still there. So, I just went to work everyday and at night churned out feature spec screenplays. The screenplays didn't do me a damn bit of good but I got a job on MTV's Undressed - my extra humble beginnings. Reflecting on the experience even Steve seems non-plussed. "We did 150 half-hours. It was an insane process. It really taught me how to write fast under pressure. In that job, you were always writing." Watching an episode of MTV's Undressed, the word "quality" isn't exactly the first thing to come to mind. So, was it hard for Steve to work on a show he admits he didn't like so much? Steve confides, "After the first season, it became a lot easier because I lost all artistic sense or anything resembling caring about what I was doing. There are only so many ways you can have people strip down to their underwear. Honest to God, towards the end if I had to write, 'She strips down to her bra and panties' one more goddamn time, I was going to go nuts! It was killing my soul." Steve's salvation wouldn't come until about a year and a half into the gig. "During one of the brief breaks between the seasons of Undressed, I decided what I needed was a new agent. I had a wonderful agent but it was an actor's agency." He explains, "She was the only literary agent there and she didn't know many people in television. I figured I needed to parlay this MTV thing into something fast before I was teaching English to the Japanese again," he adds. "So, I decided to write another TV spec. I was ping-ponging between an NYPD Blue or a Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I loved Buffy and it was a whole lot closer to my voice so I did one of those [scripts]. Unfortunately, I finished it during staffing season where all the writers [in Los Angeles] are trying to get jobs so no agency really wanted to talk to me during that period because they were busy with their own clients. I thought, 'What the hell! I'll send it to my current agent, maybe she has a cousin who works in TV somewhere.' So, I'm not kidding, she knows three people in TV and one of them was George Snyder who ran Mutant Enemy at the time. She sent it to George, he read it, really liked it and they called me." From an interview of cityofangel.commoreless
  • Rod Hardy

    Director

    5.3
  • Elodie Keene

    Director

    10
  • Allan Kroeker

    Director

    6.0
  • Dwight Little

    Director

    10
  • Tim Minear

    Director

    8.9
    Tim Minear is a popular writer, well know for writing, directing and producing for a number of popular series for television. His most recent, Wonderfalls, was cancelled after less than a season by Fox, the same fate that befell Firefly, his previous series. Tim was a signficant member of the Angel writing and directing crew for 3 seasons and became a fan favorite, known for bumping off characters with relish. Early in his career, he was the Story Editor for a season and a half on the syndicated series "High Tide" for which he wrote a number of episodes, under both his own name and the pseudonym Chris Baena. Tim Minear is remarkable as a very kind and fan-conscious writer who takes time from his busy schedule to answer e-mails, do interviews, and field questions on official fan boards as well as other news groups and discussion boards. He's also been a featured speaker at Drexel University, an X-Files Con, the Atlanta SF DragonCon 2000 and the Los Angeles Comic Con in 2003 with the Firefly crew and in 2004 with Wonderfalls producers and some of the unaired episodes. Work is pretty much finished on the writing of a screen adaptation of Robert Heinlein's "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress," and Minear's attention is now turned to reformulating a Fox series, "The Insider."moreless
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Categories

Action & Adventure, Drama, Fantasy, Science Fiction, Suspense

Themes

Futuristic