Frank Soldato grew up in upstate New York. In 2003 he graduated from Frankfort-Schuyler Central High School. After High School he took some years off working at a local movie theater before starting college in 2006 when he began attending Binghamton University. During his time at Binghamton he was involved in several student groups but none more then the Universities Closed Circuit Television Station called BTV. He Produced several episodes of an original sketch comedy show titled 'Unscrewed' with his roommates and friends. While far from professional in any way the show helped push him further into film-making and in 2010 he graduated with a BA in Cinema. He now lives in London attending the London Metropolitan University for an MA in Film Production. He has shot a short documentary titled 'tootsie:licious' and is in the process of writing and directing a short drama as well as several other side projects.
Frank Solomon is an actor, known for View from a Blue Moon (2015), Let's Be Frank (2016) and When I Go, Virtual Reality (2016).
Frank Somerville co-anchors the weekday editions of "KTVU Channel 2 News at 5," "KTVU Channel 2 News at 6" and "The Ten O'Clock News on KTVU Channel 2." Somerville joined San Francisco's KTVU Channel 2's Mornings on 2 and The Noon News in January 1992. The Berkeley native had been an intern at KTVU many years before. Previously, he'd worked as an anchor-reporter at WJAR in Providence, R.I and at KFTY in Santa Rosa. While in Rhode Island, WJAR sent him to San Francisco to cover the Loma Prieta earthquake. That was in 1989. Somerville reported live for several days, and later said it was the hardest work he'd ever done in his life. His half-hour special on the quake was nominated for an Emmy Award. He also won an Associated Press Award for Best Spot News for his coverage of a fire in downtown Providence, and an award for a Best Feature story about an 87-year-old hockey player. (Somerville is a devoted hockey player himself.) Somerville earned his B.A. in Broadcast Communications Arts at San Francisco State. While there, he was named "Outstanding Broadcast Student." Despite that, Somerville has admitted "I never really distinguished myself at school." He proposed to his wife on the Phil Donahue show live, while he was anchoring Mornings on 2 in San Francisco. She was a producer there, and the results of this proposal--where Somerville got down on knee on air--were seen across the country. "Thank God she said yes!" he quipped later. The Somerville home is filled with his abstract bright colored paintings and other artwork. Somerville has several hobbies. He trains twice a week in Gracie Jujitsu, a Brazilian martial art. He also plays ice hockey in an adult league. In addition, he works out at a gym at least three or four times a week.
Frank Song is the writer, director, producer, and lead actor of the award winning feature film, "How to Say Goodbye" (2018 Jury Prize for Best Feature at the Art of Brooklyn Film Festival), which was an official selection also at the Hoboken International Film Festival and the Chelsea International Film Festival. Frank graduated from Princeton University and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Frank is an MFA candidate for creative writing at the New School.
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Frank Spain yet.
Frank Spaniol is known for Superhumans (2010).
Frank Spano has been a filmmaker for the past 25 years. He has succeed, and gone beyond international frontiers, with over 20 films as an actor, producer, and director. He has a Masters Degree in Latin American Theatre, and a Specialization in Screenplay and Direction, obtained at the Madrid Septima Ars Film School. Hora Menos is his greatest work, and has won 3 awards at film festivals around the world.
Frank Spatacco is a producer and actor, known for Accidental Ruin: Bright Side (2015), Haunted History (2013) and Scared Famous (2017).
Frank Spinelli is known for The Prototype (2022), The Marriage Ritual (2013) and Guido Takes a Hike (2000).
Award-winning American writer and producer Frank Spotnitz is the Chief Executive of Big Light Productions Ltd., a London-and Paris-based production company he founded in 2013 with a vision to create distinctive and ambitious TV drama series, and has become one of the fastest-growing independent production companies in Europe. Big Light Productions creates and produces a diverse slate of international television series, including drama, comedy and documentaries. Under the Big Light banner, most recently, Spotnitz co-created and executive produced the drama series Leonardo, starring Aidan Turner, Freddie Highmore and Matilda De Angelis, for RAI, France Télévisions, RTVE and Sony, and is co-produced by Big Light Productions alongside Lux Vide. Previously, under Spotnitz's stewardship, Big Light has produced a number of high-end drama productions including Amazon's Emmy award-winning The Man in the High Castle, based on the classic Philip K. Dick novel. Spotnitz created, executive produced and wrote several episodes of the acclaimed series, which launched in the UK, US, Germany and Austria in 2015 and quickly became Amazon's most viewed drama series ever. Series also included Medici: Masters of Florence, starring Richard Madden and Dustin Hoffman, two seasons of Medici: The Magnificent, starring Daniel Sharman and Sean Bean, both for RAI in Italy, SFR Play in France and Netflix; Ransom for CBS in the US, Corus's Global in Canada, TF1 in France and RTL in Germany; and the comedy-drama series The Indian Detective, starring international comedian Russell Peters, for Bell Media/CTV and Netflix. Spotnitz's other credits include: Crossing Lines season 3 (2015) with Tandem/Studio Canal; Transporter: The Series season 2 (2014) for the U.S.'s TNT, Germany's M6 and HBO Canada; Hunted (2012); Strike Back (2011); Samurai Girl (2008); Night Stalker (2005); Michael Mann's Robbery Homicide Division (2002); The Lone Gunmen (2001); Harsh Realm (2000); and Millennium (1997-1999). In 2006, Spotnitz co-wrote and created (with Vince Gilligan) a pilot for Spike TV called A.M.P.E.D. Spotnitz directed two episodes and wrote or co-wrote more than 40 episodes of The X-Files television series. He served as a producer and co-writer of both The X-Files feature films, Fight the Future (1998) and I Want to Believe (2008). Spotnitz shares three Golden Globes for Best Dramatic Series and a Peabody Award for his work on The X-Files. He was also nominated for an Emmy Award for writing and three times for Outstanding Drama Series. In 2013 Spotnitz helped establish and began teaching at Serial Eyes, a postgraduate training programme in Berlin to help prepare the next generation of European TV writer-producers. With the writers' room experience at the core of the programme, twelve participants are given the opportunity to learn from industry experts and develop a European model of show-running. Each year one participant is also selected to do a three-month placement with Big Light Productions. Born in Japan, Spotnitz received a B.A. in English literature from UCLA and an M.F.A. in screenwriting from the American Film Institute. He began his career as a newspaper and magazine writer, working for the Associated Press, United Press International and Entertainment Weekly, among others.