Carlos Ferro

Carlos Ferro

Ferro in Madrid in 2009
Born Carlo Ferro
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Nationality American
Occupation Actor, voice actor
Years active 1983 - Present

Carlos Ferro is an American actor, writer, director, and producer.

Contents

Early life

Carlos’ first career in the entertainment industry was as a DJ. Spinning records in San Francisco’s nightclubs, he quickly became one of the city’s prominent DJs, befriending musical acts such as Grace Jones and the late Divine. Leaving music for a career in theatre and television, his work eventually led to a stint as an artist in residence at Cornell University.[1]

Performance

Carlos starred in the show SAL, originally produced at the Climate Theatre in San Francisco then at the Zephyr Theatre in Hollywood. His portrayal of Sal Mineo, co-produced and co-written by him, received a Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle Award nomination for Best Solo Performance.[2]

Since then, he has continued acting in television, both on-camera (in Star Trek: The Next Generation episode Genesis) and in animation voice-over (Justice League, Spawn). He has worked with director John Landis and actors Jerry Lewis, Harvey Fierstein and Dudley Moore.[1][3]

Video game voice acting

Year Title Role Reference
2002 X-Men: Next Dimension Forge
2003 James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing Peruvian villain
2005 Tony Hawk's American Wasteland Unknown
2006 Scarface: The World is Yours Colombian drug lord
2006 Saint's Row Manuel Orejuela
2006 Gears of War Dominic Santiago
2007 Assassin's Creed Damascus Bureau Leader
2008 Gears of War 2 Dominic Santiago
2008 Quantum of Solace Spanish mercenary
2009 The Godfather II Michael Corleone
2009 Assassin's Creed 2 Leonardo Da Vinci
2010 Command & Conquer: Tiberian Twilight Mastodon
2010 Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood Leonardo Da Vinci
2011 Gears of War 3 Dominic Santiago [4]

Film production

Extended stays in London and Madrid inspired Carlos to found Argumento Films in 2004. Its first release "RASTROS" was his film writing and directing debut.[1]

Music video production

In 2005 Carlos made his foray into the world of music videos, producing and directing musical artist Stoomie's "Two For a Tenner - Yes Please (Melrose Edit)."[5]

References

External links