David Newsom
David Newsom | |
---|---|
Born |
North Caldwell, New Jersey, U.S. | March 10, 1962
Occupation | Actor, Film producer, Fine Arts Photographer |
Years active | 1984-present |
Spouse(s) | Sian Heder |
David Newsom (born March 10, 1962) is an American producer, actor and fine-arts photographer. He is best known for his various critically acclaimed US television appearances, and for his work in 2005 and 2006 with Viggo Mortensen and Perceval Press.
Biography
Photography
Along with film and TV work, Newsom is a long-time photographer with and emphasis on fine art photography. In 2005, he collaborated with Viggo Mortensen to create a photo journal called Skip[1] (Newsom's eldest brother's nickname) which was then published by Mortensen's Perceval Press.[2] In June 2006, with Viggo Mortensen, Lindsay Brice and Stanley Milstein, Newsom anchored a successful group photographic show entitled "Four Tales from Perceval".[3]
In June–July 2007, Newsom held his first comprehensive one man show titled, "Three Miles of Idaho" at DCA Fine Art in Santa Monica, CA.
Film/Television Producing
In 2005, Newsom began producing movies, starting with his first short film Mother, written and directed by Sian Heder.[4]
In April 2006, "Mother" won the Grand Jury Award for Best Narrative Short at the Florida Film Festival, a victory which automatically qualified the film for a potential Academy Award nomination. Mother was also selected for the May 2006 Cinefondation Competition of the Cannes Film Festival, where it won third place in a field of 18 films from around the globe. The film was then selected for many other festivals, including the prestigious Seattle International Film Festival, where it received the "2006 Short Film: Narrative Special Jury Prize". "Mother" continues to play globally and recently took the Grand Jury Award-Narrative Shorts at the Oxford Film Festival.
In early 2007, Newsom and Heder partnered with The Mark Gordon Company and are in pre-production on the feature film, "Tallulah".
Newsom also produced Open Your Eyes for director Susan Cohen in the summer of 2007. Cohen, a recipient of a 2007 AFI Directing Workshop for Women grant, wrote "OYE" as a tribute to the women she had known who battled and lived with cancer. In May, 2008, "Open Your Eyes" was awarded the AFI "Jean Picker Firstenburg Award of Excellence".
In recent years, Newsom has been busy producing adventure/reality television for such networks as: Discovery Channel, Nat Geo and History.
From 2010-2011, he was a field producer, cameraman and story producer for Discovery's "DEADLIEST CATCH", Season 7.
In fall of 2011, he was a field producer/cameraman for Nat Geo's "Wild Justice", seasons 2 and 3.
In January 2012, he teamed up with Undertow Films and began as senior producer on a new series for History Channel, about the largest study of sharks ever conducted off the coast of South Africa.
Personal life
Newsom was born in North Caldwell, New Jersey to a mother who managed an employment agency and an investor father.[5] He lives in Los Angeles with his wife, writer/director Sian Heder.[citation needed] Newsom has a degree in film production from Ithaca College. He has worked in the past as a band singer, alternative newspaper editor, writer, waiter, delivery man, blasting worker, beer bottler, fence installer, dish washer, and in film production as well as set construction.
Filmography
- Windfall (2006) "Running with the Devil" (TV Episode)
- Windfall (2006) "Getaway" (TV Episode)
- Windfall (2006) "Pilot" (TV Episode)
- Without a Trace (2006) "Expectations" (TV Episode) - Brian Sullivan
- Inconceivable (2006) (TV Series) - Dave Cohen
- Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005) - Agent Who Kicks Robert Downey Jr.'s Ass
- CSI: Crime Scene Investigation - Compulsion (2005) TV Episode - Hayden Michaels
- 24 - Day 4: (2005) - Scott Borman
- A One Time Thing (2004) - Dillon
- The Days (2004) TV Series - Jack Day
- Like Family - Ladies Night (2004) - Jim
- Talk to Me (2000) TV Series - Rob
- Judging Amy - Short Calendar (1999) TV Episode - Jack Overby
- Judging Amy - Pilot (1999) TV Episode - Jack Overby
- Godzilla: The Series - An Early Frost (1999) TV Episode (voice) - Cameron Winter
- Godzilla: The Series - The Winter of Discontent (1999) TV Episode (voice) - Cameron Winter
- Will & Grace - Yours, Mine or Ours (1999) TV Episode - Peter
- Fantasy Island - Handymen (1998) TV Episode
- Where's Marlowe? (1998) - Jake Pierson
- Suddenly Susan - 5,947 Miles (1998) TV Episode - Kenny 'The Hammer' Fleming
- Suddenly Susan - Pucker Up (1998) TV Episode - Kenny 'The Hammer' Fleming
- House Rules (1998) TV Series - William McCuskey
- McCallum - Dead Man's Fingers (1998) TV Episode - Reporter 1
- Rose Hill (1997) (TV) - John Stringer
- Black Circle Boys (1997) - Coach Earhorn
- Sweet Dreams (1996) (TV) - Dr. Jack Renault
- Boys (1996) - Curt
- Touched by an Angel - The One That Got Away (1996) TV Episode - Mark Monfort
- Sisters - Angel of Death (1995) TV Episode - Charles 'Charlie' Holland
- Melrose Place - They Shoot Mothers, Don't They? (1995) TV Episode - Williams
- Melrose Place - The Doctor Who Rocks the Cradle (1995) TV Episode - Williams
- Melrose Place - And Justice for None (1995) TV Episode - Williams
- Murder, She Wrote - Crimson Harvest (1994) TV Episode - Henry Wilson
- Murder, She Wrote - Family Secrets (1992) TV Episode - Neal Latimer
- Chicago Hope - Over the Rainbow (1994) TV Episode - Doctor in Asylum
- Wes Craven's New Nightmare (1994) - Chase Porter
- Trouble Shooters: Trapped Beneath the Earth (1993) (TV) - Cody Mather
- Homefront (1991) TV Series - Lt. Hank Metcalf (1991–1992)
- China Beach - The Always Goodbye (1991) TV Episode - PFC Leslie Maltbie
- China Beach - Independence Day (1989) TV Episode - Kid
- Quantum Leap - The Leap Home: Part 2 (Vietnam) - April 7, 1970 (1990) TV Episode - Tom Beckett
- Quantum Leap - The Leap Home: Part 1 - November 25, 1969 (1990) TV Episode - Tom Beckett
References
External links
- David Newsom at the Internet Movie Database
- David Newsom's Official Website
- David Newsom at MySpace
- Detailed Interview with "ReadySteadyBook"
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