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Stewart Mead | |
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Nationality | American |
Education | HB Studio Luigi's School of Dance The Modern Dance Group |
Alma mater | Hofstra University |
Occupation | Actor, former airline pilot |
Employer | Lifetime (TV network) |
Stewart Mead is an American actor and former airline pilot who has been performing for over 35 years in film, television, and theater.
Mead's most notable roles include the South African judge in Amandala Kamandela, a Henry Street Settlement Production in New York City, an Off-Broadway performance as the British correspondent in Our Husband has Gone Mad Again on Theater Row, and Leo the Lionhearted in Rod Serling's Off Broadway play "Requiem for a Heavyweight." Most recently, Stewart was featured as Police Inspector Elmer Sweeney in Ayn Rand’s Night of January 16th for Hofstra Entertainment, [1] directed and produced by Bob Spiotto. Additionally, he has performed in over sixty independent films [ citation needed ] in addition to portraying the lead detective in Sam’s Creation for the Discovery Channel.
Stewart is currently a producer at LTV in East Hampton, New York. He has also produced and written for Peconic Bay Television, located in Riverhead, New York.
A Hofstra University alumnus, Stewart has also done graduate work at New York University. He studied acting at HB Studio and privately with the late Tony Manneno. At the same time, he also studied jazz dance at Luigi’s School of Dance and with The Modern Dance Group in Manhattan. For over thirty years, Stewart was a pilot for a major American airline. Stewart resides in Southampton, New York.
Scott Stewart Bakula is an American actor and director. He is known for his roles in two science-fiction television series: as Sam Beckett on Quantum Leap and as Captain Jonathan Archer on Star Trek: Enterprise. For Quantum Leap, he received four Emmy Award nominations and a Golden Globe Award.
John Harold Kander is an American composer, known largely for his work in the musical theater. As part of the songwriting team Kander and Ebb, Kander wrote the scores for 15 musicals, including Cabaret (1966) and Chicago (1975), both of which were later adapted into acclaimed films. He and Ebb also wrote the standard "New York, New York".
Anthem is a dystopian fiction novella by Russian-American writer Ayn Rand, written in 1937 and first published in 1938 in the United Kingdom. The story takes place at an unspecified future date when mankind has entered another Dark Age. Technological advancement is now carefully planned and the concept of individuality has been eliminated. A young man known as Equality 7-2521 rebels by doing secret scientific research. When his activity is discovered, he flees into the wilderness with the girl he loves. Together they plan to establish a new society based on rediscovered individualism.
Leslie Clark Stevens IV was an American producer, writer, and director. He created two television series for the ABC network, The Outer Limits (1963–1965) and Stoney Burke (1962–63), and Search (1972–73) for NBC. Stevens was the director of the horror film Incubus (1966), which stars William Shatner, and was the second film to use the Esperanto language. He wrote an early work of New Age philosophy, est: The Steersman Handbook (1970).
Night of January 16th is a theatrical play by Russian-American author Ayn Rand, inspired by the death of the "Match King", Ivar Kreuger. Set in a courtroom during a murder trial, an unusual feature of the play is that members of the audience are chosen to play the jury. The court hears the case of Karen Andre, a former secretary and lover of businessman Bjorn Faulkner, of whose murder she is accused. The play does not directly portray the events leading to Faulkner's death; instead the jury must rely on character testimony to decide whether Andre is guilty. The play's ending depends on the verdict. Rand's intention was to dramatize a conflict between individualism and conformity, with the jury's verdict revealing which viewpoint they preferred.
Gary William Friedman is an American musical theatre, symphonic, film and television composer. His career began in the 1960s in New York City as a saxophonist in an improvisational ensemble and as a composer for experimental theater. Friedman's 1970 musical, The Me Nobody Knows opened Off-Broadway and won the Obie Award for Best Music of a Musical before moving to Broadway and earning five Tony Award nominations. Friedman has also composed scores for numerous American films and television series such as PBS's children's television series, The Electric Company. His orchestral and operatic compositions have been commissioned by festivals and venues including the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
Austin Miller is an American actor, dancer, and singer, who has performed in both theater and television.
Tom Donaghy is an American playwright who works in television and film.
James Manos Jr. is an American film and television writer and producer.
Peter James Tolan III is an American television producer, director, and screenwriter.
Rodman Flender is an American actor, writer, director and producer.
Lawrence Leritz is an American actor, dancer, singer, producer, director, fitness expert and choreographer.
Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life is a 1996 American documentary film written, produced, and directed by Michael Paxton. Its focus is on novelist and philosopher Ayn Rand, the author of the bestselling novels The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged, who promoted her philosophy of Objectivism through her books, articles, speeches, and media appearances.
Jacqueline Schultz is a film and television actress.
Michael Paxton is an American filmmaker and writer. He has directed, produced, and written several films, both live action and animated, as well as plays and books. His feature documentary Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life received an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary Feature and a Golden Satellite Award for Best Documentary film in 1997. Paxton currently works as Multimedia Producer for the Ayn Rand Institute.
Robert LuPone is an American actor and artistic director. He works on stage, in film, and in television. He is the brother of actress Patti LuPone.
Duncan Scott is a film and television writer, director, and producer. Scott was one of the screenwriters of Atlas Shrugged: Part II and Atlas Shrugged: Part III. Early in his career, he became involved in the restoration of the 1942 film We the Living, a project that he continued to be involved in over the next several decades. Scott also directed and produced for television, winning several Emmy and Telly Awards, as well as being nominated for a Peabody Award.
BroadwayHD is an on-demand digital streaming media company. Based in New York City, the company records and distributes live theater performances and previously recorded theatrical productions through its platform.
Ideal is a play written by Ayn Rand. It follows Kay Gonda, a movie star suspected of murder, as she seeks support from various fans, most of whom disappoint her. Written in the 1930s, it was never produced or published during Rand's lifetime. Since her death it has since been published multiple times and produced twice, in 1989 and 2010.
The Unconquered is a three-act play written by Russian-American author Ayn Rand as an adaptation of her 1936 novel We the Living. The story follows Kira Argounova, a young woman living in the Soviet Union in the 1920s. Her lover Leo Kovalensky develops tuberculosis. To get money for his treatment, Kira has an affair with a Communist official, Andrei Taganov. After recovering from his illness, Leo becomes involved with black market food sales that Andrei is investigating. When Andrei realizes that Kira loves Leo, he helps his rival avoid prosecution, then commits suicide. Leo leaves Kira, who decides to risk her life escaping the country.