
Syracuse, New York, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Alan Gelfant (born May 21, 1957 in Syracuse, New York) is an American film actor. Alan Gelfant has acted in more than 50 plays and dozens of TV shows and movies, including leading roles in the films Next Stop Wonderland, The Destiny of Marty Fine, Men in Scoring Position, Turn of Faith and highly acclaimed documentary Hero. As a director, he has put his interest in new plays. Consequently, he is the co-founder of the annual Stella Adler Theatre - One Act Play Festival in Los Angeles. He was hired by HBO to direct and co-write Colin Quinn’s one man show The Seven acraments. In the Upper Valley area of New Hampshire and Vermont, Gelfant has produced, directed and acted in performances at the Parish Players, playing Eddie Carbone in A View From The Bridge. Besides professional acting and directing for TV, movies and the stage, Alan Gelfant teaches acting, playwriting and filmmaking at high schools. Currently, he is a teacher and tutor in Writing and Rhetoric Program of Cultural Studies at Dartmouth College, focusing on research and study in making documentary films for educational use. Description above from the Wikipedia article Alan Gelfant, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

as Kenneth Hanks

as Scott Sommerville
2000

as Father Dominic
1993

as Kenneth Hanks
1997

as Art Vandalay
1999

as Dr. Edelstein
2001

as Bassett
1996

as Marksman
1992

as Byron Sadowski
2002

as CAA Agent
1997

as Alan Monteiro
1998

as Marty Fine
1996

as Warren Funk
2001
as Glen
2002

as Father Frank
2002

as Byron Sadowski
2002

as Glen
2002

as Warren Funk
2001

as Ray
2001

as Dr. Edelstein
2001

as Wolf
2000

as Mitch DiLeo
1999

as Alan Monteiro
1998

as CAA Agent
1997

as Bassett
1996

as Marty Fine
1996

as Marksman
1992
as Kenneth Hanks
1 ep.