Here is the biography of the person:
A renowned filmmaker, he began his career in the film industry after graduating from Columbia College with a degree in Film. With over 15 years of experience, he has worked his way up the ranks, taking on various roles such as editor, post-production supervisor, and producer.
In the mid-1990s, he produced the family film "My Uncle: The Alien," which was selected for the Brussels International Festival of Fantasy, Thriller, and Science Fiction Films. The film was later broadcast on HBO and has remained a popular rerun ever since.
In 1997, he executive produced "Hollywood Safari," a 22-episode TV series for the whole family based on his successful film of the same title, which he co-wrote and produced. Two years later, he produced "Little Heroes," a rip-roaring action comedy about two amazing dogs. The film premiered on Animal Planet as the "Movie of the Month" and received big ratings, leading to the production of two sequels, "Little Heroes 2" and "Top Dog." The trilogy was distributed in the US by Warner Brothers.
Continuing to push the boundaries of creative and technical innovation, his latest productions include "Wildfire," a heartwarming action adventure about two sisters fighting to save their animal sanctuary from being destroyed by greedy corporate developers; "Abe & Bruno," a family adventure comedy about the friendship between a man and his roommate, a 600-pound gorilla; and "Heart of Fear," a heartwarming suspense drama about a young boy who loses his mother in a brutal murder and a female FBI agent who overcomes all odds to save him.
More recent productions include "Forbidden Border," a contemporary story about a girl who travels to Mexico to purchase life-saving medicine for her ailing mother only to find herself wrongly accused and imprisoned by a corrupt system involving the mighty pharmaceutical companies trying to stop Americans from crossing the border to purchase inexpensive medicine.
In 2010, he produced "The Secret of Hidden Pines," a comedy about a couple who finds a baby Bigfoot in the woods and adopts him. Fourteen years later, the teenage Bigfoot is the smartest kid in school, talking and playing games. Trouble begins when the Mayor of the town wants to capture him and put him in a zoo.
In 2011, he completed the production of "I Love Your Moves," a teenage musical-drama about a group of teens who find friendship and a purpose to follow their dreams through dancing in a ballroom dance competition. "Stepping High" was recently completed and released theatrically to great success. The story follows an Americanized Middle Eastern girl who puts her passion for dance before family and anything else in her life. After many failed auditions, she stumbles upon an opportunity to teach at a high school, where she becomes re-energized and opens the kids' eyes and minds to dance as a powerful tool for social change. Not everyone likes her progressive ideas, and tensions escalate when she introduces them to her belly-ballroom style.