Peter O’Fallon is an American director/writer/producer.[1]
Peter O'Fallon | |
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Born | |
Alma mater | University of Colorado |
Occupation(s) | Television director, television writer, television producer, film director |
Years active | 1989–present |
Biography
editO’Fallon was born and raised in Colorado, and earned a degree in film studies from the University of Colorado. He began his career in commercials winning several Clio awards.[citation needed]
After directing the independent cult feature film Suicide Kings,[1][2] starring Christopher Walken and Denis Leary,[2] and co-writing and directing A Rumor of Angels for MGM, starring Vanessa Redgrave and Ray Liotta, O'Fallon created, directed the pilot, and show ran 'Mysterious Ways" 2000 NBC and Pax TV for 2 seasons. Then went on to direct 15 television pilots: American Gothic for CBS, That Was Then for ABC, Eureka for Syfy, The Flannerys (2003), Blade for Spike, and The Riches with Eddie Izzard and Minnie Driver for FX, for which O’Fallon also served as executive producer, and The Protector EP for lifetime, The Glades pilot and EP for A&E ., O’Fallon also co-created and directed Legit, pilot and series for FX a TV starring comedian Jim Jefferies. O’Fallon co-wrote all 26 episodes and directed 24 of them. He directed several episodes (including the pilot) of Agent X was an EP for TNT starring Sharon Stone.[1] He worked as executive producer and director for Lifetime's pilot Unreal starring Constance Zimmer and Shiri Appleby. Directed the pilot and EP for Firefly Lane starring Kathrine Hiegl at Netflix. Directed the Pilot and EP for American Soul BET. EP for The Game Paramount +
Filmography
editFilm | Release year |
---|---|
Dead Silence | 1991 |
Suicide Kings | 1997 |
Odd Jobs | 1997 |
A Rumor of Angels | 2000 |
Television
Pilots
American Gothic, Prey, Mysterious ways, That was Then, The Flannerys, Blade,Eureka, The Riches,The Glades,The Protector, Legit, Agent X,Unreal, American soul.
100 episodes of first 8 episodes of television series
References
edit- ^ a b c "Peter O'Fallon". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2015. Archived from the original on 2015-11-22.
- ^ a b Holden, Stephen (1998-04-17). "Suicide Kings (1997)". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-07-29.
External links
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