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Brent Spiner Filmography
Source:
Theiapolis
Brent Spiner Resources
Brent Spiner (born February 2, 1949 in Houston, Texas) is an American actor, best known for his portrayal of the android "Data" on the television and movie series
.
Spiner attended Bellaire High School, Bellaire, Texas, where he had a very inspirational drama teacher, Cecil Pickett - the same drama teacher who coached such people as
Cindy Pickett,
Randy Quaid,
Dennis Quaid, Trey Wilson, Robert Wuhl and Thomas Schlamme. After attending the University of Houston and performing in local theatre there, Spiner moved to New York City, where he became an established stage actor, performing in several Broadway and off-Broadway plays, most notably with the original cast of the
Stephen Sondheim musical Sunday in the Park with George
. At the same time, he also had a small part in the film Stardust Memories. In 1984, Spiner moved to Los Angeles, appearing in several pilots and made-for-tv movies, and played a recurring character on Night Court, before appearing on Star Trek.
Since his success in Star Trek, he has also acted in film, including a notable minor role in the movie Independence Day. In 1991, he recorded an album of 1940s pop standards entitled Ol' Yellow Eyes Is Back
. He has since had guest appearances on ', Friends
, Deadly Games
, Mad About You
, Frasier
, as well as movie roles in films such as Phenomenon
, Out to Sea
, ', Geppetto
, Master of Disguise
and The Aviator.
Spiner, not quite as active in the Star Trek convention scene as many of his costars, currently lives in Los Angeles, California with his wife, Loree, and his son, Jackson.
In 2004, Spiner returned to the world of Star Trek, appearing as Dr. Arik Soong, an ancestor of Data's creator, in a three episode story arc of ' in "Borderland", "Cold Station 12", and "The Augments".
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Latest Film News
Latest news on Brent Spiner
InternetAn Assortment of Random Updates, Volume 1
I'm working on redesigning Waxy today, so no huge article. Instead, a roundup of brand new updates to posts from my first week of full-time blogging.
Colin's Bear Animation
Colin emailed to let me know that his inadequate former professor no longer works at the school. "They've hired a new professor this semester and he actually works at Alias," he wrote. "In only two weeks it has become very clear that we now have someone worth our parents' hard-earned cash."
Also, by request, I found a full-length copy of the song from the video. Here's an MP3 of Funky Monkey Dance from the Mother 3 soundtrack. (The good part starts at 1:20.)
Personal Ads of the Digerati
Surprisingly, the only people that seemed to care about Dave's personal ad were Valleywag, Eye on Winer (the newest in a long line of obsessive Dave Winer watchdog sites), and Dave Winer himself. He commented on it a few times on his Twitter account, but that was about it. (Related, Eye on Winer posted this Knight-Ridder article from 1986 about American bachelors, with Dave Winer in the lead story.)
Many more people took note of the bit about Richard Stallman's extremely unusual web browsing habits, culled from this post I dug up from a discussion list late last year. That link ended up on Zawodny's blog and, later, the top of Reddit. I emailed RMS some questions, to ask him more about this, leading to the shortest interview ever:
I'm fascinated with a message I read about how you read the web with a wget demon. Could you elaborate on it?
It is a program that runs wget and mails me back the result.
Do you then convert the HTML to plain text and read it by email, or do you load the retrieved file in a browser? (If so, which browser?)
I can do either one.
Finally, is it free software, or something that you'd be willing to release?
I did not write it, but our sysadmins say it is kludgy.Thanks for that elaborate explanation, Richard! As Philipp told me, "He answers like a programmer. If you stopped him on the street to ask, 'Do you know the time?' he'd say 'Yes' and leave."
The Times (UK) Spamming Social Sites
As I noted last week, The Times and Sitelynx both absolved themselves of responsibility. The Times claimed they weren't aware that social media spamming was going on, which I tend to believe, and Sitelynx blamed Piotr completely for promoting articles on social sites -- not because that's a practice Sitelynx opposes, but because he wasn't "properly trained" to do it and that's not what he wasn't hired to do. He was removed from The Times account.
Another Sitelynx employee, Sibylle Bernardakis, modified her StumbleUpon profile the day after the story broke to disclose her affiliation with The Sun, another Sitelynx client. I asked Graham Hansell, founder of Sitelynx, about this last week:
Graham responded, "She has followed our policy for submissions -- Disclaimers where possible, latest news only, direct linking (no redirect) to valuable content, no hidden links or promotional content." I pointed out that it appeared Sibylle never disclosed her affiliations before she modified her profiles earlier today. Graham replied, "That I am not aware of and will investigate. I don't believe that to be true and we are obviously reviewing our internal policy for greater transparency."Some commenters noted that Chris Deary and Ilana Fox at The Sun also use Delicious extensively for promoting their articles. This doesn't seem problematic because their affiliation with The Sun is transparent and disclosed, while Piotr and Sybille were not.
Brent Spiner's Ol' Yellow Eyes is Back
I just found out that a couple days before my post, Brent Spiner launched his new personal site and released a video on YouTube about his long-awaited concept album, Dreamland. Inspired by Broadway musicals and old-fashioned radio shows, the album is available for pre-order on Brent's site. Did I mention it features the voice acting of Mark Hamill?
Published: Thu, 07 Feb 2008 18:00:35 GMT - Source: Waxy.Org - Read the articleInternetBrent Spiner's Ol' Yellow Eyes is Back
I was writing a long, interesting article about the Microsoft and Yahoo! merger, with several interviews from insiders at both companies, but I'm already sick to death of hearing about it. So I quit! Instead, here's Brent "Data" Spiner's rare 1991 album, "Ol' Yellow Eyes Is Back."
Don't miss "It's a Sin (To Tell A Lie)," with background vocals by The Sunspots -- Jonathan "Riker" Frakes, Michael "Worf" Dorn, LeVar "Reading Rainbow" Burton, and Patrick "I've Seen Everything" Stewart.
Brent Spiner - Ol' Yellow Eyes Is Back (1991)
1. Time After Time
2. The Very Thought of You
3. More Than You Know
4. Toot Toot Tootsie
5. Embraceable You
6. It's a Sin (To Tell a Lie)
7. Long, Long Time
8. Carolina in the Morning
9. Marie (Randy Newman cover)
10. Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart
11. When I Fall in Love
12. Goodnight, Sweetheart
This album is extremely rare, and I believe this is the first time the MP3s have ever been publicly available on the Web. (I don't even see it on the torrent trackers.) The cheapest copy of the CD on Amazon is $89.99, but you can generally find it on eBay in the $40-50 range. Since the album's out of print, I hope Brent won't mind that I'm releasing it here.
Published: Fri, 01 Feb 2008 20:24:45 GMT - Source: Waxy.Org - Read the article
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