Tim Carr(II)
- Actor
- Producer
- Writer
Born in Queens, New York, but splitting time growing up between Newark,
Delaware and Avondale, Pennsylvania, Tim Carr started out doing radio
for various stations in the local area.
From radio, he moved on to TV, scoring a very small but recurring role
on NBC's "Homicide: Life on the Street" from there, he began doing
small parts in several films and TV shows, elevating to leading man
status with Lionsgate's "Killer Instinct" and spending the next few
years working alongside talent such as Holly Hunter, Jennifer Connelly,
Sydney Pollack and Robert DeNiro. Also at this time, he appeared in
several commercials which were filmed and have aired all over the
world.
On a break from filming a pilot for Fox, Tim put together a short film,
he wrote, starred and directed in "The Wrong Fortune Cookie". This film
played everywhere from New York to Los Angeles to London to Bangalore,
India, and received great reviews and was even applauded by industry
film site "Ain't It Cool News". During a screening of "The Wrong
Fortune Cookie", Tim was offered a role in a very edgy and quirky film called "13th
Grade"
After appearing in Delaware filmmaker JJ Garvine's "13th Grade", Tim
was given a role by Sylvester Stallone in his hit film "Rocky Balboa".
At the very same time, Tim was nominated for a screen writing award at
the "Hypefest" film festival in Hollywood for his screenplay "A Deeper
Shade of Soul" and also wrote a pilot that went to 2 major networks
called "Life Won't Wait". With years of working with Hollywood legends
and experience in television, stage and film, Tim decided to put
himself to the test and wrote, directed and played the lead role in the
feature film, "Leaf" a bio pic on infamous NFL quarterback, Ryan Leaf.
With "Leaf" doing incredibly well at test screenings all over the
country, as well as some solid award buzz surrounding "Leaf", Tim immediately took various
roles in films such as "Down With The Boogey," and "Safe" opposite Chris Sarandon and Jason Statham.
Adding television writing and various stage roles in New York City, Los Angeles and beyond to his repertoire, Tim continues to be among the hardest working talents around.
Delaware and Avondale, Pennsylvania, Tim Carr started out doing radio
for various stations in the local area.
From radio, he moved on to TV, scoring a very small but recurring role
on NBC's "Homicide: Life on the Street" from there, he began doing
small parts in several films and TV shows, elevating to leading man
status with Lionsgate's "Killer Instinct" and spending the next few
years working alongside talent such as Holly Hunter, Jennifer Connelly,
Sydney Pollack and Robert DeNiro. Also at this time, he appeared in
several commercials which were filmed and have aired all over the
world.
On a break from filming a pilot for Fox, Tim put together a short film,
he wrote, starred and directed in "The Wrong Fortune Cookie". This film
played everywhere from New York to Los Angeles to London to Bangalore,
India, and received great reviews and was even applauded by industry
film site "Ain't It Cool News". During a screening of "The Wrong
Fortune Cookie", Tim was offered a role in a very edgy and quirky film called "13th
Grade"
After appearing in Delaware filmmaker JJ Garvine's "13th Grade", Tim
was given a role by Sylvester Stallone in his hit film "Rocky Balboa".
At the very same time, Tim was nominated for a screen writing award at
the "Hypefest" film festival in Hollywood for his screenplay "A Deeper
Shade of Soul" and also wrote a pilot that went to 2 major networks
called "Life Won't Wait". With years of working with Hollywood legends
and experience in television, stage and film, Tim decided to put
himself to the test and wrote, directed and played the lead role in the
feature film, "Leaf" a bio pic on infamous NFL quarterback, Ryan Leaf.
With "Leaf" doing incredibly well at test screenings all over the
country, as well as some solid award buzz surrounding "Leaf", Tim immediately took various
roles in films such as "Down With The Boogey," and "Safe" opposite Chris Sarandon and Jason Statham.
Adding television writing and various stage roles in New York City, Los Angeles and beyond to his repertoire, Tim continues to be among the hardest working talents around.