Pixie Hollow Wayback Machine

Is a nighttime show at Disneyland Park at the Disneyland Resort, Disney's Hollywood Studios at Walt Disney World Resort, and Tokyo DisneySea at Tokyo Disney Resort. It features fireworks, characters, live actors, water effects, pyrotechnics, lasers, music, audio-animatronics, searchlights, decorated boat floats, and mist screen projections. The narrative structure of Fantasmic.

Pixie hollow wayback machine youtube
Dolley in 2010
Born
July 5, 1991 (age 28)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
OccupationActor, musician
Years active2004−present

Jason Scott Dolley[1] (born July 5, 1991)[2] is an American actor, musician and Twitch streamer,[3] known for his roles in Disney Channel shows and movies. These include Newton 'Newt' Livingston III on Cory in the House, Virgil Fox in Minutemen, Connor Kennedy in Read It and Weep, Pete Ivey in Hatching Pete, and PJ Duncan on Good Luck Charlie.

Career[edit]

Jason Scott Dolley was born in Los Angeles, California on July 5, 1991.[4] Dolley gained his first stage experience at 11 when he and one of his brothers performed the Abbott and Costello 'Who's on First' routine in a school talent show.[2] His first real acting jobs came that same year.[2] He won the lead role in the award-winning short film titled Chasing Daylight. He was then cast by director Mel Gibson to be T.J. Savage on the ABC series Complete Savages. After Complete Savages was canceled, he starred in the film Saving Shiloh as Marty Preston, in the Disney Channel Original MovieRead It and Weep as Connor Kennedy and in the film The Air I Breathe as the younger form of the character named Pleasure (the adult version of whom was played by Brendan Fraser).

Wayback machine search engine

In 2006, Dolley appeared in Duracell's commercial 'Trusted Everywhere' Campaign 'Amazon'.[5] Dolley was part of the Yellow team in the second edition of the Disney Channel Games, broadcast in mid-2007. From 2007 to 2008, Dolley starred in the Disney Channel show Cory in the House. In 2008, he appeared in the film Minutemen as Virgil Fox and was in the third edition of the Disney Channel Games on the Green Team. Dolley also guest-starred as the prince in Imagination Movers. In 2009, Jason starred in the Disney film Hatching Pete as Pete Ivey. In 2010, Dolley began appearing in his second Disney Channel Original Series, Good Luck Charlie as P.J. Duncan.[6]

When asked about his role in the Disney Channel Original Series family sitcom, Good Luck Charlie, he replied, 'I like the realness of it. I like the more authentic tone. I like the family sitcom. That's something different for Disney, which also appealed to me.'[7] He also said in a different interview, 'When I read the script, I was like, 'Oh, this is kind of cool. This is a little different. It has a Full House kind of feel. It's very family-friendly. Families can sit down and watch this and get a real laugh. I think that's what's been cool about it from the start and what's still cool about it today.'[8]

Dolley and cast appeared in a feature-length Christmas Disney Channel Original Movie based on the series titled Good Luck Charlie, It's Christmas!, which aired on December 2, 2011. He also voiced the character Rumble in Disney Channel's animated film Pixie Hollow Games, which also stars Brenda Song, Tiffany Thornton, and Zendaya.[9]

Dolley revealed in a Youtube video with Disney Channel alum Christy Carlson Romano that he is tied with Brenda Song for appearing in the most Disney Channel Original Movies (DCOM).[10] Dolley ties with Song with 4 DCOM appearances

Personal life[edit]

Wayback

His favorite things to do include playing the guitar, piano, video games and paintball. He also enjoys playing football with his friends.[2] He likes to spend time with his pet chocolate Labrador retriever and his family, as well as staying active in his church youth group.[11] Dolley currently lives with his parents in Simi Valley, California.[12] When not acting, he takes college courses in philosophy at Moorpark College and at California Lutheran University.[13][14]

Filmography[edit]

Film roles
YearTitleRoleNotes
2004Chasing DaylightDylan FoxShort film
2006Saving ShilohMarty Preston
2007The Air I BreatheYoung Pleasure
2014Helicopter MomLloyd
2019Staged KillerJake
2020Secret Agent Dingledorf and His Trusty Dog Splat Wing Nutfilming
Television roles
YearTitleRoleNotes
2004–05Complete SavagesT.J. SavageMain role; 19 episodes
2006Read It and WeepConnor KennedyTelevision film
2007–08Cory in the HouseNewton 'Newt' Livingston IIIMain role; 30 episodes
2008MinutemenVirgil FoxTelevision film
2008The ReplacementsSkip TripperVoice role' episode: 'The Campiest Episode Never'
2009Hatching PetePete IveyTelevision film
2009Imagination MoversPrinceEpisode: 'A Fairy Tale Ending'
2010–14Good Luck CharliePJ DuncanMain role; 97 episodes
2011Pixie Hollow GamesRumbleVoice role; television special
2011Good Luck Charlie, It's Christmas!PJ DuncanTelevision film
2013JessiePJ DuncanEpisode: 'Good Luck Jessie: New York City Christmas'
2014Major CrimesJames 'J-Me' Martin ElliottEpisode: 'Acting Out'
2018-2019American HousewifeKevin4 episodes
2018The RanchDr. HopkinsEpisode: 'Part 6, Episode 5'

References[edit]

  1. ^'Jason Dolley: Biography, Latest News & Videos'. TV Guide.com. Retrieved February 6, 2010.
  2. ^ abcd'Biography at official Jason Dolley website'. jasondolley.com. Archived from the original on September 26, 2013.
  3. ^https://www.twitch.tv/jdolley
  4. ^Jason Dolley on IMDb
  5. ^'Company: View Our Ads'Archived September 14, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. duracell.com. Procter & Gamble. Retrieved December 4, 2010.
  6. ^DISNEY CHANNEL ORDERS 'GOOD LUCK CHARLIE,' A LIVE-ACTION COMEDY SERIESArchived July 30, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. disneychannelmedianet.com. July 15, 2009
  7. ^Chmielewski, Dawn C. (December 31, 2009). 'A new Disney Channel niche: adults – Page 2'. latimes.com. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 10, 2010.
  8. ^'Jason Dolley From Disney Channel's Good Luck Charlie Talks About Family Sitcoms'Archived June 8, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. April 2, 2010. DisneyDreaming.com. Retrieved 2010-08-10.
  9. ^Disney Channel to Premiere New Animated Special ‘Pixie Hollow Games’ – Ratings | TVbytheNumbers. Tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com. Retrieved on December 3, 2013.
  10. ^Good Luck Charlie - Christy Carlson Romano Stuffed PB&J!, retrieved January 23, 2020
  11. ^'Jason Dolley on TV.com'Archived June 29, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. TV.com. Retrieved August 10, 2010.
  12. ^Jason Dolley Interview - Rough Cut on YouTube
  13. ^Jason Dolley on 'The Bonnie Hunt Show' (May 3, 2010) on YouTube. Event occurs at 4:30. YouTube. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
  14. ^Shen, Maxine. 'Finishing school'. New York Post.

External links[edit]

  • Jason Dolley on IMDb
  • Jason Dolley on Instagram
  • Jason Dolley at Family Tree Legends
  • Jason Dolley on Twitter
  • Jason Dolley on Twitch (service)
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jason_Dolley&oldid=945589640'

Pixie Hollow Wayback Machine Download

David H. Steinberg

David H. Steinberg is an American writer, director, and producer for film and television. He wrote the screenplays for American Pie 2, Slackers, National Lampoon's Barely Legal, and American Pie Presents: The Book of Love and Girls' Rules. He is currently the Executive Producer and Showrunner on No Good Nick, currently streaming on Netflix.

Career[edit]

Steinberg grew up in West Hartford, Connecticut, where he attended William H. Hall High School. He entered Yale at age 16, and earned his law degree from Duke University, where he served as editor-in-chief of the law review.[1] After four years of entertainment law in Atlanta and New York, he abandoned his legal career to attend USC's Peter Stark Producing Program.[2] Before graduating, Steinberg sold his first spec script called Slackers, which was made into the 2002 film.[3] After that sale, Steinberg was immediately hired by Universal to write the first two drafts of American Pie 2.[4]

Filmography[edit]

Steinberg also wrote After School Special, a story about three high school friends who attempt to make a porn movie.[5] The movie was eventually released under the title National Lampoon's Barely Legal.[6] In addition, Steinberg wrote the seventh and ninth films in the American Pie series, American Pie Presents: The Book of Love in 2009 and American Pie Presents: Girls' Rules in 2020.

Steinberg wrote and directed the short film The Babysitter, starring Academy Award winner Brie Larson, which went viral with over four million views on the now-defunct Atom Films before achieving immortal status on Funny or Die.[7] His feature film directorial debut Miss Dial stars Robinne Lee and Sam Jaeger[8] and premiered at the Macon Film Festival on February 16, 2013, where it received the Audience Choice Award.[9] It was released on DVD and VOD by Phase 4 Films in 2013.

He wrote DisneyToon Studios' Tinker Bell and the Pixie Hollow Games, which premiered on the Disney Channel and the DreamWorks animated feature film Puss In Boots. He also wrote the live-action body-switching movie Furry Friday for New Line Cinemas[10] and created and executive produced a TV pilot for ABC Family called Phys. Ed.

Steinberg has also written many other scripts for the major film studios. These include:

  • Only Human, a sci-fi comedy for Sony Pictures Entertainment;
  • The Fool's Errand, a family animation script he sold as a pitch to Disney;
  • Other People's Wishes, a high-concept comedy for Warner Brothers;
  • Love at Second Bite, the sequel to the 1979 comedy Love at First Bite;
  • Sprung, a comedy for New Line Cinemas;
  • Porky's, the theatrical remake of the classic 1982 comedy;
  • Anubis, a family adventure movie for 20th Century Fox Animation;
  • Kindergarten Cop 2;[11]
  • Bigger Fatter Liar, a sequel to the 2002 movie Big Fat Liar for Universal Studios.

In addition, his debut novel, a coming-of-age comedy, Last Stop This Town, was published in 2012.[12]

The Simpsons[edit]

He wrote the season 25 episode 'Pay Pal' for which he was nominated for a Writers Guild Award.[13]

Space Racers[edit]

Steinberg helped create the animated pre-school series Space Racers which airs on Sprout.[14]

Yo-kai Watch[edit]

Steinberg is the head writer on the U.S. adaptation of the hit Japanese anime series Yo-kai Watch. With his writing partner Keetgi Kogan, he wrote 77 episodes in the first three seasons which air on Disney XD.[15]

No Good Nick[edit]

Steinberg, together with his writing partner Keetgi Kogan, created the multicam comedy No Good Nick for Netflix which stars Melissa Joan Hart and Sean Astin, released in 2019. He currently serves as the Executive Producer and Showrunner.[16]

Internet

References[edit]

  1. ^Scott DeVaney: AtomFilms Filmmaker Focus: The Babysitter InterviewsArchived 2008-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^Will Plyler: Done Deal Pro Interview with David H. Steinberg
  3. ^Christopher Wehner: American Slacker: Interview with David H. SteinbergArchived 2009-08-21 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^Jeffrey Berman: Comedically Speaking: An Interview with David H. Steinberg
  5. ^Will Plyler: Done Deal Pro Interview with David H. Steinberg
  6. ^National Lampoon's Barely Legal theatrical trailer
  7. ^Funny or Die, The BabysitterArchived 2015-02-17 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^Daily Variety, Jaeger on the Line
  9. ^Reel Georgia, Macon Film Festival Award Winners
  10. ^Daily Variety, Steinberg Tapped for 'Furry Friday'[permanent dead link]
  11. ^Kindergarten Cop 2
  12. ^The Florida Alligator, American Pie Screenwriter Releases Book
  13. ^Writers Guild Awards, 2015 NomineesArchived 2015-09-01 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^Animation Magazine, KCET Hosts 'Space Racers' Screening in L.A.
  15. ^Animation Magazine, Yo-Kai Watch Premieres on XD Oct. 5
  16. ^The Hollywood Reporter, Netflix Orders Melissa Joan Hart-Sean Astin Sitcom 'No Good Nick'

External links[edit]

David H. Steinberg on IMDb

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=David_H._Steinberg&oldid=943674500'