Doug wrote, directed and edited BearCity (2010), BearCity 2: The Proposal (2012) and BearCity 3 (2016), all multiple award-winning breakout hits of the festival circuit, garnering Doug personally the 2010 Grand Jury Award for Best Screenplay by the prestigious Los Angeles film festival, Outfest. The Trilogy of films won several other Best Picture awards worldwide and the Outfest Grand Jury's best actor in a feature award. Doug wrote, produced, directed and edited Raising Heroes (1996), the first gay action film, in what the influential online 'zine Film Threat raved was "a non-stop speeding bullet of a picture." The award-winning thriller played film festivals around the world including Outfest, Frameline (San Francisco), and the Edinburgh Film Festival. Doug also appears as himself in Malcolm Ingram's 2010 documentary film Bear Nation (2010), and is a producer of Ingram's 2015 documentary film Out to Win (2015). The BearCity Trilogy and Raising Heroes were released theatrically to rave reviews and sell-out crowds with tremendous support from built-in audiences. Doug resides in Hell's Kitchen, NYC and Wilton Manors, Florida with his husband, Joseph Chapman.
Known for minimalist visual aesthetics, plot-propelling payoffs, and exceptionally well-constructed dialogue, you certainly know a Douglas Larlham film when you're watching one. Douglas is an award-winning Writer, Director, Radio Host, and Comedian. After graduating from the Ohio Center for Broadcasting, Douglas got his start as an entertainer accepting a position at KRAI in Craig, Colorado. In 2008, he was awarded "Best Afternoon Drive Show" from the Colorado Broadcasters Association and felt his Ohio calling him home. Just a year later, radio took him back home to Ohio, where, while working as a co-host for the Cleveland Indians pregame show on WEOL, he began his stand-up comedy career. This proved validating when he was named "Best Amateur Comedian in Ohio." Perhaps, another move was in order? Just months after that victory, and pre-midlife-crisis, he moved to Los Angeles to pursue stand up, but instead of finding a steady career, he met the love his life, filmmaking. You could call the affair, "torrid," and not only due to the Southern California climate. Always up to make a change, Douglas dove head first into fully transitioning to full-time filmmaking with his directorial debut, "Puppy Love" which was accepted into the prestigious Tribeca Film Festival in 2016. Douglas has no plans to slow down, and it should also be stated, he wrote this bio, for which, we can all agree, he will not be winning any awards.
Douglas Laux is a former CIA field operative having served undercover in the Middle East and Afghanistan. Upon leaving the CIA, Laux wrote a New York Times bestselling memoir entitled, "Left of Boom: How A Young CIA Case Officer Penetrated the Taliban and Al-Qaeda," which details his experiences serving amidst the Global War on Terror. In 2017, Laux appeared in the Discovery Channel series, "Finding Escobar's Millions," alongside his former CIA colleague, "Ben Smith."
Douglas Lennox is known for Let Me Make You a Martyr (2016), Not All Heroes Wear Capes and Here Alone (2016).
Douglas Leon was born on July 24, 1975 in Botkyrka, Sweden. He is an actor, known for Festival (2001), Ego (2013) and Skeppsholmen (2002). He was previously married to Leonida Léon.
Douglas Letheren is an actor, known for Mari (2018).
Douglas Leugard is an actor, known for Dogtown 2 (2022).
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Douglas Lieblein yet.
Douglas Lim is known for Small Mission Enterprise (SME) (2012), Kopitiam (1998) and Polis Evo 3 (2023).
Douglas Lipman is an actor, known for A Little Help (2010).