Next Action Star
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
GenreReality
Directed byOmid Kahangi
Glenn GT Taylor
Glenn GT Taylor
Presented byTina Malave
JudgesScot Boland
Victoria Burrows
Marki Costello
Victoria Burrows
Marki Costello
| Next Action Star | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Reality |
| Directed by | Omid Kahangi Glenn GT Taylor |
| Presented by | Tina Malave |
| Judges | Scot Boland Victoria Burrows Marki Costello |
| Composers | Dan Radlauer Adam Zelkind |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 10 |
| Production | |
| Executive producers | Cris Abrego Gary R. Benz Joel Silver Rick Telles |
| Producers | Fernando Mills Alan Schechter |
| Camera setup | Multi-camera |
| Running time | 24 mins. |
| Production companies | Silver Pictures Television Brass Ring Entertainment Warner Bros. Television NBC Studios GRB Entertainment |
| Original release | |
| Network | NBC |
| Release | June 14 – July 28, 2004 |
Next Action Star is an American reality television program shown on NBC from June 14 to July 28, 2004.[1][2]
The series featured 14 finalists (7 women and 7 men) vying for 2 spots as the Next Action Star in their own feature film. Each week, the contestants participated in screen tests that determined who got a callback and who goes home.[3] The two winners starred in their own made-for-TV movie, the Louis Morneau-directed Bet Your Life which was aired on NBC on August 4, 2004.[4]
Contestants
The 14 contestants were:
Female
- Corinne Van Ryck de Groot (winner)
- Jeanne Bauer (runner up)
- Melisande Amos (third place)
- Mae Moreno (fourth place)
- Linda Borini (fifth place)
- Somere Sanders (sixth place)
- Viviana Londono (seventh place)
Male
- Sean Carrigan (winner)
- Jared Elliott (second place)
- John Keyser (third place)
- Mark Nilsson (fourth place)
- Harold "House" Moore (fifth place)
- Greg Cirulnick (sixth place)
- Santino Sloan (seventh place)
Production
The episodes of the show are filmed in U.S. cities such as Atlanta, Georgia, Dallas, Texas, Miami, Florida, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Los Angeles, California and New York City.[2]