Kevin Connolly
American television and film production in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries drew on a generation of performers and directors who moved fluidly between acting and behind-the-camera roles. Kevin Connolly, born on March 5, 1974, in Patchogue, New York, is one such figure, a United States citizen who has built a career spanning performance, direction, and production across both film and television.
Connolly's formal training laid a foundation across multiple institutions. He attended Patchogue-Medford High School and Robert E. Lee High School before pursuing higher education at the University of the Incarnate Word and subsequently at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television. That academic path, moving from secondary schooling through to a dedicated conservatory program, positioned him to work across several distinct professional capacities. He has functioned as a television actor, a film actor, a television director, a film director, and a film producer, demonstrating range across the crafts that collectively constitute screen storytelling. His work in English spans the demands of both performing and organizing productions, roles that require different but complementary skill sets.
The breadth of Connolly's professional activity — encompassing acting credits on both the small and large screen alongside directorial and producing work — reflects the versatility that his training across those institutions was designed to cultivate. His career as a director, operative in both film and television contexts, places him among those American practitioners who have not confined themselves to a single function within the industry. That combination of on-screen performance and production responsibility, rooted in his education at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television, defines the professional profile he has maintained as an adult working in the United States entertainment industry.
Quotes by Kevin Connolly

I live in L.A. and love L.A., and you couldn't drag me out of there kicking and screaming.

If you know the filmmaker is good and the leading actor is a movie star like Diane Lane, you know you're part of something great.

I'm not married, and I don't have any kids, so sometimes I envy that end of things when I see a family vacation or people at the beach with their kids or at sporting events with their kids; you wonder, 'Is that a part of your life that you want to go into?'

The Islanders and their owner, Garth Snow, were very generous with me and let me do some cool stuff inside the organization.

They identified associates of the fugitive and were able to tie her to those associates. We basically focused on at least another man in her life that ... she had associated with in Prince William County.




