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Travis Fine
Travis Fine
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Travis Lane Fine (born June 26, 1968) is an American actor, writer, director and producer, perhaps best known for his film Any Day Now, and for his roles in Girl, Interrupted and The Young Riders.

Key Information

Early life

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Fine was born in Atlanta, Georgia, the second son of Maxine Parker Makover and Terry Fine, a professional golfer. His parents divorced when he was six years old. At 15, he moved to Los Angeles. He went to Beverly Hills High School and attended Pitzer College for a year.[1][2]

Career

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Acting career

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Fine's acting career started at the age of seven when he was cast as John Henry in a stage production of Member of the Wedding at the Alliance Theatre in Atlanta. Over the next few years, he starred in theatre productions at the Alliance Theatre, the Children's Theatre Company in Minneapolis and at Beverly Hills High School, including stagings of: A Christmas Carol, Peter Pan, Oliver!, Macbeth, Legend of Sleepy Hollow, On Golden Pond, Tom Sawyer, Grease, and Amadeus (in which he played Mozart). His on-screen debut came at the age of twelve in A Time for Miracles starring Lorne Greene.[3]

In 1989, Fine gained attention as the mute and bald Pony Express rider Ike McSwain, on ABC's Western series The Young Riders.[citation needed]

In 2002, Fine started a new career in commercial aviation by attending ATP flight school. In 2003, he was hired as a first officer flying Embraer regional jets for Chatauqua Airlines, although he said he "ha[s] not ruled out doing more acting" and he continues writing screenplays.[4]

Filmmaking career

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Fine sold his first screenplay, The Lords of the Sea (written in 1994), to Howard Koch Jr., after which he was hired to write episodes for Diagnosis: Murder and Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. In 1996, he attended New York Film Academy, where he wrote, directed and produced several short films. A year later, he wrote, produced and directed his first feature-length film, The Others, a high school comedy.[5]

In 2009, Fine wrote and directed The Space Between, starring Melissa Leo. In 2012 he co-wrote, produced and directed Any Day Now, an LGBT film set in the 1970s, starring Alan Cumming, Garret Dillahunt, Isaac Leyva, and Frances Fisher. Fine produced the film with his wife Kristine.

Personal life

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On Valentine's Day, 1993, Fine married Jessica Resnick. The couple divorced in 1995.[6] On June 29, 2002, he married Kristine Fine (née Hostetter). He has two daughters, born in 1994 and 2004, and a son, born in 2007. Fine is Jewish[7] and bisexual.[8]

Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Director Writer Role Notes
1991 Child's Play 3 No No Lt. Col. Brett C. Shelton
1994 Two Shows Daily Yes Yes Short film
1994 Whisper in My Ear Yes Yes Short film
1995 10:18 Yes Yes Short film
1997 The Others Yes Yes VTV Cameraman
1998 The Thin Red Line No No Pvt. Weld
1999 Girl, Interrupted No No John
1999 The Ride Yes Yes
2000 We Married Margo No No Basketball Friend
2001 Jack the Dog No No Buddy
2001 Tomcats No No Jan
2010 The Space Between Yes Yes Airline Pilot
2012 Any Day Now Yes Yes
2020 Two Eyes Yes Yes

Television

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Year Title Role Notes
1987 Cagney & Lacey Teenager #2 1 episode
1988 TV 101 Strange Looking Kid 1 episode
1989–1991 The Young Riders Ike McSwain 51 episodes
1992 Cruel Doubt James 'Moog' Upchurch 2 episodes
1992 Quantum Leap Will Kinman 2 episodes
1993 They've Taken Our Children: The Chowchilla Kidnapping Rick Schoenfeld TV movie
1994 Menendez: A Killing in Beverly Hills Erik Menendez TV movie
1994 Diagnosis: Murder Writing credit – 1 episode
1995 My Antonia Harry Paine TV movie
1995 Naomi & Wyonna: Love Can Build a Bridge Michael Ciminella TV movie
1996 The Lazarus Man Frank 1 episode
1995–1997 JAG Various roles 2 episodes
1997 The Pretender Brian Stoffel 1 episode
1998 Vengeance Unlimited Capt. Aaron McClane 1 episode
1999 Shake, Rattle and Roll: An American Love Story Mookie Gilliland TV movie
2000 The President's Man Lieutenant TV movie
2000 Lessons Learned TV movie
2001 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Kenny Berlin 1 episode
2000–2001 Family Law Tim Whitman 3 episodes

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Travis Lane Fine (born June 26, 1968) is an American , , director, and recognized for his early acting roles in television and film, followed by a shift to independent filmmaking focused on dramatic narratives addressing social issues. His breakthrough as a director came with Any Day Now (2012), a period drama about a same-sex couple's custody battle that earned Audience Awards and Best Picture honors at festivals including , International, and Outfest, alongside a 2013 nomination. Fine's acting credits include portraying Ike McSwain, a deaf stable hand, in the Western series (1989–1992), as well as supporting roles in films such as (1999), The Thin Red Line (1998), and (1991). Earlier in his career, he sold his first , The Lords of the Sea, and contributed to television writing before emphasizing feature directing with works like The Space Between (2010) and Two Eyes (2020).

Early life

Childhood and initial aspirations

Travis Fine was born on June 26, 1968, in , Georgia. Fine's interest in emerged early in childhood, sparked by viewing a kindergarten production of , which convinced him he wanted to become an . At age seven, he secured his first role as John Henry in a stage production of and went on to appear in 13 additional theater productions over the next seven years. By age 14, aspiring to professional acting and theater involvement, Fine relocated from to attend the Children's Theatre Schools in , , an institution focused on youth performing arts training; there, he also began writing plays. His initial career goals centered on acting, prompting a subsequent move to with his father to further pursue opportunities in the industry.

Education and training

Fine received early acting training at the Children's Theatre Schools in , which he attended starting at age 14 after leaving his hometown of ; during this period, he began writing plays before relocating to . He later completed his secondary education at . Following high school graduation, Fine enrolled at , a member of the consortium, where he participated in football until sustaining a injury that led him to depart after one year. For professional acting development, he studied at the Beverly Hills Playhouse under instructor Milton Katselas, an experience that informed his early independent filmmaking efforts, including directing The Others with fellow students from the program.

Acting career

Early television and film roles

Fine's breakthrough role came in 1989 on the ABC Western television series The Young Riders, where he portrayed Ike McSwain, a mute Pony Express rider rendered speechless by childhood trauma and who communicated primarily through sign language. The series, set in the 1860s and focusing on young riders delivering mail across the American frontier, featured Fine in the role from its premiere through 1991, spanning three seasons and over 60 episodes. His performance as the bald, gentle-natured Ike, who survived scarlet fever and faced personal hardships including unrequited romance and eventual death in the storyline, drew notice for its physical demands and emotional depth without dialogue. Transitioning to film, Fine debuted in 1991's Child's Play 3, a horror sequel directed by Jack Bender, playing cadet lieutenant colonel Brett C. Shelton at the Kent Military Academy. In the film, Shelton interacts with protagonist Andy Barclay (Justin Whalin) amid the killer doll Chucky's rampage, contributing to the ensemble of antagonistic cadets in a setting emphasizing military discipline and teen rivalries. That same year, he appeared in television projects including a guest role as Will Kinman on Quantum Leap, a science fiction series about time-traveling leaps into others' lives. In 1992, Fine starred in the miniseries Cruel Doubt, a true-crime drama based on the 1988 murder of a couple and the subsequent of their son, portraying a supporting role in the dynamics and investigation narrative adapted from Joe McGinniss's . Additional early television work included the 1993 TV movie They've Taken Our Children: The Chowchilla Kidnapping, recounting the 1976 school bus abduction, and guest spots on series like precursors in procedural formats. These roles established Fine in genre-spanning projects, blending Westerns, horror, sci-fi, and crime drama before his mid-1990s shift toward more episodic television and eventual filmmaking.

Notable performances and transitions

Fine portrayed Erik Menendez, the younger of the two brothers convicted in the 1989 murder of their parents, in the 1994 miniseries Menendez: A Killing in Beverly Hills. In Terrence Malick's 1998 war film The Thin Red Line, Fine played Private Weld, a supporting role in the ensemble cast depicting the Battle of ; the film received seven Academy Award nominations, including for Best Picture and Best Director. He appeared as John, an orderly who develops a romantic interest in the protagonist Susanna, in James Mangold's Girl, Interrupted (1999), which earned Angelina Jolie an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. Fine's last credited acting role was as Jan, a gay friend of the protagonists, in the 2001 comedy Tomcats. In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks, Fine shifted careers to aviation, attending ATP Flight School and obtaining commercial pilot certifications before joining American Airlines as a pilot; he ceased acting after 2001.

Filmmaking career

Independent film debut

Fine's independent film debut came with The Others, a 1997 high school comedy that he wrote, produced, and directed. The film follows a group of seniors on their final day of classes, who organize a chaotic amid personal dramas, including a would-be rock musician's unrequited crush on the school's most popular girl. Shot on a modest budget under Cinequanon Pictures International, it featured emerging actors such as , , Phillip Rhys Chaudhary, Derrex Brady, Devon Odessa, and John Livingston, with a runtime of 95 minutes. To assemble the production, Fine utilized student performers from a local playhouse, reflecting his hands-on approach to the project as his first feature-length effort outside mainstream roles. This low-key endeavor marked a pivot from his earlier television and , allowing him to explore directing with a lighthearted teen focused on youthful antics and . The film's independent nature emphasized practical, contained storytelling without reliance on established studio infrastructure. Reception for The Others was limited, earning a 4.7/10 average user rating on IMDb from 130 votes and a 42% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes, indicative of niche appeal rather than broad acclaim. Despite its modest footprint, the project served as a foundational step in Fine's transition to multifaceted filmmaking, predating a hiatus from the industry where he pursued aviation before returning to directorial work.

Major directorial works and themes

Fine's directorial debut in independent cinema, (2010), stars as a cynical who becomes responsible for a young Pakistani-American boy on , 2001, leading to a cross-country journey amid post-attack tensions. The film examines themes of cultural clash, personal loss, and unexpected resilience, as the protagonists confront bigotry and grief in the immediate aftermath of the attacks. It premiered at the , earning a Special Jury Award, and later aired on the to commemorate the 10th anniversary of 9/11. His follow-up, Any Day Now (2012), co-written and produced by Fine, depicts a gay couple in 1970s Los Angeles—a drag performer (Alan Cumming) and his lawyer partner (Garret Dillahunt)—who take in and fight for custody of a neglected teenager with Down syndrome. Drawing from a 1980 screenplay inspired by real events, the narrative highlights struggles against legal and societal prejudice, emphasizing improvised family bonds and the pursuit of acceptance. The film secured audience awards at the Tribeca and Chicago International Film Festivals, as well as the 2013 GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Film, and achieved a year-long theatrical run in Japan. In Two Eyes (2020), Fine constructs a triptych spanning 1868 , 1979 , and 2019, interweaving stories of an artist with his Native American guide, a grieving amid the AIDS , and a trans processing loss through performance. Themes center on , love transcending eras, bereavement, and art's capacity to bridge historical divides, culminating in interconnected revelations of self-discovery. Premiering as the closing night film at Outfest 2020, it was lauded as a standout LGBTQ+ work for its ambitious, Malick-inspired visual poetry. Across these works, Fine consistently probes provocative social terrains—non-normative identities, familial redefinition amid adversity, and historical reckonings with marginalization—favoring intimate character studies over didacticism, often informed by his own peripatetic path from to and back to . His approach prioritizes emotional authenticity and understated provocation, yielding films that garnered festival acclaim while navigating limited commercial distribution typical of independent fare.

Recent projects

Fine's most recent directorial effort is the 2020 film Two Eyes, a cinematic comprising three interconnected stories set in 1868 , 1979 , and 2019 . The narrative explores themes of , love, , and self-perception through characters including a 19th-century landscape guided by a Native American companion, a 1970s punk musician grappling with loss, and a contemporary teenager in therapy with a non-binary counselor. Fine wrote, directed, produced, and edited the film, which stars , , , , and Uly Schlesinger. occurred in August 2020 amid the , emphasizing Fine's commitment to independent, provocative storytelling. The film premiered at festivals and received acclaim for its visual lyricism and thematic depth, earning comparisons to the works of and from critics and festival programmers. Two Eyes holds a 6.2/10 rating on based on over 400 user reviews, reflecting its niche appeal within arthouse cinema. As of , it continues to screen at select venues and has garnered awards at independent film festivals, underscoring Fine's focus on marginalized narratives without reliance on mainstream distribution. No subsequent directorial projects have been announced or released by Fine as of October 2025.

Personal life

Family and relationships

Travis Fine was born on June 26, 1968, in , Georgia, to parents Terry Fine and Maxine Fine. Fine's first marriage was to Jessica Resnick on February 14, 1993; the couple divorced in 1995 and had one daughter born in 1994. He married Kristine Fine (née Hostetter) on June 29, 2002, with whom he has two children: a daughter born in 2004 and a son born in 2007.

Recognition and impact

Awards and nominations

Fine's directorial debut feature Any Day Now (2012) received widespread recognition at film festivals, accumulating over 20 audience and best picture awards internationally. The film won the Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature at the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival. It also secured the Audience Award at the 2012 . Additional honors for Any Day Now included the Audience Award and the award (for ) at the 2012 Outfest. The film earned the Audience Award at the 2012 , where it also received the Golden Space Needle for Best Narrative Feature. In 2013, it was awarded the for Outstanding Film (Wide Release). No major acting awards or nominations for Fine are documented in primary festival or industry records. Earlier short films he directed, such as those from , received mentions like honorable recognition at narrative festivals, but details remain limited to secondary listings without verified wins.
YearAwardCategoryWorkResult
2012Tribeca Film FestivalAudience Award, Best Narrative FeatureAny Day NowWon
2012Audience AwardAny Day NowWon
2012OutfestAudience AwardAny Day NowWon
2012Audience Award; Golden , Best Narrative FeatureAny Day NowWon
2013GLAAD Media AwardsOutstanding Film ()Any Day NowWon

Critical reception and contributions to cinema

Fine's directorial works, primarily independent dramas addressing social marginalization, have elicited polarized responses from critics, with praise for authentic emotional portrayals often tempered by accusations of manipulative storytelling or overly didactic approaches. His 2012 film Any Day Now, a custody battle drama centered on a gay couple and a child with , premiered at the Film Festival on April 20, 2012, where it secured the Jury Award for Best Narrative Feature, reflecting audience appreciation for its period authenticity and performances by and Garrett Dillahunt. However, reviews highlighted its formulaic structure; critiqued Fine for undertrusting audiences through excessive narrative nudging, while ARTS ATL deemed it predictable and lacking edge despite endearing elements. Subsequent projects like the 2020 anthology Two Eyes, comprising three interconnected stories on , , and LGBTQ+ experiences, fared better in niche outlets attuned to its thematic focus, earning acclaim for Fine's ambitious editing and narrative weaving that fostered emotional resonance without overt preachiness. Critics noted its inclusive character development and avoidance of , positioning it as a sophisticated that elevated indie storytelling through visual and thematic cohesion. Earlier efforts, such as the 2007 thriller The Girl in the Park, received scant critical notice amid limited distribution, underscoring Fine's challenges in securing mainstream visibility for low-budget productions. Fine's contributions lie in his self-contained indie model—writing, directing, producing, and editing films that confront underrepresented narratives, particularly around LGBTQ+ rights and familial bonds amid societal prejudice, often drawing from historical precedents like the real-life custody case inspiring Any Day Now. By prioritizing provocative material over commercial appeal, he has sustained a niche output that amplifies causal links between legal discrimination and personal trauma, as evidenced in Any Day Now's basis in George Arthur Bloom's 1982 screenplay rooted in 1970s events. This approach, while not revolutionizing cinema, bolsters independent cinema's role in documenting overlooked civil rights struggles, with Fine's hands-on involvement ensuring thematic fidelity over polished spectacle.

Filmography

As actor

Travis Fine's acting career primarily spanned the late to early , with a breakthrough role as the mute Ike McSwain on the television series , where he appeared from 1989 to 1991. In this Western drama, Fine's character communicated via , portraying a resilient rider orphaned and rendered speechless by trauma. His film debut came in (1991), playing Cadet Lt. Col. Brett C. Shelton, a military school student in the horror franchise. Fine followed with the role of James "Moog" Upchurch in the true-crime miniseries (1992), depicting a convicted murderer in the murder case. Notable film appearances include Pvt. Weld in Terrence Malick's war epic The Thin Red Line (1998) and Nurse John in (1999), supporting and in the psychiatric hospital drama. He played Jan in the comedy Tomcats (2001) and Buddy in the independent film Jack the Dog (2001). Earlier television work encompassed guest spots such as Rick Schoenfeld in They've Taken Our Children: The Chowchilla Kidnapping Story (1993) and Harry Paine in the adaptation My Antonia (1995). Later credits include Tim Whitman on and appearances on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.
YearTitleRole
1989–1991 (TV series)Ike McSwain
1991Cadet Lt. Col. Brett C. Shelton
1992 (TV miniseries)James "Moog" Upchurch
1993They've Taken Our Children: The Chowchilla Kidnapping Story (TV movie)Rick Schoenfeld
1995My Antonia (TV movie)Harry Paine
1998The Thin Red LinePvt. Weld
1999Nurse John
2001TomcatsJan
2001Jack the DogBuddy

As director and producer

Fine's debut as writer, producer, director, and editor, (2011), premiered at the Film Festival in 2010 and centers on an emotionally distant (Melissa Leo) who encounters a young Muslim boy (Anthony Keyvan) amid the events of , 2001. The film earned a Special Jury Award for Leo's performance at and was acquired by for broadcast on the 10th anniversary of the attacks. In 2012, Fine directed Any Day Now, rewriting an original screenplay by George Arthur Bloom from the early , depicting a gay couple ( and ) in 1970s fighting for custody of an abandoned teenager with (Isaac Leyva). The film secured over 20 festival awards, including audience prizes at , , and , and the 2013 for Outstanding Film (Wide Release). Fine wrote and directed Two Eyes (2020), an anthology film interweaving three narratives—a 19th-century blind inventor (Benjamin Rigby), a present-day Native American man (Kiowa Gordon), and a transgender teenager (Ryan Cassata)—exploring themes of marginalization and self-discovery across eras. The project premiered at LGBTQ+ festivals, earning accolades for its inclusive storytelling and visual style. Earlier, Fine produced and directed the short film The Others using actors from the Beverly Hills Playhouse, marking his initial foray into independent production. His work as director and producer consistently focuses on independent dramas addressing social outsiders, often drawing from historical or contemporary injustices.

References

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