Travis Scott Newman
- Actor
- Additional Crew
The youngest son of a baptist minister (William Travis Newman), who
also worked throughout his life driving city buses and taxicabs and
mother (Martha Josephine Fowler Newman), a homemaker, Travis Scott
Newman was born in Wichita Falls, Texas and grew up in the Ben Donnell
projects of the Wichita Falls Housing Authority. He attended Wichita
Falls and Burkburnett public schools and graduated in the 100th senior
class of Wichita Falls High School (1991) where he was active in
sports, theatre arts and participated in a local children's television
program, 'The Wally the Wonderdog Show'(1990-91), as host, writer and
puppeteer and also his first film, as an extra in the Peter Bogdanovich
directed, 'Texasville' (1990), the sequel to 'The Last Picture Show'
(1971), the Academy Award-winning contender for Best Picture, written
by Academy Award and Pulitzer Prize winning screenwriter/novelist Larry
McMurtry, also a Wichita Falls native. While in high school, in the
wake of Operation Desert Shield, Newman enlisted in the United States
Navy through the delayed entry program and spent the next several years
between duty stations and naval commands during Operation Desert Storm
as an Aviation Boatswain's Mate specializing in aviation firefighting
and catapult systems aboard aircraft carriers such as the USS
Enterprise (CVN-65) and, while on active-duty and soon following,
attended several colleges and universities, majoring in Business and
achieving success in the insurance, healthcare and staffing industries
but always continuing in his education and passion for film, music and
writing. In 2006, while acting on a student film, he met visual effects
artist, David Templin and director, Bradley Scott Sullivan and made a
decision to pursue acting as a career. He began acting in local theatre
productions, commercials, television and film with some success finding
smaller roles on such projects as 'Jolene' (2008), 'Live Fast, Die
Young' (2008), 'The Deep End' (2010) and was eventually cast on another
Sullivan-directed project, the critically-acclaimed low-budget horror
hit, 'I Didn't Come Here To Die' (2010), with a supporting performance
that drew rave reviews and comparisons to the likes of several
Hollywood heavyweights. He continues to find unique roles and appears
to be one of the faces of the future in the realm of television and
film. He spends time between California, Oklahoma, Louisiana and Texas.