Mark Falvo(I)
- Actor
- Additional Crew
Mark Falvo was born in Boston to Carl and Thelma Falvo. After bouncing
around Western and Northeest Pennsylvania, the family settled in Northwest
Pa. where Carl Falvo became general manager of a radio station. Mark
started working at the radio station when he was 13 doing everything
from emptying the garbage cans to on-air broadcasting, including news
and sporting events. Mark was very athletic in school, however, after a
sports injury sidelined his sports career he became very interested in
the arts. He developed his artistic side painting in acrylics,
watercolors, pen and ink, oils, winning several local juried art shows.
At the same time, he was also writing short stories and experimenting
with acting and the inner workings of the movie industry. Mark
graduated from Penn State and worked in radio - selling advertising,
doing voice-overs and writing copy. He also began his modeling career
in print and local television commercials. Shortly thereafter, he was
accepted into law school and three years later graduated from Ohio
Northern Law School. While attending law school, Mark was hired by the
theater department to develop campaigns, and promote and advertise
theatrical productions. He was also the house manager and became a
mainstay in the theater department.
law, he continued to write copy and announce sporting events on the
radio for his father at night. Mark was also very involved in the
community, coaching several sports and volunteering for several
organizations. He was chairman of the Young Lawyers Division of the
local bar association. During this time, Mark used his expertise in
broadcasting, media and his coaching skills and applied everything to
the organizations he was involved in, but mostly toward his bar
association duties. In 2001-2002, all of Mark's efforts came together
when he created a program called "Legal Eagles." The program, which
brought professionals from various fields into the school districts to
speak with the students, became recognized locally, by the state and
nationally earning him accolades from various governors of Pennsylvania
and two former U.S. presidents (Clinton and Bush). The American Bar
Association ranked the program in the top 10 of public service
programs in the 50 states in all U.S. Territories. The program
continues today but on a limited basis due to Mark investing more time
into his creative ventures - photography for the local newspaper,
acting (locally and throughout the mid-Atlantic states), working as an
extra in educational films, feature films and made-for-TV movies. Mark's younger brother, passed away in 2017.