- Joe Cucinotti was born on November 4th, 1977 in Rochester, NY.
He moved to Allen, TX (a small suburb of Dallas) in 1990 where he developed an interest in theatre and began performing in school plays and talent shows.
In 1995, after winning an award for "Outstanding Performance" in the role of Eddie McCuen in "The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940" at the Texas State Thespian Convention, Mike Tomas of the Tomas Agency in Dallas, TX signed on to represent Joe Cucinotti.
Joe was cast as Skyhook in the live action film "The Space Kidettes", based on the 1966 Hanna-Barbera animated TV show. Due to contract and budgetary reasons, filming was halted and the project never completed.
In 1999, Joe Cucinotti played the role of "Mark", one of the principal cast, in a low-budget superhero movie called "Roach Man".
He has done "extra" work in films like 1998's "Armageddon" and 2002's "Serving Sara". Joe has also appeared on several episodes of "Walker, Texas Ranger" and its spin-off pilot "Sons of Thunder".
From 1997 - 2018, Joe Cucinotti worked in the Dallas radio market under the on-air name of "Joe Kelly".
As of 2018, Joe is living in Dallas, TX with his wife, Sara, and daughter, Harper (named after Harper Lee). He co-hosts a weekly podcast about movies called "The Editing Bay" and does voice-over work at FUNimation for a number of shows like, "Interviews with Monster Girls", "The Saga of Tanya the Evil", "Knights & Magic" and "Hakata Tonkotsu Ramens".- IMDb Mini Biography By: Joe Cucinotti
- Joe Cucinotti wrote, directed and self-produced a stage-adaptation of Alan Moore's "Batman: The Killing Joke" in March of 2013 at the Cox Building Playhouse in Plano, TX. Due to popular demand, the show was re-staged in June of 2016 at the Margo Jones Theater at Fair Park in Dallas, TX - crowdfunded at 275% of their goal and paired with an original piece called "Batgirl: The First Lesson" which explored, more deeply, the beginnings of Barbara Gordon as Batgirl.
- Joe Cucinotti once wrote an e-mail to Bruce Campbell, which was later used as part of the heading for Chapter 40 in Campbell's book, "If Chins Could Kill: Confessions of a B Movie Actor".
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