Wiki 24
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{{sidebar | image =
 
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{{sidebar
| name = 13 January 1956
 
 
| image =
| birthplace = Cleveland, Ohio, USA
 
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| name = Dwight Little
| birthdate = 1958
 
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| born = Dwight Hubbard Little<br>{{d|January|13|1956}}<br>Cleveland, Ohio, USA
 
| role = Director}}
 
| role = Director}}
   
'''Dwight Little''' was a director on ''[[24]]''. He attended the Film School at the University of Southern California.
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'''Dwight Hubbard Little''' {{born|January|13|1956}} was a director on ''[[24]]''. He attended the Film School at the University of Southern California.
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== Biography and career ==
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Dwight Little was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He attended the Film School at the University of Southern California. His senior thesis project, "Americano," earned him several awards, including the Focus Film Festival's top prize.
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Through his career, Little has directed films like ''Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers'', ''Marked for Death'' (with [[Tom Wright]]), ''Rapid Fire'' (with [[Powers Boothe]], [[Al Leong]], [[Carl Ciarfalio]], [[Francois Chau]], and [[Tzi Ma]]), ''Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home'' (with [[Michael Madsen]], [[Jayne Atkinson]], [[Al Sapienza]], [[Mykelti Williamson]], and [[Neal Matarazzo]]), ''Murder at 1600'' (with Wright, [[Tate Donovan]], [[Harris Yulin]], and [[Douglas O'Keeffe]]) and ''Tekken'' (with [[Ian Anthony Dale]] and [[Tamlyn Tomita]]).
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Since the 2000s, Little has focused more on a career in TV. Some of the shows, he has directed are ''The Practice'' (with [[Silas Weir Mitchell]]), ''The X-Files'' (with [[Scott Paulin]]), ''Millennium'' (with [[Glenn Morshower]]), ''Prison Break'' (with [[Wade Williams]]), ''Castle'' (with [[Stana Katic]] and [[Julian Sands]]), ''Dollhouse'' (with [[Harry Lennix]]), ''Nikita'' (with [[John Billingsley]]), ''Drop Dead Diva'' (with [[Steven Culp]]), ''Scorpion'' (with [[Derrick McMillon]] and [[Chris Mulkey]]), and ''Sleepy Hollow'' (with [[John Noble]]).
   
 
==''24''-related work==
 
==''24''-related work==
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===Episodes directed===
 
===Episodes directed===
   
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* {{ep|5x19}}
* "[[Day 5: 1:00am-2:00am]]"
 
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* {{ep|5x20}}
* "[[Day 5: 2:00am-3:00am]]"
 
   
 
== External links==
 
== External links==
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* [http://dwightlittledirector.com/ Official website]
 
* {{IMDb-link|page=nm0514546}}
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* {{wp|Dwight H. Little}}
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* {{Imdb|name/nm0514546}}
 
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* {{Tw|Little4Dwight}}
   
 
{{Director}}
 
{{Director}}
   
[[Category:Crew|Little, Dwight]]
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Little, Dwight}}
[[Category:Directors|Little, Dwight]]
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[[Category:Crew]]
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[[Category:Directors]]
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[[Category:Season 5 crew]]

Latest revision as of 13:41, 13 January 2019

This article's subject relates to Season 5 of 24.This is a production article written from an out-of-universe perspective

Dwight Hubbard Little (born January 13, 1956; age 68) was a director on 24. He attended the Film School at the University of Southern California.

Biography and career[]

Dwight Little was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He attended the Film School at the University of Southern California. His senior thesis project, "Americano," earned him several awards, including the Focus Film Festival's top prize.

Through his career, Little has directed films like Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, Marked for Death (with Tom Wright), Rapid Fire (with Powers Boothe, Al Leong, Carl Ciarfalio, Francois Chau, and Tzi Ma), Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home (with Michael Madsen, Jayne Atkinson, Al Sapienza, Mykelti Williamson, and Neal Matarazzo), Murder at 1600 (with Wright, Tate Donovan, Harris Yulin, and Douglas O'Keeffe) and Tekken (with Ian Anthony Dale and Tamlyn Tomita).

Since the 2000s, Little has focused more on a career in TV. Some of the shows, he has directed are The Practice (with Silas Weir Mitchell), The X-Files (with Scott Paulin), Millennium (with Glenn Morshower), Prison Break (with Wade Williams), Castle (with Stana Katic and Julian Sands), Dollhouse (with Harry Lennix), Nikita (with John Billingsley), Drop Dead Diva (with Steven Culp), Scorpion (with Derrick McMillon and Chris Mulkey), and Sleepy Hollow (with John Noble).

24-related work[]

Episodes directed[]

External links[]