Tom was born Thomas James Shaker on August 13, 1952 to Mary Katherine Christopher Shaker (daughter of Italian immigrants) and Mitchell Francis Shaker (son of Lebanese immigrants) in the town of Niles, Ohio. He is the fifth of eight children. He scored the lead role in his kindergarten play "Frosty the Snowman" and never looked back. Throughout his 12-year parochial education, Tom mixed high academic marks with countless arts, sports and student government activities. This culminated with his becoming a participant, then counselor and finally consultant to the National Association of Student Councils (NASC) and its affiliates in Ohio (OASC) and Pennsylvania (PASC). He continued these activities as he prepared for undergraduate school. Entering Kent State University in September 1970, Tom immediately became involved with activities surrounding the tragic campus shootings the previous May 4. He was a founding member of the Candlelight Vigil Committee and continued to work with the Centre for Peaceful Change. From 1970-74, Tom produced many theatrical works off campus while performing in university theatre department plays. He was inducted into three honoraries and given the Senior Service Award. Tom graduated with countless student activity, government and arts credits highlighted by his work as publisher for the Chestnut Burr Yearbook and Kent Stater Campus Newspaper. Tom earned his AEA Actors' Equity Association card (the union for professional stage actors) in the summer of 1974 as the third cowboy from the left in "Oklahoma" and the fourth Buddhist from the right in "The King and I". He was accepted to Akron University Law School, attending in the fall of 1974. But, the draw to the arts was too strong and he left law school to continue his main pursuit, the stage. Tom spent 1975 as a teaching consultant for the Portage County schools, filming and coaching teachers on classroom presentation and speaking techniques. He began his Masters Degree program at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, autumn, 1976. Again Tom graduated with high marks and a series of honors in spring, 1978, most notably serving as President of the Michigan Union. Tom simultaneously spent those years in Ann Arbor battling Hodgkin's disease, a form of lymphatic cancer that warranted his regular sessions of MOPP chemotherapy throughout his academic tenure at the U of M. With diploma in hand and a clean bill of health, Tom moved to Detroit and spent twelve years distinguishing himself as an actor, director, producer and Edu-tainer. He earned union membership in Screens Actors Guild (SAG) and the American Federation of Television and Radio Announcers (AFTRA). His countless commercial, industrial and film credits included national spots for General Motors, the voice for Cadillac and a role in Beverly Hills Cop with Eddie Murphy. He also formed his production company, staged dozens of musicals including Fiddler on The Roof, West Side Story, Guys and Dolls, Oklahoma...and toured schools with creative interpretations of classic works from Shakespeare to Aesop to Dickens. His edu-tainment company created an improvisational concept called story-building where student stories and ideas were brought to life before the entire school assembly of their peers, thus building creative writing interest, literacy skills and self-esteem. He even developed a school outreach program for McDonalds Corporation and actually portrayed the character "Ronald McDonald" for the dozen years he spent in Detroit. He also served as a board member for The Ronald McDonald Houses (RMC) in both Ann Arbor and Detroit and was a consultant to Ronald McDonald Children's Charities (RMCC) at Hamburger University in Oakbrook, Illinois. New York had always been beckoning. In 1991, Tom moved to NYC and spent another decade in countless film, television, theatre and edu-tainment projects. Productions included Law and Order, Ransom, 15 Minutes, Die Hard III and a critically acclaimed showcase of his original musical "Birdsville", (adapted from the Aristophanes farce), staged at the Kauffman Theatre on 42nd Street. In 2000, Tom traveled to Rome, Italy in search of his Italian heritage. A two-week vacation turned into a change of continents and he is now a dual citizen commuting between The Eternal City and The Big Apple.He is Dottore Shaker in Italy, Director of Performing and Visual Arts Education, consulting at Sapienza Roma I University and Link Campus University. He is also a member of the USO committee in Rome and has served as past president of the American International Club of Rome (AICR).He has spent countless hours on various sets and sound stages including Cinecitta, "Hollywood on the Tiber". Mel Gibson selected Tom for the roll of "Eyepatch" in The Passion of the Christ.Recently, the Cinecitta Jerusalem of Gibson became the Roman Forum for HBO and Tom was cast for recurring appearances in the drama mini-series, Rome. He is the Court Lictor in the episode titled Spoils.In Italy, Tom is writing his book, At Home in Rome, scouting for his documentary film, Kissa Grandp,a and producing/singing an album of new jazz standards with his band Tom and the Cats, featuring the tune Italiano-Americano. He has produced and recorded the album, Giggin' with God, in the Vatican studios. Tom has also completed principal photography for the first fifteen episodes of his international media project, Where in the World with Tom Shaker, Rome 360, the Churches.In Paris, France, Tom co-wrote, shot and starred in the TV series, Forget About It (Fugedaboudit), the story of a bar/diner owner and his screwy clientèle. The show was accepted and showcase at the Hollywood Film Festival in December 2012.Presently, Tom and his Florida partners are building a full-service, per-to-post, production facility in Boca Raton. The umbrella non-profit corporation Tom heads, Garage Gallery Group (G3), hosts his international LLC, The 3 Amici Production Studios inside a 16,000-foot warehouse operated by G3.Works in Progress include: . Post Production, Rome 360, Season I . Pre Production, Season II, Rome 360, March 2013 . Episode and distribution development for Forget About It . Scripting the premier episode of reality show, Garage Gallery . Developing a co-production, HungAry for America with the Hungarian department of tourismFinally, Tom keeps busy in Italy lecture-guiding friends, colleagues and referrals around the entire boot and islands.
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