Born in the small town of Albany, Georgia, David cannot remember life without theatre.  He began his career at the age of five and never looked back.  Moving to Galveston, Texas at the age of eleven, David quickly began working nonstop in regional and summer stock theatre.  David decided to continue his theatre training at the College of Santa Fe, NM--where he fell in love with theatre history and truly noticed for the first time how all great cultures were defined by their art/theatre.  Most memorable was his Theater History teacher--Harry Richie--one of the few people ever to get a doctorate in Theatre (Yale).  By the age of eighteen, David had already begun writing--although few knew of his secret desire to not merely speak the words on stage, but write them.  Vowing never to let others read his work until he felt ready, David moved to New York pursuing an acting career. 

 
After five years of consistent if unfulfilled work as an actor, David finally decided that his writers' voice was ready to be heard, and began distributing his scripts.  Inspired by the political relevance of Tony Kushner, the theatricality of Shakespeare, and the humor of Chekhov, David worked on honing his own voice in modern theater.  Always drawn to generational fluxes and the inability of people to tell/see the truth, David found his passion of the dual nature of the personal and social psyche.  His first staged play, Folie A Deux, examined how easily a society is prepared to minimize the level and intensity of crime and downplay the horror of an act.  Almost immediately, people began to be excited about his plays, and as they began getting produced, the acting career fell to the wayside. 
 
David continues to live and work in NYC, and hopes that slowly, his plays will reach a greater audience.