Michael Flessas
Micheal C. Flessas (born June 02,1959 in Miami, Florida), is the birth name of actor Michael Flessas. Flessas' most notable film role was "Angry Man" in the Cannes Film Festival [1] 2000 Palme d'Or winning film Dancer in the Dark [2] directed by Danish film director Lars von Trier. Originally, the director himself considered playing the role but, instead, the role was given to Flessas. Dancer in the Dark starred Icelandic singer/actress Björk who won the Best Actress award at Cannes for her role. French film icon, Cesar Award winner, and Academy Award nominee Catherine Deneuve, and other noteworthy artists such as Academy Award and Tony Award winner Joel Grey, Peter Stormare, David Morse, and Stellan Skarsgård also performed in the multiple prize winning film. One of Björk's songs for the film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Song.
An Iranian actress/director Susan Taslimi's [3] film Hus i helvete [4][5] (The film's English title: All Hell Let Loose), starring Melinda Kinnaman[6], which won the Best Feature Film prize at the Brooklyn International Film Festival 2003 [7], Flessas played the vicious pornographer "Videomannen" in a nightmarish flashback scene in the film.
Flessas also portrayed massive and deadly Russian hitman "Jurij Rostoff" in Beck - Okänd avsändare [8], a film directed by Swedish actor and director Harald Hamrell [9]. (Hamrell later received an Emmy nomination from the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for directing the Swedish television series Ramona.) Beck - Okänd avsändare was among the popular Swedish Beck detective films starring Swedish actor Peter Haber [10]. (Beck is the surname of the fictional police detective Martin Beck created by authors Maj Söwall [11] and her husband Per Wahlöö [12].) Curiosity note: As "Jurij Rostoff" Flessas weighed in at 150 kilos in the role as a result of weight training and diet; however, in his younger and less heavy years, Flessas danced in the corps de ballet of the Columbia City Ballet then under the direction of Ann Brodie (Brodie was also a founder of the Carolina Ballet [13]) in Columbia [14], South Carolina and, while a student at Dreher High School [15], Flessas was a long distance runner who won a second place medal in the high school division of the Governor's Cup Road Race in South Carolina in the then 15 mile long road race.
Although he won two scholarships in Music, Flessas changed majors and majored in Religious Studies [16] and minored in Philosophy at the University of South Carolina [17] where he met and studied under professor James S. Cutsinger [18], author and renown expert on Frithjof Schuon and religio perennis.
Flessas also gained notoriety in the mid 1990's for his creation of a now defunct website entitled "Resources for the Homeless" which was one of the first, if not the first, websites in the United States of America solely devoted to helping the homeless through individual initiative by offering the homeless relevant data on resources via one website. At the time, many poor people were being removed from Milwaukee, Wisconsin welfare rolls while many Milwaukee city officials were engaged in plans to fund and build a new multi-million dollar stadium. Flessas perceived the situation (building a new stadium while removing the poor from welfare) as an injustice to the poor. Given that libraries in Milwaukee, Wisconsin were just connecting to the World Wide Web, Flessas gathered and placed information regarding all the services available to the homeless in Milwaukee on the World Wide Web so service providers to the homeless and the homeless themselves (who often sought shelter in local libraries) had equal and rapid access to information about resources available in Milwaukee, Wisconsin via the Milwaukee County library system computer network. "Resources for the Homeless" was considered an unusual information delivery solution at the time given the new nature of the method of delivery and the biased misperception that the homeless did not and would not use computers to learn about resources available. The "Resources for the Homeless" project in Milwaukee, Wisconsin received no direct funding for it was Flessas' express purpose to show what one person with computing skills could do to help the homeless with the use of the nascent World Wide Web. The project began in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on a freenet and, later, a similar site was created with the help of a local web designer in Columbia, South Carolina. Flessas' exploits with the site were reported on television in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, WIS [19] television in Columbia, South Carolina, and in an article in Silicon Valley's San Jose Mercury News [20] newspaper.
In a newspaper article in Columbia South Carolina's The State [21] newspaper, Flessas promoted the use of e-mail in the 1990's to broadcast a demand (then akin to what is now guerrilla communication and subvertising) that thousands of potential visitors to South Carolina boycott the state's multi-million dollar tourism industry to force state government officials to remove the Confederate flag [22] from South Carolina's State House [23] dome. (Flessas, curiously enough, through his mother's side of the family, is a descendant of Elisha Jefferson "Elijah" Sutherland [24] who fought with the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War.) Social and political activism is not unknown in the Flessas Family for Flessas himself (through his father's side of the family) is also a direct descendant of Papaflessas through Papaflessas' father Demetrios Flessas.