Christopher Castile

Christopher Castile
Born
Christopher Jon Castile

(1980-06-15) June 15, 1980 (age 44)
OccupationActor
Years active1990–1998

Christopher Jon Castile (born June 15, 1980) is an American former actor. His well-known roles include Ted Newton in Beethoven and Beethoven's 2nd, the voice of Zachary Sellers and Nick Mulligan in Focus on the Family's Adventures in Odyssey, Mark Foster on the sitcom Step by Step, and the voice of Eugene Horowitz in Hey Arnold!.

Castile retired from acting following the cancellation of Step By Step. He received a master's degree, he currently teaches political science as a professor at Biola University in La Mirada, California, and is teaching at Downey High School as a U.S. History teacher.[1] His class is called Step By Step. [citation needed]

Credits

Year Title Role Notes
1990 My Two Dads Episode: "To Thine Own Elf Be True"
1990 Hurricane Sam Neil Gianelli TV movie
1990 Empty Nest Larry Episode: "Barbara the Mom"
1990 The Fanelli Boys Timmy Episode: "Tarnished Angel"
1991 Going Places Sam Roberts 3 episodes
1991 The Family Man Lowell Episode: "Trading Places"
1991–1998 Step by Step Mark Foster 160 episodes
1992 Beethoven Ted Newton
1992 Empty Nest Barry Episode: "Final Analysis"
1993 Beethoven's 2nd Ted Newton
1995 Are You Afraid of the Dark? Jason "The Tale of Prisoner's Past"
1996–1997 Hey Arnold! Eugene Horowitz (voice) 8 episodes

Awards and nominations

Young Artist Award

  • 1992: Nominated, "Best Young Actor Starring in a Television Series" – Step by Step[2]
  • 1992: Nominated, "Best Young Actor Starring in a Motion Picture" – Beethoven[2]
  • 1993: Nominated, "Outstanding Youth Ensemble in a Television Series" – Step by Step (shared w/cast)[3]
  • 1994: Nominated, "Best Performance by a Youth Ensemble in a Motion Picture" – Beethoven's 2nd (shared w/cast)[4]
  • 1996: Nominated, "Best Performance by a Young Actor in a TV Comedy Series" – Step by Step[5]

References

  1. ^ "Whatever Happened to 'Step By Step' Star Christopher Castile?". TheFW.
  2. ^ a b "Fourteenth Annual Youth in Film Awards: 1991–1992." Young Artist Award, 2012. Web. February 8, 2012 [1].
  3. ^ "Fifteenth Annual Youth in Film Awards: 1992–1993." Young Artist Award, 2012. Web. February 8, 2012 [2].
  4. ^ "Sixteenth Annual Youth in Film Awards: 1993–1994." Young Artist Award, 2012. Web. February 8, 2012 [3].
  5. ^ "Seventeenth Annual Youth in Film Awards: 1994–1995." Young Artist Award, 2012. Web. February 8, 2012 "17th Annual Awards". Archived from the original on March 17, 2011. Retrieved March 31, 2011..