
Frank Collison
Acting
Born 1950-02-14 · Evanston, Illinois, USA
Frank Collison (born February 14, 1950) is an American actor. Trained at the American Conservatory Theatre in San Francisco, he earned his BA in theatre at San Francisco State University and helped establish a summer theatre company in the Sierra Nevadas then went on to earn an MFA in acting at UC San Diego. Before Collison began his professional career in acting, he worked as a forest fire fighter, diaper service dispatcher and substitute teacher. Appearing in over 150 productions, Collison has worked off Broadway and in regional theaters in Boston, Denver and California. His theatrical roles have ranged from "Puck" in Midsummer's Nights Dream to "Miss Havisham" in Great Expectations to "Jacob Marley" in Christmas Carol. Frank is a founding member of Pacific Resident Theatre in Venice, California, which has won over 25 Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Awards. Collison began his film and television career when he moved to Los Angeles in 1984. He is perhaps best known as "Horace Bing," the hapless telegraph operator on Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (1993) and "Wash Hogwallop" in "O Brother Where Art Thou?
Filmography

Two Yellow Lines
Nov 9, 2021

The Collector
Jan 1, 2021

Buckshot
Oct 6, 2017

The Hero
Jun 9, 2017

You're Gonna Miss Me
Jun 6, 2017

Pee-wee's Big Holiday
Mar 15, 2016

The 4th
Jan 23, 2016

L.A. Slasher
Jun 12, 2015

Grandma
Jun 4, 2015

Pirate's Code: The Adventures of Mickey Matson
Oct 16, 2014

Hitchcock
Nov 22, 2012

Radio Free Albemuth
Feb 25, 2010

Hesher
Jan 22, 2010

The Happening
Jun 11, 2008

Voodoo Moon
Jun 4, 2006

Suspect Zero
Aug 27, 2004

The Village
Jul 30, 2004

The Whole Ten Yards
Apr 7, 2004

Hidalgo
Feb 4, 2004

Hope Springs
May 9, 2003

The Majestic
Dec 21, 2001

K-PAX
Oct 26, 2001

A Crack in the Floor
Apr 24, 2001

Camouflage
Jan 9, 2001

O Brother, Where Art Thou?
Aug 30, 2000

Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman: The Movie
May 22, 1999

Buddy
Jun 6, 1997

S.F.W.
Jan 20, 1995

It Runs in the Family
Sep 23, 1994

Dead Connection
May 1, 1994