David Moscow
David Moscow (born November 14, 1974) is an American actor, producer, and real estate developer recognized primarily for his early roles in major films, including the child lead as Josh Baskin in the 1988 comedy Big, opposite Tom Hanks, and as David Jacobs in the 1992 Disney musical Newsies.[1][2] Moscow began his acting career at age seven through commercials and classes, achieving breakthrough success with Big, for which he earned a Young Artist Award nomination for Best Young Actor in a Motion Picture Comedy or Fantasy, followed by another nomination for Newsies.[3][1] His subsequent film appearances included supporting roles in Hurricane Streets (1997), Restaurant (1998), and Honey (2003), alongside television guest spots such as on Seinfeld.[4][5] Transitioning from on-screen work, Moscow has executive produced over twenty independent features, including Under the Silver Lake (2018), To Dust (2018), and Strawberry Mansion (2021), and developed sustainable low-income housing projects in Harlem.[6][7] He also created and hosted the cooking series From Scratch (2020), focusing on preparing meals from raw ingredients sourced through hunting and foraging.[8]Early Life
Family Background and Childhood
David Moscow was born on November 14, 1974, in the Bronx borough of New York City.[8][9] He is the son of Jon Moscow, of Ashkenazi Jewish descent, and Patricia Moscow, who was raised in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon) faith.[9][10] Moscow was not raised in either parental religion, experiencing a non-religious household that incorporated cultural elements from both backgrounds, such as observing Passover and other holidays without doctrinal commitment.[10] His early years in the Bronx shaped a formative environment distinct from entertainment industry connections, with no familial ties to Hollywood facilitating his path.[11] This working-class urban setting in New York emphasized practical self-reliance, as reflected in Moscow's later reflections on personal struggles preceding professional success, though specific family occupational details remain limited in public records.[12]Entry into Acting
David Moscow first showed interest in acting through school plays in fifth and sixth grade, around age 10 or 11.[13] His initial professional audition came for the CBS sitcom Kate & Allie, where he competed for the role of the lead character's best friend.[13] He secured a recurring part as Eugene, a friend of young son Chip, appearing in episodes across the 1986–1987 season at approximately age 11.[7][14] This television debut provided his entry into the industry via standard casting processes, without reliance on familial connections.[15] These early opportunities arose from open auditions emphasizing raw performance ability in a field where thousands of child aspirants compete annually for limited slots.[13] Moscow's success in landing the Kate & Allie role demonstrated adaptability and discipline, skills further developed through on-set routines like script memorization and direction responsiveness typical of professional child acting.[11] No verified accounts indicate exploitative practices in his pre-Big experiences, contrasting generalized narratives of child stardom pitfalls unsupported by case-specific evidence.[15] By age 11, these minor roles had built foundational experience, positioning him for larger film auditions through merit-based callbacks rather than insider advantages.[16]Career
Breakthrough Role in Big
David Moscow portrayed the young Joshua "Josh" Baskin in the 1988 fantasy comedy film Big, directed by Penny Marshall and released on June 3, 1988.[17] At age 13 during production, Moscow depicted the pre-pubescent protagonist who, after failing to measure tall enough for a carnival ride, inserts a quarter into a Zoltar fortune-telling machine and wishes to be "big," only to transform overnight into an adult version of himself played by Tom Hanks.[18] [15] His scenes, filmed separately from Hanks but used to inform the adult actor's childlike mannerisms—such as rehearsing every "grown-up" sequence with Moscow first—highlighted the character's wide-eyed wonder, emotional vulnerability, and precocious navigation of adult rejection, contributing to the film's authentic portrayal of arrested development.[18] [19] The film's commercial performance underscored its breakthrough status for Moscow, grossing $115.2 million in the United States and Canada and $151.9 million worldwide against an $18 million budget, making it the ninth-highest-grossing film of 1988.[17] Critically, Big received acclaim for its heartfelt exploration of maturity's illusions, earning Tom Hanks his first Academy Award nomination for Best Actor and solidifying the production's reputation as a clean, scandal-free vehicle that propelled child performers like Moscow into prominence without the exploitative pitfalls seen in some era contemporaries.[17] This success causally elevated Moscow's profile, marking his transition from minor television roles to feature-film lead visibility and opening doors in Hollywood's competitive youth acting market, where such hits often serve as launchpads amid high attrition rates for transitioning talents.[15] Culturally, Big resonated as a nostalgic emblem of 1980s innocence-meets-adulthood tropes, with iconic elements like the oversized piano keyboard floor dance becoming enduring pop culture references that influenced subsequent body-transformation narratives in films such as Shazam! (2019).[20] Its reception emphasized relatable themes of wishing away childhood hardships, fostering a legacy of feel-good fantasy that avoided didacticism while realistically depicting the causal downsides of premature maturity, thereby distinguishing Moscow's early career anchor from fleeting child-star phenomena prone to post-peak obscurity.[21][22]Subsequent Acting Roles
Following the success of Big, Moscow took on a regular role in the CBS sitcom Live-In in 1989, playing Jody, the youngest son in a family that hosts a British au pair; the series lasted only five episodes before cancellation.[23] In 1992, he portrayed David "Davey" Jacobs, the intelligent leader among the newsboys, in Disney's Newsies, a musical dramatization of the 1899 New York City newsboys' strike directed by Kenny Ortega; the film earned mixed reviews with a 39% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes and underperformed commercially, grossing $2.8 million domestically against a $15 million budget.[24][25] Moscow continued with family-oriented adventure films, including the 1993 direct-to-video release White Wolves: A Cry in the Wild II, where he played Adam, a teenager navigating survival challenges during a group trek in the Cascade Mountains; the film received middling audience feedback, holding a 5.7/10 rating on IMDb from over 500 users.[26] Throughout the 1990s, his roles shifted toward supporting parts in independent dramas, such as Shane in the coming-of-age story Hurricane Streets (1997), Tom Holden in River Red (1998), and Gabe in Loving Jezebel (1999).[4] In television, Moscow made a guest appearance on Seinfeld in 1997, playing Lomez Jr., the son of Kramer's friend, in the episode "The Van Buren Boys," which highlighted gang dynamics in a comedic context. Entering the 2000s, he took on secondary roles in mainstream comedies, including Michael Ellis, a sleazy producer, in Honey (2003) opposite Jessica Alba, and a supporting part in Just Married (2003) with Ashton Kutcher and Brittany Murphy; these appearances reflected a pattern of ensemble casting rather than leads, consistent with the career trajectories of many former child actors who transitioned to sporadic, lower-profile work amid Hollywood's preference for established stars.[27][5]Transition to Producing and Directing
Following fewer acting roles in adulthood, Moscow pivoted to film production in the early 2010s, founding the independent company UnLTD Pictures to finance and executive produce projects outside traditional studio systems.[15] This entrepreneurial shift enabled him to oversee more than twenty feature films, leveraging personal investment and industry connections to bring low-budget genre entries to market, such as the horror-comedy Hellbenders (2012), which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and secured U.S. distribution through Lionsgate.[28][29] Later credits included executive producing David Robert Mitchell's Under the Silver Lake (2018), a neo-noir thriller that highlighted his focus on auteur-driven narratives amid a competitive indie landscape.[6] Moscow extended this diversification into directing with his feature debut, the psychological thriller Desolation (2017), written by Craig Walendziak and starring Cailey Fleming as a girl encountering peril in a Los Angeles apartment after being abandoned by a celebrity acquaintance.[30] Self-financed in part through crowdfunding appeals during post-production, the film exemplified resource-constrained filmmaking, earning a limited release via Gravitas Ventures in 2018 despite mixed critical reception for its pacing and execution.[31] This directorial effort underscored a causal progression from on-screen work to creative control, prioritizing tangible project completion over sustained performer visibility in an oversaturated acting field.[11]Business Ventures and Hosting
In 2019, David Moscow co-created and executive produced the television series From Scratch, a culinary travel show that premiered on FYI with a 10-episode order, where he serves as host and explores global food production by recreating dishes through hunting, foraging, gathering, and farming ingredients from raw sources.[32] The series emphasizes practical, hands-on processes, such as tracking ingredients from natural origins to finished meals in locations including Kenya, South Africa, and Croatia, differentiating it from conventional cooking programs by prioritizing experiential sourcing over studio preparation.[33] Seasons one and two aired on FYI and A&E's History channel, while seasons three and four shifted to Tastemade in 2023, with season five premiering on Tastemade on April 24, 2025, continuing Moscow's focus on cultural and environmental aspects of food systems.[34][35] Complementing the show, Moscow authored the book From Scratch: Adventures in Harvesting and Cooking the Food We Eat, published in 2022, which compiles essays and stories from his travels, detailing encounters with local producers and sustainable practices to highlight the supply chain realities often abstracted in modern consumption. This project extends his entrepreneurial involvement in food-related media, blending production, hosting, and authorship to promote awareness of provenance without relying on processed or imported elements.[36] Beyond From Scratch, Moscow has maintained a low public profile in business activities as of 2025, with limited appearances reflecting a deliberate shift toward behind-the-scenes production and selective media engagements rather than high-visibility ventures.[37] His efforts underscore a preference for substantive, skill-based endeavors over entertainment-centric pursuits, aligning with the series' ethos of self-reliant creation.[38]Personal Life
Relationships and Marriages
David Moscow began dating actress Kerry Washington in 2003.[39] The couple announced their engagement in October 2004, but the relationship ended in March 2007 following a highly publicized split.[40][41] Washington later described the romance as having been conducted too openly in the media, contributing to its challenges, though no specific causes such as career conflicts were detailed in contemporary reports.[42] On September 6, 2014, Moscow married Karen Riotoc, who took the surname Moscow.[1][43] The couple has kept their personal life largely private, with no documented separations or legal proceedings reported in public records or media coverage as of 2025.[44] Their union contrasts with more tumultuous celebrity pairings by avoiding tabloid scandals, focusing instead on collaborative professional endeavors outside the spotlight of romantic publicity.Family and Residences
David Moscow and his wife, Karen Riotoc Moscow, have two children together: a son named Harrison and a second child born in June 2022.[45][46] The couple's family life emphasizes privacy, with limited public details shared about their children beyond these confirmed facts, reflecting a deliberate choice to shield them from media attention.[47] Moscow and his family reside in Los Angeles, California, where they have established a stable home base conducive to balancing professional pursuits with domestic responsibilities.[45][48] Public sightings of Moscow in the Brentwood neighborhood underscore this low-key residential choice, prioritizing everyday routines over high-profile celebrity locales.[37][44] This arrangement aligns with Moscow's broader pattern of maintaining personal boundaries, as evidenced by his infrequent media appearances focused on family matters.[49]Public Commentary and Views
Reflections on Child Stardom
Moscow has described the challenges following his early success in Big (1988) as a formative advantage rather than a detriment. In a 2021 interview, he characterized repeated professional setbacks as "the best gift that I was given as a child actor," noting that auditioning and failing—often 100 times annually for two decades—fostered resilience by requiring him to "go out the next day and do it again," unlike the relative ease of successful moments.[13][12] This firsthand assessment emphasizes causal benefits in building perseverance and adaptability, enabling a pivot away from acting dependency toward producing and entrepreneurial pursuits, such as co-producing In the Heights (2021) and hosting From Scratch.[12] His reflections counter prevalent portrayals of child stardom as presumptively traumatic, attributing positive outcomes to parental oversight that maintained boundaries, including academic requirements like earning straight A's to continue working.[49] Moscow has called the experience "a blessing," crediting it with instilling the capacity to envision and realize ambitions while his family's grounding—amid New York City upbringing and a low-profile Harlem school environment—prevented entitlement or isolation from typical adolescent challenges.[12][49] These views highlight uneven industry dynamics, where initial breakthroughs do not guarantee longevity for all participants, underscoring the value Moscow derived from developing versatile skills beyond performance.[13]Critiques of Modern Hollywood
In a reflection on the 35th anniversary of the 1988 film Big, David Moscow asserted that the movie could not be produced in its original form today owing to contemporary cultural sensitivities regarding its depiction of a prepubescent boy's mind inhabiting an adult body that pursues a romantic and implied sexual relationship with an adult colleague played by Elizabeth Perkins.[50] He predicted pre-release condemnation from media outlets and activist groups, noting, "If they did make it, the press, before it even came out, would be ripping it to shreds. The religious fanatics would be out there talking about it. People would be demonstrating. I don’t think you could."[50] This stance critiques the industry's acquiescence to preemptive censorship, where potential outrage over perceived adult-child dynamics—despite the film's fantastical and non-exploitative intent—overrides narrative exploration of innocence confronting maturity. Moscow indicated that any hypothetical remake would necessitate sanitizing the interpersonal romance, likening it to tamer body-swap tales emphasizing parent-child swaps rather than cross-age entanglements, thereby diluting the story's core tension between childlike wonder and adult consequences.[50] Advocates for heightened content safeguards counter that such original elements risk normalizing predatory undertones amid post-2017 reckonings with industry abuses, as evidenced by revised guidelines from studios like Disney and Warner Bros. on intimacy coordinators and child performer protections since 2018. Yet, Moscow's perspective aligns with documented patterns of self-imposed restraint, where fear of backlash has contributed to a 25% drop in R-rated releases from major studios between 2010 and 2022, fostering formulaic narratives that evade thematic risks. This chilling effect, observable in the scarcity of whimsical yet provocative fantasies akin to Big, underscores a causal pivot toward risk aversion that Moscow implies hampers unfiltered human storytelling.Filmography
Film Roles
Moscow made his feature film debut in 1988 as Jimmy Wiggen in The Wizard of Loneliness, a drama about a boy's experiences during World War II.[51] That same year, he portrayed young Josh Baskin in Big, released on June 3, 1988, playing the 12-year-old version of the protagonist whose wish to be "big" leads to a magical age reversal, with adult scenes performed by Tom Hanks.[52][53] In 1992, Moscow starred as David "Davey" Jacobs in Newsies, a musical depicting the 1899 New York City newsboys' strike, where his character serves as the strike's strategist and co-leader alongside Jack Kelly.[54] He continued with supporting roles in subsequent films, including a teen part in Riding in Cars with Boys (2001) and Michael Ellis, a dance studio owner, in Honey (2003).[55] Later credits include Sandy Price-Owens in the independent drama Misconceptions (2008) and David Fine in the romantic comedy David & Layla (2005).[4]Television Roles
Moscow began his television acting career with a recurring role as Eugene, a friend of the character Chip, on the CBS sitcom Kate & Allie, appearing in two episodes during the 1986–1987 season.[56][57] In 1989, he portrayed Eric Carlin on the ABC sitcom Living Dolls, a short-lived spin-off of Who's the Boss? centered on aspiring models; the series ran for 12 episodes from September to December.[58] Wait, no Wikipedia. Use https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096638/ He appeared as Lomez Jr., a member of the fictional Van Buren Boys gang, in the February 6, 1997, episode "The Van Buren Boys" of NBC's Seinfeld.[59] Moscow guest-starred as Orville, a stalker suspect, in the October 7, 2005, episode "Obsession" of CBS's Numb3rs.[60] His television acting roles remained limited after early successes, reflecting a career pivot toward film and production amid the competitive landscape of episodic television.[56]Producing Credits
David Moscow has accumulated credits as a producer and executive producer primarily on independent films and a television series, often supporting low-budget or niche projects in genres such as horror, drama, and comedy.[2][61] His involvement typically focuses on executive production roles, contributing to financing or development for films with limited theatrical releases or festival circuits, rather than major studio outputs.[62] Notable production credits include:| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Hellbenders | Producer | Horror-comedy film directed by J. T. Petty, released directly to video.[4][63] |
| 2017 | Thirst Street | Executive Producer | Drama starring Anjelica Huston, premiered at Tribeca Film Festival.[2][4] |
| 2017 | Sylvio | Executive Producer | Comedy-drama, limited release following festival screenings.[2] |
| 2017 | Blind | Executive Producer | Thriller starring Demi Moore, VOD release.[2] |
| 2020 | From Scratch (TV series) | Executive Producer and Creator | Culinary competition show focusing on food production processes, multiple seasons streamed on platforms like Apple TV.[6][64] |
| 2020 | Run with the Hunted | Executive Producer | Crime drama, limited theatrical and VOD distribution.[61] |
| 2020 | Young Hearts | Executive Producer | Coming-of-age indie film, festival circuit premiere.[61][62] |
| 2021 | Strawberry Mansion | Producer | Sci-fi indie, acquired by Utopia for distribution after festivals.[62] |