Born in rural England, David W. Ross moved to London at seventeen, after his mother died of cancer. His dream was to be involved in the budding remix culture of the early 90s. At the same time as looking for studios to record in, David sought work as a film extra and within a few months his photo was spotted by a "boy band" producer. David was signed to A&M Records U.K., as one of the four members of Bad Boys, Inc. Tours of Europe and Asia were part of the bands massive media blitz, with hundreds of live shows, magazine articles and television appearances. The group released one self-titled album, which spawned five hit singles, including the Top 10 smash, "More to this World." Realizing his creativity was going to waste David moved to Los Angeles, where he studied acting and began writing again, this time for film. He appeared in the award -winning short, "The Receipt", which won the prize for "Best Comedy" at the Los Angeles International Short Film Festival, "Sneaux", which was nominated for 6 LA Weekly theatre award s including "Best Musical", and Quinceanera (Echo Park, LA), which won the Audience award and Grand Jury Prize at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival and an Independent Spirit Award in 2007. David is also a screenwriter with his first feature I DO now filming for a 2012 release. The film stars Jamie Lynn Sigler, Alicia Witt, Maurice Compte and Grant Bowler with David playing Jack Edwards.
A gay Brit living in New York is deprived of his immigration status, and risks losing his family and life in the U.S. He marries his lesbian best friend to remain in the country and stay with his family, but things get complicated when he meets the love of his life and is forced to make an impossible choice.