David Moscow made his big screen debut back in 1988 as young Josh in the hit comedy Big, he would amazingly become Tom Hanks overnight.
So his role was brief, just the beginning and the end of the film but FemaleFirst asks where is David Moscow now?
He has worked steadily since his debut back at the end of the nineties mixing some movie role with a string of television shows. The Wizard of Loneliness was next for the young actor before he returned to television
He appeared in Live-In which followed a family that take in an Australian nanny before moving on to Living Dolls, which was a spin off of Who's The Boss? about young models.
Disney's Newsies was next in 1992. When Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst raise the distribution price one-tenth of a cent per paper, ten cents per hundred, the newsboys, poor enough already, are outraged.
Inspired by the strike put on by the trolley workers, Jack "Cowboy" Kelly (Christian Bale) organizes a newsboys' strike. With David Jacobs (David Moscow) as the brains of the new union, and Jack as the voice, the weak and oppressed found the strength to band together and challenge the powerful.
Then Moscow disappeared until 1997 when he resurfaced in Hurricane Streets as a drug dealer before taking a starring role on River Red as Tom Holden who takes the fall for his older brother who had killed their abusive father.
Despite all of this work his career wasn't really going anywhere. However it was his 1999 TV part in Zoe, Duncan, Jack & Jane, as Duncan, that propelled him to the level of fame he enjoyed when Big was released.
More recently Moscow has continued to work between TV and film appearing in Numbers and Crash and Burn as well as Misconceptions and The Promotion.
Later this year he is set to star in Vacancy 2: The First Cut and Dead Air is currently in post production.
FemaleFirst Helen Earnshaw