While earning his
Bachelor of Arts in English from Hamilton College, he was able to meet, study, and work with
Nat Boxer, one of
Francis Ford Coppola's favorite technicians, then at Hamilton's sister school Kirkland College. While still in school, Fred produced and directed several short films, one of which, ''A Winter's Tale'', was screened at the
Cannes Film Festival. After producing and directing several short drama films for the Communications Office of the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo (one of which,
A Midnight Clear, won a Gabriel Award), they asked him to develop and direct a feature-length film for local television entitled
Skeleton Key. Following the success of that endeavor and due to a connection made at college with the author Natalie Babbitt, Fred produced and directed the original film based on her book
Tuck Everlasting. He followed that up with another Babbitt adaptation,
The Eyes of the Amaryllis. His third independently produced and directed film was
Vamping, starring
Patrick Duffy. Partly due to the success of these films, especially the Babbitt films for young audiences, Fred was engaged to direct half of the episodes for Nickelodeon's first sitcom,
Hey Dude, shot entirely on location in Tucson, AZ. The directing of over 200 hours of television followed, including multiple episodes of
New York Undercover,
The Pretender,
House,
24,
CSI: Miami,
Boomtown,
Numb3rs,
Life and
Blue Bloods. He had also been either the producer or supervising producer on a number of shows, including
The Pretender,
Boomtown and
Blue Bloods. He returned to short form with the pilot for the series
Weight, which won the 2016 WGA Award for Short Form New Media-Original. His current project,
The Cartoonist, is a feature-length mystery thriller set during the Cannes Film Festival, which will be filmed on the Côte d’Azur in collaboration with the Paris-based production company Pistoleros. In addition to his film and television career, Keller also directed numerous plays and two operas. Keller died in Los Angeles on January 26, 2026, at the age of 75. ==References==