Ron is by far the most famous and, arguably, the least flea-bitten actor to come from Claygate, England. The second most famous is still currently a beagle that had a recurring on a BBC sit-com in the '70s. Always one step ahead of the law, he moved to the U.S. in 1979 to study History at U.C. Berkeley and then on to the M.F.A. Acting program at N.Y.U., spending three years of his life with such n ...
show all Ron is by far the most famous and, arguably, the least flea-bitten actor to come from Claygate, England. The second most famous is still currently a beagle that had a recurring on a BBC sit-com in the '70s. Always one step ahead of the law, he moved to the U.S. in 1979 to study History at U.C. Berkeley and then on to the M.F.A. Acting program at N.Y.U., spending three years of his life with such neurotic geniuses as Rob LaBelle, Marcia Gay Harden, Bill Mondy and Eliza Foss. He has appeared in over 60 plays, Off-Broadway, regionally and in Los Angeles, playing an assortment of characters from Nazis to lyrical guys in doublets, to IRA rebels, to pompous hotel detectives and cowboy politicians. He most recently appeared as Anton Chekhov in "Chekhov and Maria" at the Odyssey Theatre in Los Angeles, in a production that moved to the Barrow Group Theatre in NYC in July of last year. The New York Times called Ron's performance "outstanding and complex" and he agreed. In November "Chekhov and Maria" starring Ron and Gillian Brashear made it onto film, directed by the legendary Eric Till. Ron's been riding motorcycles since 1975, been a BMWMOA member since 1984, and recently became a proud member of the Iron Butt Association, riding his R1100RT from L.A. to Seattle in 17 hours. He's also a pilot working extremely methodically on his instrument rating. He owns and operates Canyon Flyer Inc., a motorcycle messenger service in Los Angeles. Somehow he's made the time to spawn two fantastic kids, Danny (b. 1995) and Sasha (b. 1997) and is married to the lovely and talented actress Holly Fulger, who gets fan mail from people in prison, and without whose support and patience none of his continued success, or potential failure, would be even remotely possible.
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