David Ackroyd
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David Ackroyd | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1969–present |
Spouse | Ruth Liming (1963–present) |
Children | Jessica Ackroyd Abigail Ackroyd |
Parent(s) | Arthur Ackroyd Charlotte Henderson |
David Ackroyd (born May 30, 1940) is an American actor, who first came to prominence in soap operas such as The Secret Storm and Another World.
Early life
On May 30, 1940, Ackroyd was born in East Orange, New Jersey, a suburb of Newark; he moved to Wayne, New Jersey when he was 12 years old.[1][2]
Career
David Ackroyd extended his all-stage career into film and television in the early 1970s, beginning with daytime leading man outings in The Secret Storm and Another World. He progressed to prime time work as Gary Ewing in Dallas until Ted Shackelford successfully took over the role when the character moved front and center with the spin-off drama Knots Landing, though Ackroyd himself would later appear on Knots Landing as a guest star, playing a different character. Coincidentally, Shackelford's last recurring role prior to Dallas was on Another World.
His prime on-camera work occurred in the late 1970s with a series of strong co-star roles in the miniseries The Dark Secret of Harvest Home as Nick Constantine; The Word and the TV-movies And I Alone Survived and Exo-Man. He costarred in the short-lived series AfterMASH and A Peaceable Kingdom. He began to find supporting roles in such movies as The Mountain Men, Dark Angel and Xena: Warrior Princess. He voiced "John Cavanaugh/Prince Corran of Dar-Shan" in the animated series Wildfire as well as several characters in The New Yogi Bear Show, The Greatest Adventure: Stories from the Bible, The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest and The New Adventures of Captain Planet.
On Broadway, Ackroyd appeared in Unlikely Heroes, a 1971 production of three plays based on the stories of Philip Roth; and Children of a Lesser God, in which he replaced John Rubinstein as the lead character, James Leeds, in 1981. Since the late 1990s and into the 2000s, Ackroyd has narrated documentary television series like History's Mysteries and UFO Files: "Alien Engineering".[citation needed]
Ackroyd moved to Montana in 1996. In 2003, he co-founded the Alpine Theatre Project in Whitefish, a professional acting company, of which he is the Artistic Development Director. The project has featured appearances by such notable performers as Olympia Dukakis, John Lithgow and Kelli O'Hara. [citation needed]
Filmography
Actor
- The Secret Storm (1971–1974)
- Another World (1974–1977) as Dr. Dave Gilchrist
- Kojak (1975)
- Exo-Man (1977) as Dr. Nicholas Conrad / Exo-Man
- Lou Grant (1978)
- The Dark Secret of Harvest Home (1978)
- The Word (1978)
- Dallas (1978)
- And I Alone Survived (1978)
- The Paper Chase, Season 1, Episode 5: "Voices of Silence" (1978)[3]
- Women in White (1979)
- Little Women (1979)
- Mind Over Murder (1979)
- The Yeagers (1980)
- The Mountain Men (1980)
- A Gun in the House (1981)
- The Sound of Murder (1982)
- Knots Landing (1982)
- Trapper John, M.D. (1982)
- McClain's Law (1982)
- The Facts of Life (1982)
- Cocaine: One Man's Seduction (1983)
- Deadly Lessons (1983)
- Dynasty (1983)
- Whiz Kids (1983)
- When Your Lover Leaves (1983)
- AfterMASH (1983)
- The Sky's No Limit (1984)
- Hunter (1984)
- Cover Up (1984)
- Riptide (1984)
- Hardcastle and McCormick (1985)
- Picking Up the Pieces (1985)
- St. Elsewhere (1985)
- The Nativity (1986)
- Murder, she wrote, Season 2, Episode 13: "Trial by error" (1986)
- The Children of Times Square (1986)
- Stark: Mirror Image (1986)
- The Greatest Adventure: Stories from the Bible (1986)
- Wildfire (1986)
- The A-Team (1986)
- A Smoky Mountain Christmas (1986)
- Nutcracker: Money, Madness and Murder (1987)
- Tales from the Hollywood Hills: Natica Jackson (1987)
- Cagney & Lacey (1985–1987)
- Poor Little Rich Girl: The Barbara Hutton Story (1987)
- Hotel (1988)
- Windmills of the Gods (1988)
- MacGyver (1985–1988)
- Memories of Me (1988)
- Highway to Heaven (1988)
- The New Yogi Bear Show (1988)
- Studio 5-B (1989)
- A Peaceable Kingdom (1989)
- Wrestling with God (1990)
- Dark Angel (1990)
- History's Mysteries: Drake's Secret Voyage (1991)
- Hell Hath No Fury (1991)
- Stop at Nothing (1991)
- Breaking the Silence (1992)
- The Fear Inside (1992)
- The Round Table (1992)
- Dead On (1993)
- Love, Cheat & Steal (1993)
- The New Adventures of Captain Planet (1993)
- Murder, She Wrote (1986–1994)
- Against the Wall (1994)
- Fortune Hunter (1994)
- Walker, Texas Ranger (1994)
- The Cosby Mysteries (1995)
- Xena: Warrior Princess (1996)
- The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest (1996)
- No Strings Attached (1997)
- Raven (1997)
- Prison Life (2000)
Self
- In Search of History: The Heretic King (1998)
- The Mysteries of Amelia Earhart (1998)
- In Search of History: The First Americans (1998)
- History's Mysteries: The First Detective (1999)
- History's Mysteries: The Inquisition (1999)
- History's Mysteries: Chain Gangs (2000)
- History's Mysteries: Body Snatchers (2000)
- Horror or Hoax (2000)
- History's Mysteries: Ghost Plane of the Desert - Lady Be Good (2000)
- History's Mysteries: Amityville -The Haunting (2000)
- History's Mysteries: Vikings, Fury from the North (2001)
- Meteors: Fire in the Sky (2005)
- UFO Files: Alien Engineering (2006)
- In Search of History: Dragons (2006)
- The Universe (2007)
Archive footage
- Intimate Portrait (2002)
References
- ^ Denis, Paul.Daytime TV's Star Directory, p. 30. Popular Library, 1976. Accessed July 21, 2019. "David Ackroyd Personal Life: Born in East Orange, N.J., David's family (of Irish-English background) moved to Wayne, N.J., when he was 12."
- ^ "Interview with David Ackroyd". YouTube. August 7, 2017.
- ^ The Paper Chase, Season 1, Episode 5: "Voices of Silence" (YouTube)
External links
- 1940 births
- Living people
- Male actors from New Jersey
- American male soap opera actors
- American male stage actors
- American male television actors
- American male voice actors
- People from East Orange, New Jersey
- People from Wayne, New Jersey
- 20th-century American male actors
- 21st-century American male actors
- Yale School of Drama alumni