Rusty DeWees
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Rusty DeWees | |
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Born | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 15 November 1960
Occupation(s) | actor, producer and writer |
Rusty DeWees (born November 15, 1960) is an American actor, producer and writer. He works regionally in Vermont, Off-Broadway, in television, and films. He is best known for his one-man comedy show, The Logger.[1]
Early life
[edit]Rusty DeWees was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of Marilyn Mason DeWees, a homemaker and newspaper business manager, and William Wallace DeWees, a Greyhound bus driver.[2] He is the younger brother of Holly DeWees. DeWees is Dutch, meaning "the orphan". He attended Stowe High School, where he played basketball, and percussion in the school band.[2] He also performed in high school theater productions. After graduating high school DeWees, worked as a school bus driver, basketball coach, stonemason, and logger. During a town team basketball game, Champlain College coach Robert Tipson noticed him and recruited him to play basketball on the team.[3] After graduating, he worked as a gas jockey in Burlington, Vermont.
Career
[edit]DeWees acted in Burlington with Vermont Repertory Theater under the direction of Robert R. Ringer before moving to New York City in 1989 to pursue an acting career.
In New York, DeWees worked as an assistant to William J. Doyle of William Doyle Galleries, while doing commercials and movies on the side.
Known for his authentic rural appearance, DeWees appeared in the films: Black Dog, A Stranger in the Kingdom, Pieces of April, Radical Jack, Mud Season, Where the Rivers Flow North, and The Devil's Own. DeWees also appeared in Law and Order, The Cosby Mysteries, and various soap operas.
While working on the Patrick Swayze movie, Black Dog, he met the singer Meat Loaf, who gave DeWees advice on how to produce his one-man play, The Logger, a comedy in Two Ax, for which he is best known in and around New England.
DeWees has also written two books, Scrawlins, and Scrawlins Too compilations of short essays.[2]
Awards
[edit]DeWees won Best Actor at the Los Angeles Method Fest Film Festival for his role as Jerry in Mud Season.
Personal life
[edit]DeWees was raised in Stowe, Vermont, and attended the Stowe Community Church.
In addition to acting, DeWees is a musician and plays with his band, The Fellers. DeWees also races stock cars at Thunder Road Speedbowl. DeWees works with charities, Ronald McDonald House, Make-a-Wish, and Meals on Wheels. He does motivational speaking to high schools and businesses.
Filmography
[edit]The following is the Filmography by American Actor, Producer, Writer, and Comedian Rusty DeWees.
Film
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1993 | Ethan Frome | Man at Post Office | |
Where the Rivers Flow North | The Champ | ||
1996 | Diamond Run | Reece | |
1997 | Pressure Point | Local | |
1998 | Black Dog | Junior | |
My Mother's Early Lovers | Tom/Strage and Beautiful Soldier | ||
1999 | Mud Season | Jerry | |
A Stranger in the Kingdom | Harlan Kittredge | ||
2000 | Icebreaker | Timmy | |
The Newcomers | Dennis Brownbear | ||
2001 | New Port South | Janitor | |
Ordinary Sinner | Bill Parish | ||
2002 | The Year That Trembled | Local Cop | |
2003 | Pieces of April | Joy's Biker Guy | |
2004 | Mending Wall | Red | |
Senses of Place | Ethan Reed | ||
Nothing Like Dreaming | Red Morisette | ||
2006 | Disappearances | Frog Lamundy | |
2008 | Shout It Out | Jessie's Dad | |
2010 | The Sparrow and The Tigress | Jake | |
2013 | Northern Borders | Bumper Stevens | |
Before I Sleep | Nurse |
Television
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1994 | The Cosby Mysteries | Bailiff | Season 1 Episode 8: Expert Witness |
1995 | Law & Order | Leon Trapp | Season 6 Episode 5: Hot Pursuit |
1997 | Dave Randall | Season 7 Episode 11: Menace | |
2004 | Windy Acres | Lucian LaFlamme | Main Role;
7 Episodes |
References
[edit]- ^ Paula Routly. "Diamonds and Rusty – Theater – Seven Days – Vermont's Independent Voice". sevendaysvt.com. Retrieved 2017-09-06.
- ^ a b c Dewees, Rusy (2015). Scrawlins. Morrissville VT: Rusty D. Inc. ISBN 978-0971275683.
- ^ "Vermont Business Magazine". vermontbiz.com. Retrieved 2017-09-06.
External links
[edit]- Living people
- 1960 births
- Male actors from Philadelphia
- American male comedians
- Comedians from Philadelphia
- Writers from Philadelphia
- 20th-century American male actors
- 20th-century American comedians
- 20th-century American writers
- Comedians from Vermont
- Writers from Burlington, Vermont
- Male actors from Vermont
- 20th-century American male writers
- 21st-century American comedians
- Champlain College alumni
- Actors from Burlington, Vermont