Michael Raynor (actor)
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Michael Raynor | |
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Born | Michael Roy Stearn |
Occupation(s) | Actor, director, writer |
Website | www |
Michael Raynor is an American actor, director and writer. He is best known for his role as Joseph Morgan in ER, Apollo 15 Astronaut Al Worden in From the Earth to the Moon, Mick in the movie A Brother's Kiss[1] and Frank in the movie Federal Hill.
Early life
[edit]Michael Raynor was born Michael Roy Stearn in Queens, New York. He was raised on the Upper East Side of Manhattan bordering Spanish Harlem.
Later, Raynor's mother moved him to PS 6, where he was placed into the IGC program for gifted children. He went on to win a scholarship to Friends Seminary, a Quaker private school. There, he met and became best friends with Nick Chinlund, who was later his co-star in the movie A Brother's Kiss.[1]
After spending 2 years at Friends Seminary, he attended Stuyvesant High School in New York City, being accepted after taking a test similar to the SAT. As a junior, his girlfriend was Marion Grodin, daughter of actor Charles Grodin. His first experience with creative writing and storytelling was through his English teacher, Pulitzer Prize winner Frank McCourt. At Stuyvesant, Raynor was captain of the basketball team playing the position of point guard. He was also a member of Lou d'Almeida's original Gauchos Basketball team in the Rucker Tournament at Rucker Park.
Early career
[edit]Raynor attended the University of Georgia and majored in International Relations. At that time, the department was run by former Kennedy and Johnson Secretary of State, Dean Rusk. While there, Raynor won a National Award for Debate in the Model United Nations during the United Nations Conference of Trade and Development forum as the chief delegate. The University of Georgia was awarded Outstanding Delegation during the same conference.
After college, Raynor worked on the floor of the New York Mercantile Exchange in Crude Oil Options and later transferred to the Commodity Exchange doing arbitrage between New York and Chicago in precious metals, gold and silver. After Black Monday, Raynor quit his job to become the personal night time driver of Steve Rubell of Studio 54. He began studying acting and martial arts with the Grand Master Kwon as well as Shihan William Oliver, 2-time Grand Champion at Madison Square Garden. He has also done modeling for Italian jeans manufacturer, Replay.
Acting
[edit]Michael Raynor first studied acting in New York with Fred Kareman, Bobby Lewis, Wynn Handman, Tim Phillips and George Morrison.
His theater credits began in a Greenwich Village basement cabaret opposite James Gandolfini, continuing on to Off-Broadway as he originated characters and new plays for emerging New York writers.
Michael wrote and performed the hit one man show, Who is Floyd Stearn?[2] Off-Broadway to critical acclaim.
Raynor's film credits include leads in Shadow Boxing (1993), The Waiting Game (1999) (with Will Arnett), Tripfall (2000) (opposite Eric Roberts and John Ritter), The Reunion (1998), The First Man (1996) (opposite Leslie Ann Warren and Heather Graham), A Brother's Kiss (1997) (with Cathy Moriarty, Rosie Perez and John Leguizamo), Federal Hill (1994)[citation needed] (Deauville Film Festival Winner, Critics Award and Audience Award) as well as Allison Eastwood's, Rails & Ties (2007), The Pavilion (2004), Sonic Impact (2000) (with Ice-T), The Taxman (2008) (with Joe Pantoliano and Michael Chiklis), Mike Nichols’ Wolf (1994), The Advocate (2013)[3] and For the Love of Money (2012).[4]
His television work includes From the Earth to the Moon (as Apollo 15 astronaut Al Worden), Bella Mafia (opposite Jennifer Tilly), and In The Line of Duty: Hunt for Justice (opposite Nicholas Turturro, Adam Arkin and Melissa Leo), as well as guest starring roles on Criminal Minds, Castle, Southland, Law & Order: LA, Cold Case, CSI, ER, Law & Order, Shark, NYPD Blue, Brooklyn South, Brimstone, Everybody Hates Chris, and My Own Worst Enemy.[citation needed]
Directing and writing
[edit]Raynor first studied screenwriting with Robert McKee, renowned author of Story Structure, and was part of Ken Rotcop's ongoing Los Angeles Writing Workshop for several years.
Raynor developed and directed Butch Hammett's comic hit one-man show, Southern Discomfort, which was invited into the Comedy Central Stage in Los Angeles, and voted Critics Choice in Prague, Dublin and Edinburgh. He also co-wrote the screenplay version, which Chad and Carey Hayes are attached to produce.[citation needed]
In addition, Michael developed and originally staged Kathryn Graf's Surviving David, winner of Outstanding Solo Show - New York International Fringe Festival. He developed and directed Fia Perrera's Swimming Naked, and worked extensively with Jay Sefton, winner of LA Weekly's Best Actor in a Solo Play for The Most Mediocre Story Ever Told.
His screenplays include the adaptation of Mark Kriegel's award-winning novel Bless Me, Father, Proud Harry, Wilding, The Run, Dead Weight and the film adaptation of the Off-Broadway hit, Who Is Floyd Stearn?
Notable work
[edit]Who Is Floyd Stearn? was originally developed with Mark Travis.[5] First presented as a “member’s project” by Joseph Siravo at the Ensemble Studio Theatre in New York, then cut short by 9/11 after only two performances, it moved to Los Angeles and worked-shopped at TheatreTheatre as well as The Tamarind Theatre, where it ran for 24 weeks.[citation needed]
It premiered for critics in the prestigious Assembly Rooms at The Edinburgh Festival, and later opened the Edgemar Center for the Arts’ Kaleidoscope Festival in Santa Monica under Larry Moss’ direction.[citation needed]
The New York Times called Who Is Floyd Stearn? “the best family confessional play they’ve seen”[6] and The New York Post named Raynor to a "2005 Galaxy of New Stars" list[7] after the Off-Broadway run produced by his childhood friend, Rick Waxman.
The JewishJournal.com wrote an article about Who is Floyd Stearn? which painted a picture of the emotional turmoil Raynor has faced while dealing with his father's absence.[8]
Howard Stern was so moved by the production, he wrote Raynor and talked about his own relationship with his father.[9] Stern's voice is featured on the YouTube video promo talking about his view of the show and impressions of Raynor's performance.[citation needed]
Personal life
[edit]At age 13, Raynor was Bar Mitzvah'd at the Temple Emanuel on 5th Avenue in New York City Manhattan.[citation needed]
Raynor changed his name at 18 years of age from Michael Roy Stearn to Michael Raynor when he was adopted by his then stepfather, John Raynor. At that time, he had not seen or heard from his biological father, Floyd Dampsey Stearn since the age of 7.
Raynor reconnected with his paternal grandmother who was able to answer many of Raynor's questions about his father. Based on interviews with relatives and his experiences and personal anguish with his biological father, he grew up to write and act in the one man show, Who Is Floyd Stearn? which talks about his struggle to understand the mystery behind the man Floyd Stearn.
Raynor was in a long-term relationship with American actress Erica Gimpel from 1988-2004.[citation needed]
In the memoir Standing Up, by Marion Grodin, the daughter of Charles Grodin, Raynor's relationship with her is depicted in detail. Grodin and Raynor were teenage sweethearts.[citation needed]
Filmography
[edit]- Film
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
1993 | Shadow Boxing | Johnny |
1994 | Federal Hill | Frank |
1994 | Hand Gun | Raid Cop #4 |
1994 | Full Cycle | Jake |
1996 | The First Man | Jill Rosen |
1997 | A Brother's Kiss | Mick |
1998 | The Reunion | Father Michael |
1999 | The Waiting Game | Franco |
1999 | Taxman | Exon Executive |
2000 | Tripfall | Franklin Ross |
2000 | Sonic Impact | Agent Allen |
2007 | Rails & Ties | Detective Christian Fox |
2012 | For the Love of Money | Martz |
2013 | The Advocate | Detective Perkins |
- Television
Year | Title | Episode | Role |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | Law & Order | Intolerance (42/2:20) | Acuff |
1995 | In The Line of Duty: Hunt for Justice | [TV Movie] | Jimmy |
1996 | Space: Above and Beyond | Never No More (14/1:14) | Lt. Hall |
1997 | Bella Mafia | [TV Movie] | Jerry Bernstein |
1998 | Brooklyn South | Don't You Be My Valentine (16/1:16) | Johnny Rodriguez |
1998 | From the Earth to the Moon | Galileo Was Right (10) | Al Worden |
1998 | Brimstone | Encore (3/1:3) | Tim Nowack |
2000 | ER | Sand and Water (137/7:2) | Joseph Morgan |
2003 | NYPD Blue | Tranny Get Your Gun (10:15) | Randy Rupe |
2006 | Shark | Fashion Police (6/1:6) | Joe Bertelsen |
2007 | Company Man | [TV Movie] | Guard |
2007 | CSI: Crime Scene Investigation | Go To Hell (168/8:3) | Alvin Macalino |
2008 | Everybody Hates Chris | Everybody hates Being Cool (63/3:19) | FBI Agent |
2008 | My Own Worst Enemy | The Night Train to Moscow (5/1:5) | Serik Shefer |
2010 | Cold Case | Metamorphosis (148/7:14) | State Detective #2 |
2010 | Law & Order: LA | Hondo Field (6/1:6) | Vince Braden |
2011 | Southland | Discretion (16/3:3) | John Devine |
2011 | Criminal Minds | The Stranger (135/6:21) | Detective Bryce Harding |
2013 | Castle | Time Will Tell (110/6:5) | Dr. Silverman |
References
[edit]- ^ a b Ebert, Roger (October 10, 1997). "Reviews: A Brother's Kiss". RogerEbert.com.
- ^ Who is Floyd Stearn? at FloydStearnMovie.com
- ^ The Advocate at TheAdvocateMovie.com
- ^ For the Love of Money at ForTheLoveOfMoneyTheMovie.com
- ^ Write Your Life Workshop at markwtravis.com
- ^ Zinoman, Jason (November 4, 2004), "In the Head of One Man Looking for Dad", New York Times
- ^ Garvey, Marianne (January 2, 2005), "2005 Galaxy of New Stars", The New York Post
- ^ Pfefferman, Naomi (August 25, 2005), "Actor's Missing Dad Takes Center Stage", The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles
- ^ Letter from Howard Stern to Michael Raynor about Who is Floyd Stearn?, as found at FloydStearnMovie.com
External links
[edit]- Official website of Michael Raynor. Includes Biography/Filmography, photos, video and current projects
- Michael Raynor at IMDb
- Projects at LarryMoss.org, official site of Larry Moss, acting coach and director of Who Is Floyd Stearn?
- YouTube video promo Who is Floyd Stearn? featuring the voice of Howard Stern
- 1961 births
- 20th-century American male actors
- 21st-century American male actors
- Film producers from New York (state)
- American male film actors
- American male television actors
- Jewish American male actors
- Living people
- Male actors from Queens, New York
- Film directors from New York City
- Friends Seminary alumni
- Male actors from Manhattan
- People from the Upper East Side
- 21st-century American Jews