No. 24 [1] | |
---|---|
Position | Fullback, [1] tailback [2] |
Personal information | |
Born: | January 26, 1953 71) [3] Harlan, Kentucky [3] | (age
Height | 6 ft 1 [1] in (1.85 m) |
Weight | 206 [1] lb (93 kg) |
Career history | |
College |
|
High school | Perrysburg (OH) |
Richard Hill (born January 26, 1953) is an American actor, author, and former gridiron football player. He is perhaps best known for his appearances in several films from veteran producer Roger Corman, including playing the title role in two installments of his Deathstalker series. He is also a published writer of non-fiction, having collaborated with controversial baseball figure Pete Rose on a 2004 tell-all book.
Hill was a three-sport letterman for Perrysburg High in Perrysburg, Ohio. In football, he twice won MVP honors in the Northern Lakes League, and was also a league all-star in basketball. [4] [5] He was recruited by the Georgia Tech football program, [4] but his career was plagued by injuries. [6]
Before 1972, NCAA players were required to spend a year on a freshman team before graduating to the varsity team. [7] Despite a slow start which he attributed to an ankle sprain, [8] Hill led the so-called "Baby Jackets" in ground gains, [9] in part because future College Hall of Famer Randy Rhino was moved to defense. [10] Hill's second year started slow again on a weak team, and he was redshirted partway into the season, although head coach Bill Fulcher called him "probably as good a back as we have at Tech". [11]
Hill came out strong in the 1973–74 campaign and led the team with six touchdowns by early November, when he suffered a ligament tear that took him out of action for the rest of the schedule. [12] Unsure if he would even be able to play until late into the pre-season, Hill took the field for the 1974–75 campaign [13] but was quickly sidelined with a hamstring injury. [14] He recovered and helped a rejuvenated Tech offense to several school records in the final stretch. [15] [16]
Hill was a Rhodes Scholarship nominee at Georgia Tech, from where he graduated in 1975 with a major in business. [6] [17] Thereafter, he briefly enrolled at Emory University to study law, before attempting to turn pro. Hill trained with the Detroit Lions of the NFL, but did not make the team. [6] He signed a contract with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the CFL in the spring of 1976, [18] but suffered a dislocated shoulder during the preseason and left training camp [19] with no appearance on record in the regular season. [20]
Hill's acting break came when he was scouted at a Los Angeles beach and offered the small part of a lifeguard in a production called One of a Kind. [6] The same setting begat a leading role in Beach Patrol , the 1979 pilot for a proposed Aaron Spelling series, although the show was not picked up. [21] Hill was able to capitalize on his athletic background to keep his career going: he played a college football star (albeit from Michigan) in Detour to Terror, an NBC telefilm starring and produced by O.J. Simpson, [6] [22] and had a recurring role as another football player on the daytime drama Days of Our Lives . [23] He also guest-starred as a varsity football player on an episode of Charlie's Angels , another Spelling production. [24] In 1981, he was cast in Today's FBI , a re-imagining of classic show The FBI , which ran for a single season on ABC. [17] In the later stages of his career, Hill has occasionally worked as a director of episodic television. [25]
In 1983, Hill made his theatrical debut in Deathstalker , which was part of a wave of heroic fantasy films that followed Conan The Barbarian in its wake. [26] The film was profitable for Roger Corman's New World Pictures, and Hill subsequently starred in several action films for Corman (including the third Deathstalker sequel) and his associate Cirio Santiago. [27] Hill also appeared in Warrior Queen, a film aping the Deathstalker template but made by another exploitation producer, Harry Alan Towers. In 1994, he played a secondary protagonist in the final installment of the Class of... series, Class of 1999 II . Around the same time, the actor made another push for a leading role with Immortal Soldier, an android film which he co-wrote and was to feature genre veterans Maria Conchita Alonso, Jeff Wincott, Robert Davi, Michael Ironside and Louise Fletcher. However the project, promoted by upstart Hatch Entertainment, did not materialize. [28]
In the 1980s, Hill was a member of the Hollywood All-Stars, a touring celebrity softball team raising money for various charitable causes. [29]
Early in his entertainment career, Hill expressed an interest in writing, and was working on a spec script based on his college recruiting experience. [6] A baseball fan, he wrote another about the life of Jim Eisenreich, who battled through Tourette syndrome to become a Major League player. After that one was optioned, his agent tried to pitch him as a writer for a planned biopic of Pete Rose, [30] a fellow Ohioan with whom Hill had become acquainted at a 1986 celebrity softball game. [31] While neither film projects panned out, Rose read the Eisenreich script and chose Hill to write a book about his life. In the resulting opus, My Prison Without Bars , Rose admitted to betting on MLB games for the first time, an accusation he had steadfastly denied before. [32]
In 2023, Hill published another biography, dedicated to humanitarian doctor and fellow Georgia Tech graduate G.B. Espy. [33] Hill met Espy during a public speaking engagement, and the idea of the book was suggested to him by former Tech basketball player Roger Kaiser, an admirer of the doctor's career. [34]
Note: This Rick Hill is not to be confused with several homonyms, including an Australian actor and a kickboxer who appeared in Bloodfist II for his frequent employer Roger Corman.
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | Deathstalker | Deathstalker | |
1986 | The Devastator | Deacon Porter | Also known as The Destroyers |
1987 | Warrior Queen | Marcus | |
1988 | Fast Gun | Jack Steiger | |
1990 | Mark of the Beast | Dan Allen | |
1991 | Dune Warriors | John | |
Deathstalker IV: Match of Titans | Deathstalker | ||
Eye of the Widow | Chris Jones | ||
1994 | Class of 1999 II: The Substitute | G.D. Ash | |
1997 | Inferno | Trevor | Also known as Operation Cobra |
1998 | Storm Trooper | Denton |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1978 | ABC Afterschool Specials | Lifeguard | Episode: "One of a Kind" [6] |
1979 | Beach Patrol | Earl "Hack" Hackman | TV movie |
Charlie's Angels | Steve Fitzpatrick | Episode: "Angels on Campus" | |
Steeletown | Coach Barnes | TV movie | |
1980 | Eight is Enough | Scoutmaster Harvey | 2 episodes |
Days of Our Lives | Kyle McCullough | 24 episodes | |
Detour to Terror | Kurt | TV movie | |
Where the Ladies Go | Steve | TV movie | |
1981 | Today's F.B.I. | Al Gordean | 19 episodes |
1982 | Magnum, P.I. | Lee Chambers | Episode: "The Eighth Part of the Village" |
1981 1983 | The Dukes of Hazzard | Matt Mallory / Phil Ackley | 2 episodes |
1983 | Cheers | Tibor Svetkovic | Episode: "Now Pitching, Sam Malone" |
1984 | The Master | Ron Gordon | Episode: "Kunoichi" |
1988 | Matlock | Vince Campbell | Episode: "The Body" |
1991 | The New Adam-12 | Bomb Squad Officer | Episode: "Playing with Fire" |
1993 | Raven | Al Striker | Episode: "Poisoned Harvest" |
1998 | Mowgli: The New Adventures of the Jungle Book | Russell | Episode: "What Goes Around..." |
Born Free | — | Director 5 episodes | |
Hollywood Safari | — | Director Episode: "War Games" | |
2002 | TVography | — | Director and producer Episode: "Lee Majors, Hollywood's Bionic Hero" |
Deathstalker II, also known as Deathstalker II: Duel of the Titans, is a 1987 Argentine-American fantasy comedy-adventure film directed by Jim Wynorski and a sequel to 1983's Deathstalker. It was written by Neil Ruttenberg and starring John Terlesky, Monique Gabrielle, John LaZar and María Socas. Terlesky replaced Rick Hill, the protagonist from the previous film, in the starring role of Deathstalker. This is the last sword and sorcery movie that Roger Corman produced in Argentina during the 80s.
Deathstalker, also known as El cazador de la muerte, is a 1983 Argentine-American sword and sorcery film directed by James Sbardellati, and starring Rick Hill, Barbi Benton, Bernard Erhard and Lana Clarkson.
George Everett Strupper Jr., known variously as "Ev" or "Strup" or "Stroop" was an American football player. He played halfback for Georgia Tech from 1915 to 1917. Strupper overcame deafness resulting from a childhood illness and was selected as an All-American in 1917.
The 1942 Georgia Bulldogs football team was an American football team that represented the University of Georgia in the Southeastern Conference (SEC) during the 1942 college football season. In their fourth season under head coach Wally Butts, the Bulldogs compiled an 11–1 record, shut out six of twelve opponents, won the SEC championship, and outscored all opponents by a total of 378 to 73. The Bulldogs' 75–0 win over Florida remains the largest margin of victory in the history of the Florida–Georgia football rivalry.
New Concorde (NC) is an American film distribution company founded by Roger Corman. NC got its start in 1983 when Corman formed the production and distribution Concorde-New Horizons (CNH) as one of the first production companies to develop and take advantage of video as a distribution tool.
Deathstalker IV: Match of Titans, also called Deathstalker IV: Match of the Titans, is a 1991 sword and sorcery fantasy film written and directed by Howard R. Cohen. Rick Hill, who played the title role in the first film, reprises his role in this film. It is the fourth and final installment in the Deathstalker tetralogy.
The 1917 Georgia Tech Golden Tornado football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology in American football during the 1917 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season. The Golden Tornado, coached by John Heisman in his 14th year as head coach, compiled a 9–0 record and outscored opponents 491 to 17 on the way to its first national championship. Heisman considered the 1917 team his best, and for many years it was considered "the greatest football team the South had ever produced". The team was later named national champion by the Billingsley Report, Helms Athletic Foundation, Houlgate System, and National Championship Foundation.
The 1918 Georgia Tech Golden Tornado football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 1918 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season. The Tornado was coached by John Heisman in his 15th year as head coach, compiling a record of 6–1 and outscoring opponents 466 to 32. Georgia Tech played its home games at Grant Field.
The 1917 College Football All-Southern Team consists of American football players selected to the College Football All-Southern Teams selected by various organizations for the 1917 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season. Georgia Tech won the SIAA and the south's first national championship. Walker Carpenter and Everett Strupper were the first two players from the Deep South selected first-team All-American.
The 1904 Georgia Tech football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 1904 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season. This is the first year for Georgia Tech under coach John Heisman. Lob Brown was the school's first consensus All-Southern player.
The 1906 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 1906 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season. In the third season under coach John Heisman, Georgia Tech posted a 6–3–1 record.
The 1908 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 1908 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season. J. R. Davis was selected All-Southern. Vanderbilt coach Dan McGugin wrote, "He has one glaring fault—a tendency to tackle around the eyebrows. Otherwise he is a splendid foot ball man. He weighs two hundred pounds, is never hurt, never fumbles, bucks a line hard and furnishes excellent interference. He was the strength and stay of Tech."
The 1943 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team was an American football team that represented Georgia Tech as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) during the 1943 college football season. In their 24th year under head coach William Alexander, the Yellow Jackets complied an overall record of 8–3, with a conference record of 3–0, and finished as SEC champion.
The 1942 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team was an American football team that represented the Georgia Institute of Technology in the Southeastern Conference (SEC) during the 1942 college football season. In their 23rd season under head coach William Alexander, the Yellow Jacket won the first nine games of the season, before losing its final two games, including a loss to Texas in the 1943 Cotton Bowl. They were ranked No. 5 in the AP poll.
Ivan Andy "Ike" Williams was an American gridiron football player of the 1920s. He played college football for Georgia Tech and later had a brief professional career.
David Ayres Collings Jr. was an American college football player. He played four seasons with the Georgia Bulldogs, 1919–1922.
The 1979 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 1979 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Yellow Jackets were led by head coach Pepper Rodgers, in his sixth and final year with the team, and played their home games at Grant Field in Atlanta. Rodgers was fired as head coach after a 4–6–1 campaign.
The 1978 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 1978 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Yellow Jackets were led by fifth-year head coach Pepper Rodgers, and played their home games at Grant Field in Atlanta. The team was invited to the 1978 Peach Bowl, held just three miles from their home stadium in Atlanta, where they lost to Purdue.
The 1973 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology during the 1973 NCAA Division I football season. The Yellow Jackets were led by head coach Bill Fulcher, in his second and final year with the team, and played their home games at Grant Field in Atlanta. Fulcher resigned as head coach at the end of the season, claiming that he simply didn't enjoy the job.
The Georgia Tech–Vanderbilt football rivalry is an American college football rivalry between the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets and Vanderbilt Commodores. Both universities are founding members of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and Southern Conference (SoCon), and Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA). Georgia Tech leads the series all time 20–15–3.
Football player Kyle McCullough got a kick out of Maggie at the casino.