Matthew Walker | |
Birth Date: | 12 October 1968 |
Birth Place: | Santa Monica, California, U.S. |
Othername: | Matt Walker T. Walker Matthew "Matt" Walker |
Occupation: | Actor, director |
Years Active: | 1986–present |
Matthew D. Walker (born October 12, 1968)[1] is an American film and television actor and television director.
Walker was born in Santa Monica, California. He has been acting professionally since the age of 17, when he appeared in a Disney Movie of the Week in 1986. Since then he has made his living appearing in numerous television shows, feature films, commercials and live venues across the country. At age 19 he was cast as a series regular on the ABC drama Supercarrier, starring Wendie Malick, Paul Gleason and Richard Jaeckel. Co-starring roles soon followed in the feature films and Child's Play 3, which established Walker in the famed slasher movie sequel genre.
In Hollywood as a young actor, Walker worked with such notable actors as Kate Hudson, Melanie Griffith, John Goodman, Lea Thompson, Andy Dick, Tony Danza, Martin Mull, Haysha Deitsch, Donald Pleasence, Willford Brimley, John Ritter, and George C. Scott, and such directors as Tobe Hooper, James Burrows, and Garry Marshall. In 1995, Walker was cast as a series regular in the Fox sitcom The Preston Episodes with David Alan Grier, and as the star of a CBS pilot called Shock Treatment. The publicity from these two shows landed Walker with the William Morris Talent Agency, but acting roles began to dry up. That same year, Walker accepted a job as the director of a TBS cable television show, Dinner and a Movie. That job turned into more directing for TBS including the shows Movies For Guys Who Like Movies, The Man Made Movie, Movie & A Makeover and Big PlayStation Saturday. Six years and over 200 episodes later, Walker had worked with more of Hollywood's top shelf talent, including Kelsey Grammer, Joan Cusack, Jon Cryer, Beverly D'Angelo, John C. McGinley, John Travolta, Bridget Fonda, Danny DeVito, Morgan Freeman, Ray Liotta and Arnold Schwarzenegger.
During his stint as a director and while he was still represented by WMA, Walker decided to run away and join the circus. In 1997 he left Los Angeles and was accepted into Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey's Clown College on a full scholarship. For three months, seven days a week, 14 hours a day, Walker was trained in the circus arts including clowning, acrobatics, stilt walking, make-up, mime, dance, prop building and juggling. This led to a contract as a clown with the Greatest Show on Earth. Traveling across the country on the circus train, Walker performed in venues including The Cotton Bowl at the Texas State Fair, The United Center in Chicago and The L.A. Sports Arena.
After the circus, Walker was more committed than ever to bringing a purely physical, musical and improvisational style of theater to Los Angeles. Having studied previously with Second City Improvisation, the San Francisco Mime Troupe, and renowned clown Bill Irwin, Walker assembled a multi-talented group of actors, musicians, writers and acrobats, and the Troubadour Theater Company was born. Having recently celebrated its 10th year, Troubadour has evolved into one of Los Angeles' most critically acclaimed comic troupes. Original productions include Fleetwood Macbeth, It's A Stevie Wonderful Life, Twelfth Dog Night and Christmas Carole King.
Walker's theater career includes performing in over 100 stage plays and musicals at venues such as La Mirada Theater, Grove Shakespeare, International City Theater, Pasadena Playhouse, the John Anson Ford Amphitheater, the Sarasota Opera House, the Lobero Theater, San Diego Repertory Theater, and the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion with the Los Angeles Opera.
Walker is currently an adjutant professor of Clowning and Commedia dell'arte at the University of California at San Diego for their graduate acting program, and continues as a director of television for Norsemen Productions in Valley Village, California, directing such shows as Saturday Night Solution for Court TV, and The Dude Room for the Discovery Channel.
Most recently, Walker collaborated with Universal Studios Creative on a theme park show for their Islands of Adventure Park; directed a world premiere musical, Million Dollar Quartet, at Daytona’s Seaside Music Theater; and is currently serving as Associate Director for Garry Marshall's world premiere musical, Happy Days.
His awards include:
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2016 | Mother's Day | Randy | |
2009 | Grande Drip | Keith Glassco | |
2008 | Mikey | Universal Studios Florida attraction. Also Director. | |
2005 | Absolute Zero | Hershel | TV |
2004 | Captain Kip Kelly | ||
Raising Helen | Fashion Show Security | ||
1997 | Strategic Command | Brier | |
1995 | Shock Treatment | The Shock | TV |
A Dangerous Affair | Unknown | TV | |
1994 | Guardian Angel | Lippy | |
Doctor Jaffe | TV | ||
In the Army Now | Stoner #2 | ||
1991 | Deception: A Mother's Secret | Salesman | TV |
Child's Play 3 | Major Ellis | ||
1990 | I'm Dangerous Tonight | Punk #2 | TV |
1989 | Spitz | ||
A Deadly Silence | Boy in Classroom | TV | |
1988 | Casual Sex? | Ronny | |
Supercarrier | Unknown | TV |
Year | Title | Role | No. of episodes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Judging Amy | Doctor | 1 episode | |
The Mime | 1 episode | |||
1995 | The Preston Episodes | Adam Green | 2 episodes | |
1992 | Life Goes On | Kingfish | 1 episode | |
1990 | Ferris Bueller | Shred | 1 episode | |
1988–1990 | Wiseguy | Devlin | 2 episodes | |
1988 | Supercarrier | Seaman Apprentice Raymond LaFitte | Unknown |
Year | Title | |
---|---|---|
2003 | Big PlayStation Saturday | |
Man Made Movie | ||
2000 | The Man Made Movie |