Translation

Select text and it is translated.
This area is result which is translated word.

Languages


Adrian Zmed

Adrian Zmed Born Adrian George Zmed
March 4, 1954(1954-03-04) (age 54)
Chicago, IllinoisSpouse(s) Susan Wood

Adrian Zmed (born March 4, 1954 in Chicago, Illinois) is a Romanian-American television and film actor. Zmed is best known for his roles as "Johnny Nogerelli" in Grease 2, and as "Officer Vince Romano" in the T.J. Hooker television series, where he starred alongside William Shatner.

Contents

Career

Zmed took on the role of Danny Zuko in Grease twice: first during the original Broadway run in the 1970s, and again during the show's revival in 1995.

Adrian Zmed made his television debut as "Socks Palermo" in the 1979 series Flatbush. In 1980, he appeared on another television series, The Goodtime Girls, playing "Frankie Millardo". This was followed by a guest appearance in 1982's An Evening at the Improv.

In 1982, Zmed starred as "Johnny Nogerelli", the new leader of the "T-Birds", in Grease 2, opposite Michelle Pfeiffer.

That film led Zmed to a short period playing other teenagers on film, including 1983's The Final Terror, in which he played "Gerone". While this film bombed at the box office, his next movie (while not necessarily a hit by Hollywood economical standards), fared better: Zmed played "Jay O'Neill" in 1984's Bachelor Party, alongside Tom Hanks.

Zmed continued to appear on television as the host of Dance Fever. He reached celebrity status playing "Officer Romano" in the aforementioned T.J. Hooker, a TV series based on the life of a real Los Angeles cop of the same name. He appeared on the show until 1985. Meanwhile, Zmed played "Fred Feliciano" in the TV movie Victims for Victims: The Theresa Saldana Story (1984) and made guest appearances on a number of television shows throughout the 80s and 90s, including Hotel, Empty Nest, Murder, She Wrote, and Caroline in the City.

Adrian Zmed returned to stage work in the 1990s. He headlined the musical Children of Eden at the Paper Mill Playhouse, and starred in three shows on Broadway: Falsettos, Blood Brothers, and Grease. He most recently appeared as Noah in the musical The Ark, in New York City, and in the 2006 Stan Harrington film, The Craving Heart.

Zmed has appeared as himself on VH1's popular I Love the 80s, and Saturday Night Live. Adrian also filled in for the sick Cooky The Clown on The Bozo Show.[citation needed]

He will star in the film Spring Break '83, released in 2008.

Facts

This article does not citeany references or sources. (May 2007)
Please help improve this articleby adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiablematerial may be challenged and removed. This article or section seems to contain embedded liststhat may require cleanup.
To meet Wikipedia's style guidelines, please help improve this articleby: removing items which are not notable, encyclopedic, or helpful from the list(s); incorporating appropriate items into the main body of the article; and discussing this issue on the talk page.
  • Zmed speaks fluent Romanian.
  • Zmed's father was a Romanian Orthodox priest.
  • The family had anglicized their name to "Smith" but Zmed changed it back.
  • In the original Broadway production of Grease, he starred with Jeff Conaway, who is best known as Kenickie in the 1978 motion picture Grease.
  • He was married to Broadway singer Susan Wood
  • He provided the voiceover for "Toth" in the 2002 video game, Star Wars Jedi Starfighter.
  • In 2006 filmed a 30 second PSA on chained dogs for humane non-profit Dogs Deserve Better.
  • Is Basil (the "floating head") on the NBC soap opera Passions.


References


External links

PersondataNAME Zmed, Adrian ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION actor DATE OF BIRTH March 4, 1954PLACE OF BIRTH Chicago, IllinoisDATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH
Categories: 1954 births | Living people | People from Chicago, Illinois | American film actors | American musical theatre actors | American television actors | Romanian-Americans | BilingualsHidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since October 2007 | Articles lacking sources from May 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Cleanup from January 2008 | Wikipedia laundry list cleanup

Related word on this page

Related Shopping on this page