A.J. Benza
- Actor
- Writer
- Producer
Benza was born June 2, 1962 in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. His father, Al,
and his mother, Lillian, moved Benza and his two sisters, Rosalie and
Lorraine, to West Islip, New York (Long Island) shortly after his
birth. Benza graduated from West Islip High School in 1980 and attended
C.W. Post College in Brookville, New York where he became a journalism
major and showed an affinity for horticulture.
During his college days, he spent most of his time studying and
pursuing dramatic theatre. Being a huge Hall and Oates fan, In 1983 he
started a rock band with three childhood friends, Whitey, Chico and
Fred; they called the band: "Fred can wait." Benza, a harmonica wizard,
dazzled many college crowds with his lightning lipwork and crashing
crescendos.
Benza left the band for a part-time job at Newsday, a newspaper on Long
Island. He wrote high school sports and freelanced as a bouncer on the
weekends at a club called Illusions in Mahwah, New Jersey. He quickly
quit the club and was hired full-time to write gossip for the Daily
News.
Benza wrote through the early 90s, then was scooped away to L.A. to
host "Mysteries and Scandals" on the E! channel.
A.J. has been the co-host with fellow poker commentator Gabe Kaplan on
High Stakes Poker since 2004.
Now he writes freelance, performs the harmonica at open mics and still
makes appearances in films and television. He currently lives in Los
Angeles.
and his mother, Lillian, moved Benza and his two sisters, Rosalie and
Lorraine, to West Islip, New York (Long Island) shortly after his
birth. Benza graduated from West Islip High School in 1980 and attended
C.W. Post College in Brookville, New York where he became a journalism
major and showed an affinity for horticulture.
During his college days, he spent most of his time studying and
pursuing dramatic theatre. Being a huge Hall and Oates fan, In 1983 he
started a rock band with three childhood friends, Whitey, Chico and
Fred; they called the band: "Fred can wait." Benza, a harmonica wizard,
dazzled many college crowds with his lightning lipwork and crashing
crescendos.
Benza left the band for a part-time job at Newsday, a newspaper on Long
Island. He wrote high school sports and freelanced as a bouncer on the
weekends at a club called Illusions in Mahwah, New Jersey. He quickly
quit the club and was hired full-time to write gossip for the Daily
News.
Benza wrote through the early 90s, then was scooped away to L.A. to
host "Mysteries and Scandals" on the E! channel.
A.J. has been the co-host with fellow poker commentator Gabe Kaplan on
High Stakes Poker since 2004.
Now he writes freelance, performs the harmonica at open mics and still
makes appearances in films and television. He currently lives in Los
Angeles.