- Steve Gluck left Brooklyn in 1974 at the age of 22, traveling to Berkeley California where he lived for the next 30 years. After his divorce from child-prodigy violinist Elisa Claudio in 1983, he studied acting under Larry Menkin, creator of the Captain Video TV Series, in San Rafael, California, the Jean Shelton School of Acting in San Francisco, and other Method Schools in California. He was accepted as a member of the Screen Actors Guild in 1990, based on his costarring performance opposite Linda Blair, Troy Donohue and Dan Haggerty in The Chilling (1989). Shortly thereafter, he put his acting career on hold to focus on his career in design and construction. He also trained with professional fighters under the guidance of boxing-trainers Jimmy Simmons and Rio Rosa in the 1980s and 90s.
Steve later developed an interest in Africa and spent many years traveling to and from Africa studying its wildlife, cultures and peoples before returning to academia at Harvard in 2006. He is an authority on the conservation of African wildlife and has spoken on this subject at a number of world-conferences, as well as at Harvard.
After receiving his degree from Harvard, he reinstated his SAG/AFTRA card and began studying acting again at the Media Performance Institute (Boston Casting) and The Hartford Stage. Aside from SAG/AFTRA, Steve holds memberships in MENSA and Harvardwood (Harvard Alumni in the Arts, Media and Entertainment). He is currently seeking representation in New York City and Boston.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Steve Gluck
- Gender / Gender identityMale
- Gluck trained with professional boxers for more than a decade and once owned a farm in Africa.
- The goal of conservation is Maximum-Potential-Biodiversity ...
- Boxing is one of the highest achievements of civilization ...
- There is no life on the internet ... no sense of space in cyberspace ... image without substance ... sound without tenor ... text but no texture ...
- We cannot develop our minds at the expense of the rest of the planet ...
- We object to non-African, ex-military individuals coming to Africa masquerading as conservationists simply because they are unable to cope with life after military service. We suggest that they, and the world, would be better-served if they return to their native lands and seek whatever professional help they might need to adjust to life in a non-militarized environment, rather than bringing their pathology with them, wherever they go ...
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