Brian Wallace was an awkward youth and went into the theater mainly so he could kiss girls. But even in school he was mostly given the character parts: old men, dandies, foreigners and some incarnation of "the Man" every February.
Nobody ever believes him when he mentions where he is from, so he no longer talks about his past. The only time people never question what Brian says is when he is on stage, and he typically plays roles that benefit from a strong presence, bold choices and facility with language.
He harbors an affection for obscure classics (i.e., those plays that never make money), and has also been a familiar face when certain Tony and Pulitzer nominees/winners want to develop new work. Brian also writes and performs sketch comedy, which is apparently the law in California, where he has lived since 2015.
He's beaten more polygraph machines than any other living actor, reads a play a day and is an excellent tipper. If he had to do it all over again he'd rather be a retired Beatle, but all in all he gets by.
Nobody ever believes him when he mentions where he is from, so he no longer talks about his past. The only time people never question what Brian says is when he is on stage, and he typically plays roles that benefit from a strong presence, bold choices and facility with language.
He harbors an affection for obscure classics (i.e., those plays that never make money), and has also been a familiar face when certain Tony and Pulitzer nominees/winners want to develop new work. Brian also writes and performs sketch comedy, which is apparently the law in California, where he has lived since 2015.
He's beaten more polygraph machines than any other living actor, reads a play a day and is an excellent tipper. If he had to do it all over again he'd rather be a retired Beatle, but all in all he gets by.