Michael Easton

Actor

Birthday February 15, 1967

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Inglewood, California, US

Age 57 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.83 m

#21997 Most Popular

1967

Michael Easton (born February 15, 1967) is an American film, television and voice actor, writer, and director.

Although the Emmy-nominated actor may be best known for his work on the series Ally McBeal, VR.5, Total Recall 2070, One Life to Live and General Hospital, he is also the author of several critically-acclaimed novels, including the trilogy Soul Stealer, and is an accomplished director whose films have earned multiple independent film awards.

Born in Inglewood, California, Easton was raised and educated in the US and Ireland.

He attended high school and then UCLA when he returned to the United States, and graduated with a double major in English and History.

His first major series role was a two-year stint on NBC's Days of Our Lives, playing Tanner Scofield when he was just 25.

1992

While on the show, he was featured in People Magazine’s “50 Most Beautiful Issue” in 1992, and left the role when his mother was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 1993.

1994

Easton returned to Los Angeles to care for her until her death in 1994.

1995

Easton returned to acting in 1995 with Fox's VR.5 as Duncan, co-starring with Fame alumna Lori Singer and Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s Anthony Head.

This was followed up with a turn as the lead in showrunner Stephen J. Cannell's Two.

He played the dual roles of a Seattle professor who is framed for murder by his previously unknown twin, and is forced to go on the run from the FBI in order to clear himself of his brother's crimes.

Easton co-wrote the episode “A.D.”, and also penned the series finale, “The Reckoning”.

1997

In 1997, he landed a role on Damon Wayans’ 413 Hope Street with Jesse L. Martin and Richard Roundtree.

Easton played Nick Carrington, a former drug addict and counselor at an inner-city crisis center.

The show tackled topics including the struggles of drug addiction and recovery, homelessness, racism, hate crimes, HIV and AIDS, social justice, income inequality, and disproportionate Black conviction and incarceration.

Easton later described the experience as one of the most creatively and personally rewarding of his career.

1998

In 1998, Easton was featured in a multi-episode arc of Ally McBeal as Glenn, for which one episode was awarded a Primetime Emmy.

He went on to play the role in a short arc on the award-winning series The Practice.

Both shows were the brainchildren of producer David E. Kelley.

The Showtime series Total Recall 2070 featured him in the leading role as David Hume, a detective partnered with a sentient and self-aware android.

The series was shot in Toronto, and is a loose adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s short story "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale" and novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?.

The classic cult film Blade Runner was also a major influence on the series’ narrative tone and visual style, exploring themes of eugenics, class/caste systems, rule by minority, and oligarchy juxtaposed with human rights and individual rights and autonomy.

Easton returned to Daytime with ABC's Port Charles, a spinoff of General Hospital that took a more supernatural turn, as he helped shape and create the vampire antagonist Caleb Morley.

2003

When Port Charles ended, Michael began work as Detective John McBain on One Life to Live in 2003 – a role he played for the next nine years.

2011

His 2011 graphic novel trilogy Soul Stealer was a critical success and praised by Ain't It Cool News as "Graphic Novel of the Year" in 2010.

The story, combined with artist Christopher Shy's visualizations, made a collaborative partnership of words and pictures.

Easton has also maintained a long friendship with Peter Straub – who had been a dedicated One Life to Live viewer.

The author visited the set in New York and left a copy of Koko in Easton's mailbox.

It was a novel Michael's mother had loved and which he had been reading to her during her last days of battling cancer.

Years later, Easton collaborated with Straub to write the horror graphic novel The Green Woman for DC Comics.

Easton's most recent solo novel is Credence, published by Blackwatch Comics.

A member of the Writers Guild of America, Michael also adapted and wrote the screenplay for Daedelus is Dead, a short film based on an unfinished script by Doors legend Jim Morrison.

The film has screened at more than a dozen major film festivals and was bought by The Sundance Channel.

His feature detailing the life of actor Montgomery Clift is being produced by Relativity Media, while another screenplay about Ella Fitzgerald is in development with Norman Lear.

2015

In 2015, he also wrote and directed short films Dreamliner and the award-winning Ultraviolent – both starring his friend and former OLTL castmate Trevor St. John.

2016

Easton reprised his One Life to Live role on General Hospital. He rejoined the GH cast on March 22, 2016, playing his current character, Dr. Hamilton Finn, an infectious disease specialist and epidemiologist with a penchant for waistcoats and a bearded dragon named Roxy.

2018

His performance as the character battled addiction and subsequent struggle in withdrawal and recovery earned him a Daytime Emmy nomination in 2018.

Easton is a prolific novelist, screenwriter and director.

2020

In 2020 he teamed up again with St. John, and former co-stars Sherri Saum and Rebecca Budig on the short film About a Girl, written by Budig and directed by Easton.

The film won the Outstanding Achievement Award in the 2020 Best Shorts Film Festival, praising the “Deft direction, beautiful craft, and achingly authentic performance by Budig.”

Easton's collection of poetry, Eighteen Straight Whiskeys, was initially written while on a four-month break in Paris, France in the aftermath of his mother's death.