Richard Biggs had a somewhat unsettled childhood as he travelled
between Air Force bases where his father was stationed. Because of his
itinerant lifestyle he made few friends and changed schools often. When
he was seventeen, and living at a missile base in North Dakota, he
decided to change his plans for a medical career after playing the lead
in a local theatrical production of 'The Wiz'. After that, bitten by
the acting bug and never deterred by deafness in one ear, he went on to
complete a Bachelor of Fine Arts (majoring in performing arts) at USC's
School of Theatre, with the distinguished actor
John Houseman as one of his drama
teachers. He later went on to give his own acting classes at the
Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum in Topanga
Canyon.
Like so many other aspiring performers, Richard had a tough time in his
quest to get started in his chosen field. His chief difficulty lay in
obtaining membership in the Screen Actor's Guild without experience,
yet how was one to acquire experience without a union card ? Living in
his car for much of this time, he made ends meet by playing small roles
on stage, and, occasionally television. He also worked for a while as a
telephone operator answering complaints for an LA waste disposal
company. One of his local stage performances, as Romeo at the Ensemble
Theatre, impressed an agent who took him on and landed him an audition
for a part on the daytime soap opera
Days of Our Lives (1965).
Several auditions later, he got the part, and the SAG card as well.
For most of his career on television, Richard played doctors, an irony
which was probably not lost on him: Dr.Tomson in
The Twilight Zone (1985),
Dr. Lecksis in
Beverly Hills, 90210 (1990),
Dr.Milo Morton in "Strong Medicine", and, of course, Dr.Marcus Hunter,
in 1295 episodes of 'Days of Our Lives', from 1985 to 1992. Richard had
done his homework for the part by observing a real plastic surgeon in
action. However, having played the same individual for such a lengthy
period led him later to express doubts about the one-dimensional 'goody
two-shoes' nature of the character, who he would have preferred a
little
'rougher around the
edges'.
A far edgier and more complex part was that of Dr.Stephen Franklin, the
chief medical officer of
J. Michael Straczynski's
cult sci-fi series
Babylon 5 (1993). Richard played
the humanly flawed, but mercurial character from 1994 to 1998 (also in
three made-for-TV movies, and, briefly, in the short-lived spin-off
series
Crusade (1999), as part of a
first-rate ensemble cast. His performances were often extremely
compelling, particularly in the 'walkabout' episodes of season three,
culminating with 'Shadow Dancing'.
Post-Babylon, Richard played a detective in
Any Day Now (1998), returned to
soap opera as Clayton Boudreaux in
Guiding Light (1952)
and had a brief run as a scientist in the unsuccessful TV spin-off
Tremors (2003). The character in his
last series,
Strong Medicine (2000), was
killed off in the show because of the actor's tragic, untimely death at
the age of 44. Richard Biggs was eulogised by Babylon 5's Straczysnky
as a 'consummate professional' and 'quite simply, a terrific guy'.