This moody, baby-faced hunk had the slick, sullen, magnetic good looks
and rebel attitude of an
Elvis Presley,
not to mention a startling resemblance. Sure enough, the timing would
prove right for Michael St. Gerard, making a killer impression on
teenage girls first on film, then TV -- as greaser types and even Elvis
himself -- in the early 90s.
Born in New York Mills, New York, he
developed an early interest in acting and first found work in Japanese
commercials and the off-Broadway stage. He made a strong impression in
an otherwise mediocre teen film
Senior Week (1988), then really set
the wheels in motion with his second film, the
John Waters' retro classic
Hairspray (1988) in which
Ricki Lake pines for the St. Gerard amid an
American Bandstand type setting circa 1962. The amiable and tuneful
satire worked perfectly and St. Gerard managed to stand out among the
cult figures who appeared, including
Divine,
Sonny Bono and
Debbie Harry.
St. Gerard got to play
Presley twice in films with
Heart of Dixie (1989) and
Great Balls of Fire! (1989),
the latter film a biopic on
Jerry Lee Lewis, played all-out by
Dennis Quaid. So much attention was placed
on St. Gerard's Elvis imitation that the producers of a new TV series
looking to recapture Elvis' early years had to look no further. The
highly ambitious
Elvis (1990) ran for 10
episodes and St. Gerard was magnificent in the role, with
Millie Perkins and
Billy Green Bush equally terrific as
his parents, Gladys and Vernon Presley. The show, however, was canceled
despite the critical praise heaped upon it.
Michael moved ahead to the
popular teen show
Beverly Hills, 90210 (1990),
playing an acting teacher in it second season, but this time
Luke Perry and
Jason Priestley grabbed the sexy
attention. From there a few insignificant direct-to-video exports
materialized, such as
Into the Sun (1991),
Live Wire (1992) and
Replikator (1994), but his career had
simmered.
In 1994, St. Gerard had a spiritual awakening after leading a
Sunday School class, and, with it, decided to retire and focus his
energies on religious instruction. He subsequently became a pastor in
the Harlem area of New York City, extending himself and his church in
particular to inner-city youths, and spends little time reflecting on
his past stardom.