Randall Batinkoff


Actor
Randall Batinkoff

About

Birth Place
Monticello, New York, USA
Born
October 16, 1968

Biography

A tall, lanky leading and supporting player, Randall Batinkoff has been most successful at depicting repressed preppy types in features and on the small screen. Born and raised in upstate New York, the actor began his career as a child, appearing in his first TV commercials at age eight. Within a few years, he was seen alongside Ricky Schroeder and Joe Namath in the Afterschool Special ...

Photos & Videos

Biography

A tall, lanky leading and supporting player, Randall Batinkoff has been most successful at depicting repressed preppy types in features and on the small screen.

Born and raised in upstate New York, the actor began his career as a child, appearing in his first TV commercials at age eight. Within a few years, he was seen alongside Ricky Schroeder and Joe Namath in the Afterschool Special "An Orchestra Is a Team, Too" (1981) and had a featured role in the busted pilot "One More Try" (CBS, 1982), as Laurence Luckinbill's son. His TV series debut came with the short-lived CBS sitcom "Better Days" (1986) and he made his TV-movie debut as one of "The Stepford Children" (NBC, 1987). Batinkoff returned to series TV in 1994 as the Rev. David Grantland, one of the suitors of a teacher (Kellie Martin) who relocates to eastern Tennessee, in "Christy" (CBS, 1994-95). He also played the taciturn suitor spurned by his long-time girlfriend (Kimberly Williams) in the ABC drama "Relativity" (1996-97).

Batinkoff made his feature film debut in "Streetwalkin'" (1985), but had his first leading role as Molly Ringwald's young husband in "For Keeps" (1988). Audiences and critics ignored the film and Batinkoff took a four-year hiatus to complete his studies at Brown University before returning to the screen in supporting roles four 1992 films: Robert Altman's "The Player"; "Buffy the Vampire Slayer"; "The Joke"; and "School Ties." Other feature credits include John Singleton's "Higher Learning" (1995) and "The Peacekeeper" (1997).

Life Events

1974

Made debut in TV commercial (date approximate)

1981

Appeared in Afterschool Special "An Orchestra Is a Team, Too" with Ricky Schroeder

1982

Cast in the busted pilot "One More Try"

1985

Feature film debut in "Streetwalkin'"

1987

TV-movie debut "The Stepford Children"

1988

Had first screen lead opposite Molly Ringwald in "For Keeps"

1997

Had supporting roles in "The Peacemaker" and "As Good As It Gets"

1999

Portrayed <i>Playboy</i> founder Hugh Hefner in the USA Network biopic "Hefner: Unauthorized"

Bibliography