Larry Bishop
- Actor
- Writer
- Director
Larry Bishop was born on November 30, 1948 in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania and grew up in New Jersey. He's the son of famous Rat Pack
comic Joey Bishop. Larry attended
high school in Beverly Hills, California. After graduation Bishop was
briefly in an improvisational group whose other members included
Rob Reiner,
Albert Brooks and
Richard Dreyfuss. Larry was hook-handed
drummer Abraham in
Wild in the Streets (1968).
Bishop achieved his enduring cult popularity with his portrayals of
scruffy bikers in
The Savage Seven (1968),
Angel Unchained (1970) and
Chrome and Hot Leather (1971).
Moreover, Larry did guest spots on such TV shows as
The Dukes of Hazzard (1979),
Barnaby Jones (1973),
Laverne & Shirley (1976),
Barney Miller (1975),
Kung Fu (1972),
Love, American Style (1969)
and
I Dream of Jeannie (1965).
Although he appeared alongside fellow biker movie regular
Adam Roarke in the dim-witted comedy
How Come Nobody's on Our Side? (1974)
and had a sizable supporting role in
The Big Fix (1978), Bishop's acting
career sadly ran out of gas in the early 80s. Larry bounced backed in
the mid 90s by writing the script for the mobster black comedy
_Underworld_. He also has a substantial part in this film. Bishop then
wrote, directed, co-produced and co-starred in the equally offbeat and
uproarious Mad Dog Time (1996).
Larry popped up in a cameo as coarse, belligerent strip club owner
Larry Gomez in
Cô Dâu Báo Thù 2 (2004). Larry
Bishop's most recent picture is
Hell Ride (2008), an homage to 60s
biker cinema that he not only wrote, directed, and co-produced, but
stars in as well.