|
Actor,
director, producer, and tenor who studied part of his craft at Lincoln
Center Theater Director’s Lab West. One of his earliest recordings was
Frank Sinatra’s 1979 boxed set, Trilogy. In 1983, he played Richard on the last
episode of Quincy, M.E. Seven years later, he turned up on
an episode of Jake and the Fatman.
In 1991, he played Hickman on Star
Trek: The Next Generation,
and appeared on the same program two years later as Commander Ian Andrew Troi. (He even has his own Star Trek trading card.)
His recording
career got a boost in 1997, when he collaborated with Cam Floria on the album, David: A Man After
God’s Own Heart. (Amick played David.) It would not be the last time he
would voice a biblical character. The same year, he was credited as a
“voice” in A Christmas
Carol and sang “The Factory Song” on the straight-to-video
release, MGM Sing-Alongs: Having Fun. He had fun in 1998 supplying
additional voices to another direct-to-video project, Pocahontas II: Journey
to a New World, and supplying the singing voice of Moses in The Prince of Egypt.
If you are
sensing a theme here, you are not alone: Amick’s
voice is practically inescapable if you have seen an animated musical in
the last ten to fifteen years.
At the turn of the decade, he was one of the singers/voices in Lion of Oz, and sang “Here on
the Land and Sea” in The Little
Mermaid II: Return to the Sea,
another straight-to-vid sequel. In 2001, he played David on
“The Home-Wrecker” episode of the television program, Kristin. Direct-to-video animated sequel,
anyone? In the same year, he
was also credited as “chorus” and “voice” in Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp’s Adventure and Mickey’s House of Villains.
He teamed up
with Ronali de Silva in 2003 on the recording, Sunshine Kids, and performed on the
soundtrack of Peter Pan. The following year, he released his
first solo album, Encounter, a
concept album on which Amick portrays a variety
of Biblical characters in song, accompanied by several musicians from the
London Philharmonic Orchestra.
In the winter of 2004, he went on tour with former Styx front-man
Dennis DeYoung, a tour that lasted well into
2006. The concerts featured old
Styx classics as well as music from DeYoung’s
stage musical, The Hunchback of Notre
Dame.
Somehow, Amick also found time to do some more movie work,
singing on the soundtracks of The
Greatest Game Ever Played and King
Kong in 2005. 2006 was rife
with live appearances: In
addition to performing with Dennis DeYoung and a
variety of orchestras (The Memphis Symphony Orchestra, The Northwest
Arkansas Symphony, and Rock Symphony) in a variety of venues, Amick did a series of shows at Vitello’s
Italian Restaurant in Studio City, California, appeared on Kirk
Cameron’s Praise the Lord
on Trinity Broadcasting Network, and hosted his own “Live Worship
with Amick” at a pair of churches in Texas,
Boerne’s 1st Baptist Church and San Antonio’s Church
at Stone Oak. A year later, Amick was back in the movie studios for the soundtracks
of Enchanted and West Bank Story.
In addition to
the aforementioned films, he has also performed on the soundtracks of Aladdin, Beauty and the Beast, Dr.
Seuss’ Horton Hears a Who!, El
Dorado, Hercules, The Lion King, The Matrix, Mulan, Pocahontas,
Shrek, and Shrek 2. He is also
credited as a voice on some fifty episodes of The Simpsons. Other
TV shows on which he has appeared include Ally McBeal, Frasier, Friends, Saved by the Bell, and Superior Court, on which he played
Attorney Darrell Guillary for three seasons.
It is hard to
believe this guy has had time to also fashion a massive career for himself
as a stage actor, director, and producer. He has played the title role in Jesus Christ Superstar, Enjolras and Marius in Les Miserables, starred in Broadway
and Los Angeles productions of Phantom
of the Opera, and played Joe Gillis in Sunset Boulevard, with Glenn Close. His directing credits include Aesop, Ben Hur, The Best of Broadway, Brigadoon,
Great Gershwin!, his own A Hollywood Tale, How to Succeed in Business without
Really Trying, Into the Woods,
Les Miserables,
One to One, Pinocchio and Mounette, School House Rock, and The Secret Garden.
He frequently
produces his musical projects, including Radio Gals, which played on 42nd Street’s John
Houseman Theater in New York, and continues to enjoy success at various
venues throughout the United States.
Back in the recording studio, he recently played Aslan
on a CD based on C.S. Lewis’s The
Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, and recorded Hymns Renewed with his wife, Cassandra Byram. He has twice been nominated for a
Grammy Award, thanks to his collaborations with the jazz vocal group,
2+2. In his copious free time, Amick teaches theater at Costa Mesa’s Vanguard
University in California.
Sources:
- http://www.amickbyram.com/bios_amick.html
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0125974/
- http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/music/artist/card/0,,410632,00.html
- http://www.amickbyram.com/news.html
- http://www.amickbyram.com/appearances.html
- http://cdbaby.com/cd/amickbyram
- http://movies.nytimes.com/person/658889/Amick-Byram
- http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&search-type=ss&index=music&field-artist=Amick%20Byram&page=1
- http://www.myspace.com/amickbyram
- http://musicishere.com/artists/Amick_Byram/Encounter
|