Our Fabulous Alumni
For over 20 years, we’ve performed in literally hundreds of shows, in scores of theaters, venues, & clubs of all sizes. During that time, we’ve has some of the most talented artists in the world join us on stage. We celebrate their contributions and, in some cases, their lives here.
Jeremy was one of Robin Williams's favorite comics and it’s easy to see why. He’s unpredictable, supremely literate, improvisational, and funny as hell.
We lost Andrew to suicide back in 2009. Prior to his death, he’d been a member of the cast for 5-6 years anchoring such roles as Dracula in the Mercury Radio Theater rendition and other pivotal roles. Andrew was the son of Star Trek actor Walter Koenig, who played Checkov on the original Star Trek series. He played “Boner” in the first four seasons of the ABC sitcom Growing Pains. More info on his Wikipedia page here.
Paul was a writer for The Chris Rock Show when it was on TV and owned the now-defunct and much-beloved “Fake Gallery” in Los Angeles on Melrose and Heliotrope.
Denny was a recurring cast member on “Whose Line Is It Anyway” and actually earned really MONEY doing top-notch improv. She’s still performing in Southern California and is a very nice lady.
Now living in Los Angeles, Peter listened, as a kid, to some of the shows to which Fake Radio pays homage. At the age of 30, he made his off-Broadway debut in 1976 in Robert Lowell’s adaptation of Herman Melville’s Benito Cereno. On TV, he was cast as rookie cop Pete Doyle in “Hill Street Blues”. His movie and TV credits include “Kramer vs. Kramer”, “Memoirs of an Invisible Man”, “Search for Tomorrow” and “Knott’s Landing”. In his spare time, “Dr. L” writes poetry, edits and translates books and dissertations in English, Portuguese and Spanish.