He appeared in the 2008 spoof film Meet the Spartans, which was a box office success despite being universally negatively reviewed by critics.
#Hand of fate voice actor series#
He also starred in the Lifetime Channel film Last Chance Café, the Hallmark Channel film Avenging Angel, co-starring his real life wife Sam Jenkins and guest starred as a bounty hunter in the season-two episode "Bounty Hunters!" of the series Psych. He reprised his role in the second sequel, Walking Tall: Lone Justice which released later that year. In 2007, he starred in the direct-to-video film Walking Tall: The Payback, which was a sequel to the 2004 film Walking Tall. and guest-starred in the sitcom Two and a Half Men. In 2006, he played a recurring role on the final season of The O.C. After Hercules came to an end, Sorbo played the starring role of Captain Dylan Hunt in the science-fiction drama series Andromeda from 2000 to 2005. In between the years playing Hercules, he played his first leading film role in Kull the Conqueror (1997). Sorbo would go on to make his final appearance as Hercules on Xena in the Season Five episode "God Fearing Child" which aired in February 2000. This was reportedly due to Sorbo declining to extend his contract to continue starring in the series for a further three years. Hercules was canceled midway through the filming of Season Six of which only eight episodes were produced and the final episode aired in November 1999. In 1998, a spin-off direct-to-video animated film titled Hercules and Xena – The Animated Movie: The Battle for Mount Olympus was released with both Sorbo and Lawless voicing the characters. Sorbo made his first of two appearances on Xena in the Season One episode "Prometheus" in 1995.
This allowed several characters from both shows to make crossover appearances.
The success of the show spawned the popular spin-off series Xena: Warrior Princess starring Lucy Lawless, who was introduced in a three episode arc in the first season of Hercules. Sorbo also directed two episodes of the series during its run and co-wrote one episode. The series made Sorbo an international star and was one of the highest rated syndicated television shows at the time. The ratings success of the films paved the way for the commissioning of the television series Hercules: The Legendary Journeys which started airing in syndication from January 1995 and ran for six seasons. The first film to premiere was Hercules and the Amazon Women which aired in April 1994 and the subsequent films aired later in the year. In 1993, he got his breakthrough leading role as the Ancient Greek mythical demigod Hercules in a series of five television films which aired in 1994 as part of Universal Television's Action Pack. In 1993, he made his film debut playing a supporting role in Slaughter of the Innocents. He was considered for and lost out to Dean Cain as Superman in Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman and was a possible contender for the role of Fox Mulder in The X-Files which went to David Duchovny. In 1992, he starred in an unsuccessful pilot for a medical drama series titled Condition: Critical which was not picked up but aired as a television film on ABC. This was followed by guest appearances in television series such as 1st & Ten, Murder She Wrote and The Commish. He occasionally landed acting roles during this period and made his acting debut in an episode of the soap opera Santa Barbara in 1986. One of the popular commercials he appeared in was for Jim Beam bourbon whiskey, known for Sorbo's repeated catchphrase "This ain't Jim Beam". By the early 1990s, he had appeared in over 150 commercials. In the mid 1980s, Sorbo traveled around Europe and Australia working in television commercials and also modeled for print advertisements.
To help pay for tuition, he began to work as a model for print and television advertising. Sorbo attended Minnesota State University Moorhead, where he double majored in marketing and advertising. Sorbo was born in Mound, Minnesota, on September 24, 1958.