
Michael Champion
Biography
Michael Campbell (born in Anderson, Indiana) started his public career as a singer, songwriter and musician in Detroit. In 1967 with a short-lived band called 'The Abstract Reality', a 45 rpm single Love Burns Like A Fire Inside was released. With Bob 'Babbitt' Kreinar, Ray Monette and Andrew Smith he formed Scorpion (1968–1970 band). His name appears as Mike Campbell on Scorpion (1969 album) and Meat Loaf's debut album Stoney & Meatloaf (1971). For this recording, apart from having cowritten four songs, he played the harmonica on Lady Be Mine. He became an actor by the name Michael Champion and since 1979 played in several TV series and movies such as Diagnosis Murder (1993), Matlock (1989), and The Flash (1991), History of the World: Part I (1981), Beverly Hills Cop (1984), Total Recall (1990) and Toy Soldiers (1991), and video game characters like the terrorist in Flash Traffic: City of Angels (1994) and 'Wolf' in Maximum Surge (1996).
Movie Appearances

Beverly Hills Cop
as Casey
1984

Total Recall
as Helm
1990

History of the World: Part I
as Prehistoric Man
1981

Toy Soldiers
as Jack Thorpe
1991

Pink Cadillac
as Ken Lee
1989

The Forgotten
as Sgt. Elmer J. Miller
1989

10
as Party Guest
1979

One Man Out
1989

When a Stranger Calls
as Bill
1979

The Swordsman
as Stratos
1992

Stark
as Sam
1985

Dead Cold
as Bill Butler
1996

Forgotten Ingenue
as Officer Martner
2021

Raven Hawk
as Gordon Fowler
1996

Crime of Innocence
1985

Leather Jackets
as Costello
1992

The Heroes of Desert Storm
as Warrant Officer Hunter
1991

The Woman Inside
as Nolan
1981

Fatal Beauty
as Buzz
1987

False Identity
as Luther
1990
TV Appearances

V
as Garrison
1984

Diagnosis: Murder
as Big Angie
1993

ALF
as Sgt. Matt Fox
1986

Viper
as Erick Van Hook
1994

MacGyver
as Larson
1985

Knight Rider
as Wade Fontaine
1982

Star Trek: The Next Generation
as Boratus
1987

Knight Rider
as Monk
1982

A Year in the Life
as Jim Scully
1987

The Flash
as Captain Cold
1990

Father Dowling Mysteries
as Harry Deal
1989

21 Jump Street
as Facility Director
1987