Robert Beltran

Robert Beltran

at Fedcon 15 Convention (2006)
Born Robert Adame Beltran
(1953-11-19) November 19, 1953
Bakersfield, California, U.S.
Occupation actor
Years active 1981present
Website www.robertbeltran.com

Robert Adame Beltran (born November 19, 1953) is an American actor, known for his role as Raoul Mendoza in the 1982 Paul Bartel's black comedy film Eating Raoul, and as Commander Chakotay on the television series Star Trek: Voyager.

Early life

Beltran was born in Bakersfield, California, the son of Aurelia Olgin (née Adame) and Louis Perez Beltran,[1] first generation Mexican-Americans. Beltran attended East Bakersfield High School and Bakersfield College. He has two sisters and seven brothers, including the well-known Latin Jazz musician Louie Cruz Beltran.

Career

Beltran graduated from California State University, Fresno with a degree in Theater Arts and moved to Los Angeles to begin his acting career. He has been working steadily since 1979 in both theater and film. Beltran had his first film role in Zoot Suit in 1981, but his breakthrough came in 1982 when he played Raoul in the cult classic film Eating Raoul. Beltran also had a supporting role as Chuck Norris' partner, Deputy Kayo in Lone Wolf McQuade in 1983 (this film was also the basis for the TV series Walker, Texas Ranger starring Chuck Norris). He was in the 1984 TV movie The Mystic Warrior as the Native American "Ahbleza", and starred as Hector in the 1984 cult classic, Night of the Comet.

Beltran is perhaps best known for his role as Commander Chakotay, first officer of the starship Voyager, in the science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager from 1995 to 2001. Beltran won the Nosotros Golden Eagle Award for Outstanding Actor in a Television Series in 1997. He was nominated in 1996 for the NCLR Bravo Award for Outstanding Television Series Actor in a Crossover Role, and the ALMA Award for Outstanding Individual Performance in a Television Series in a Crossover Role in 1998 and 1999.

Beltran founded and co-directed the East LA Classic Theater Group. He is also a member of the Classical Theater Lab, an ensemble of professional actors who co-produced his production of Hamlet in 1997, which he directed and starred in.

Beltran at the Toronto Sci-Fi Expo, 2007

Since at least 2003, Beltran has collaborated with amateur actors in the LaRouche Youth Movement in performing plays and scenes of plays of Friedrich Schiller and William Shakespeare; Lyndon LaRouche holds Beltran up as the arbiter of all things theatrical in the LaRouche organization. Following discussions with LaRouche on the question of classical tragedy, Beltran produced and starred in a Los Angeles production of "The Big Knife" by Clifford Odets, a play which explores the Hollywood environment during the historical period of the "red scares" under the administration of President Harry Truman.[2][3]

In May 2009, Beltran played the dual roles of Don Fermin and Older Eusebio in the American Conservatory Theaters staging of José Rivera's Boleros for the Disenchanted. He has also taken the recurring supporting role of Jerry Flute in Seasons 3 and 4 of HBO's Big Love.[4]

Recordings

Latino Poetry Excerpts from a live performance by Beltran (recorded at the Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach, California, April 2002)

Theater

  • I Don't Have To Show You No Stinkin' Badges (1986)
  • Stars In The Morning Sky (1987)
  • A Burning Beach (1988)
  • Macbeth (1989)
  • Widows (1991)
  • A Touch Of The Poet (1993)
  • Hamlet (1997)
  • The Big Knife (2003)
  • Boleros for the Disenchanted (2009)
  • Solitude (2009)
  • Devil's Advocate (2011)

Filmography

Notable awards & nominations

References

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