Sam Cohen(1954-2023)
- Actor
Born in New York City to a Spanish-Greek-Polish-Jewish family, Sam was
raised near Rockaway Beach and on the rustic shores of Lake Mohegan,
NY. His great-uncle was film composer Louis Herscher. Sam began acting
and singing in grade school with starring roles in the musicals
"Oliver!", "The Mikado" and "Bye, Bye Birdie." At 16, he enrolled at
the University of Rochester to study drama, English and philosophy. He
became the first freshman in its history to be elected to senate by
campaigning room to room and talking to over 1000 students. By age 19,
he was Phi Beta Kappa, a Rhodes Scholar nominee and featured in "Who's
Who in American Colleges." He was awarded a scholarship to Harvard
University where he studied theatre, film and psychology. Bowing to
family pressure, he attended Columbia University Medical School for one
year. He took a leave-of-absence to write and study acting at NYU, HB
Studio and the New School. Stage work and small roles in films and
commercials soon followed, and Sam moved to Los Angeles, where he
studied acting and screenwriting at UCLA. He quickly discovered that
witty dialogue was his strong suit. Inspired by the classic romantic
comedies, he wrote "A Pair Of Hearts", which he plans to produce and
costar in. Sam's voice is compelling in a natural, often seductive way.
He is a talented mimic, capable of impersonating someone moments after
meeting them or seeing them onscreen. Actors he emulates are Montgomery
Clift and Marcello Mastroianni. Writer/directors who inspire him are
Woody Allen, Cameron Crowe, Barry Levinson, James L. Brooks, Federico
Fellini and Steven Spielberg. He has 3 sisters, two of whom are
identical twins.