Daniel Roebuck
Born: Mar 4, 1963
Daniel Roebuck was born in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. He performed at age nine in local events, and by age 13, had traveled the tri-state area as a clown in a regional circus. He continued to hone his craft by acting, directing and writing plays and performing a magic act at local area clubs that evolved into a stand-up comedy routine. Making the move to Los Angeles at age 21, Roebuck won stage roles in such presentations as the U.S. premiere of Sarcophagus at L.A.T.C., No Time for Sergeants and the world premiere stagings of Holy Toledo and Who Killed Orson Welles. He won praise for one of his first movie roles, the haunting, stoned-out teenage murderer, in Tim Hunter's searing drama, River's Edge. A familiar face to fans of the hit TV series Matlock, in which he played legal assistant Clifford Lewis for three seasons, he has logged roles in such telefilms as Caught in the Crossfire, Runaway Father, the small screen remake of The Dirty Dozen and The Killing Mind on Lifetime. . He also shared a small piece of television history with a role in the episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation which resurrected Leonard Nimoy's Mr. Spock and introduced the new TV series.
click here to see him in action
Daniel Roebuck Nude and Sexy

       

Members Login
Username:
Password :
The Net's #1 Online Adult Entertainment Website
| Copyright © 2012 Malestars.com, Inc. All rights reserved! |

Webmasters Who Want To Promote This Site, Click Here!
All models portrayed are eighteen (18) years of age or older.
Please click here to see that we are 2257 compliant .
Members Enter Here
Our purpose is to provide you, our subscribers, with news, indormation, moive reviews and photographs about the activities of public figures and well-known celebrities. We reserve the right to make legitimate mention of the public activities of such people. As stated in the Restatement of Torts, Second, comment to Section 652C, "No one has the right to object merely because his or her name or appearance is brought before the public, since neither is in any way a private maner and both are open to public observation.