Dean Cain
Born Dean George Tanaka in Mt. Clemens, MI, Cain was the son of actress Sharon Thomas and U.S. Army serviceman Roger Tanaka, who left his mother before he was even born. Cain and brother Roger were later adopted by his mother's second husband, director Christopher Cain. After moving to California with his parents, he took up acting as a child, appearing in bit parts in the films, "Elmer," (1976) and "Charlie & The Talking Buzzard" (1979). Cain later attended Santa Monica High School, where he earned scholarship offers as a star athlete, while also appearing in his first speaking role in his step-father's film "The Stone Boy" (1984). Upon graduation, he enrolled at Princeton University, where he played football as a free safety and defensive back, as well as excelled in volleyball. Cain set a school record for interceptions in a single game while, at the same time, scoring off the field by dating fellow student Brooke Shields. After earning his bachelor's in history, Cain signed as a free agent with the Buffalo Bills, but a devastating preseason knee injury ended his football career.Not surprisingly, Cain returned to film full time, first trying his hand at screenwriting, then acting. Thanks to his talent and good looks, he had little trouble landing jobs in commercials and bit parts in television - one of his first was the made-for-television movie, "Things That Go Bump in the Night" (ABC, 1989). He went on to appear in the follow-up series of the same name, then made guest appearances on "Life Goes On" and "A Different World," (NBC, 1987-93). Cain managed to draw attention with a four-episode stint as Rick, the dashing boyfriend of Brenda (Shannon Doherty), on "Beverly Hills, 90210" (Fox, 1990-2000). After a handful of bit parts in between, Cain landed the role of Superman in "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman." Conceived as a new take on the superhero, the show focused on the romantic storyline of Clark and Lois Lane, played by Teri Hatcher. The show was an instant success and surprise hit with female viewers, who were quickly drawn in to the romantic, fanciful storylines. Cain was straightforward in his characterization of Superman. But the bigger role was Clark, with the actor eschewing the standard nerdy, awkward reporter for a more handsome, dashing journalist.The show was a ratings hit for four seasons, while Cain was able to flex his writing muscles, penning episodes in the second and third seasons. During this time, he also wrote and hosted a prime time special, "Off Camera With Dean Cain," profiling the lives of celebrities such as Andrew Shue and Daphne Zuniga. At the peak of popularity of "Lois & Clark," producers took the bold step of marrying Lois and Clark - but when it was revealed that Clark mistakenly married a clone of Lois, many fans felt that they were cheated. Lois and Clark wed for real in the third episode of the fourth season, but by then viewership had already dropped. A finale suggesting that Lois and Clark would be adoptive parents when an infant arrives on their doorstep, failed to get the show renewed for a fifth season.Free of the red cape, Cain moved on to a series of smaller roles and guest parts. He developed, produced and hosted "Ripley's Believe It or Not!" which ran for four seasons on TBS before its cancellation. He also guest starred on the short-lived remake of "Fantasy Island," (ABC, 1998-99), and on episodes of "Just Shoot Me," (NBC, 1997-2003) and "Frasier" (NBC, 1993-2004). He also had a regular role on "The Division," (Lifetime, 2001-04), playing the character of Inspector Jack Ellis. Back in the feature world, he had a small part in the 2001 Jerry Zucker comedy "Rat Race," but made subsequent appearances in mainly B-movie action fare such as "Firetrap," (2001) "New Alcatraz," (2002) and "Dark Descent" (2002). He raised his profile, however, playing the heavy in the 2003 Denzel Washington thriller, "Out of Time," in 2003. The role of the bad guy led to his portrayal of Scott Peterson in the 2004 television movie, "The Perfect Husband: The Laci Peterson Story," for the USA Network. Initially reluctant to take a role he feared would be exploitative, Cain changed his mind, thanks to encouragement from his father to take on the part - but only if the script was good and it allowed him a chance to stretch his acting chops. Since that high profile role, Cain appeared as a regular on "Hope & Faith," (ABC, 2003-06) and played the recurring character of Casey Manning on the hit series, "Las Vegas" (NBC, 2003-08). He had a lead role in the made-for-television disaster epic, "10.5: Apocalypse," (NBC, 2006), then starred in another made-for-TV holiday romance, "A Christmas Wedding," (Lifetime, 2006), and the miniseries, "Final Approach" (Hallmark, 2007). In "September Dawn" (2007), his step-father's period drama on the Mountain Meadows Massacre in 1857, Cain had a small, but significant role as Joseph Smith, founder of the controversial Mormon Church. Cain continued working steadily in TV movies and in guest roles on TV series, often--as on "Entourage" (HBO 2004-2011) and "Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23" (ABC 2012-13)--playing a tongue-in-cheek version of himself. Cain hosted a revived version of the series "Bloopers" (Syndicated 2012-13) and co-starred in the religious drama "God's Not Dead" (2014). Cain co-starred in basketball drama "Hit the Floor" (VH1/BET 2013-) and had recurring roles in "Supergirl" (CBS/CW 2015-) and Maria Bamford's comedy series "Lady Dynamite" (Netflix 2016-18).