Sam Hennings was born in Macon, Georgia and started working as an actor in television, film, and on stage in the 1980s. Prior to his work on Star Trek: The Next Generation he appeared in episodes of Moonlighting (1985, with Robert Ellenstein and Brian Thompson), The Colbys (1985, with regulars Stephanie Beacham, Tracy Scoggins, and Ricardo Montalban), Dallas (1986, with Susan Howard, John Beck, Barry Jenner, and Morgan Woodward), Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1986, with Bruce Gray and Nana Visitor), Scarecrow and Mrs. King (1986, with Rick Fitts, Richard Herd, and Georgann Johnson), and Houston Knights (1988, with Anthony DeLongis). Early film projects include the drama Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling (1986, with Barbara Williams and Mike Genovese), the family drama On Our Own (1988), and the war drama Private War (1988).
Sam Hennings Biography
Sam Hennings was born in Macon, Georgia, of German, English and Scotch-Irish ancestry. Deciding in the early 1980s to pursue acting as a full-time profession, he moved to Los Angeles where he studied at the prestigious Beverly Hills Playhouse (for 20 years) with prominent acting teacher, Milton Katselas. In 1984, with encouragement from his teacher, Hennings launched his theatrical stage career, a medium he fell in love with and continues to return to whenever possible. In 1985, Hennings made his professional acting debut on Moonlighting: Moonlighting (Pilot) (1985). Over the next few years, he continued to improve his craft through study and stage work and landed several TV guest-starring roles including Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Dallas, Star Trek: The Next Generation and Hunter. In 1989, Hennings had his first break when director Randy Roberts, who had directed the actor earlier in Alfred Hitchcock Presents, invited him to co-star with Louis Gossett Jr. in The Last Plane from Coramaya (1989).
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Career: The 1990s brought Hennings more substantial television roles and well deserved exposure. In 1991, he made his film debut as a hard-nosed, Texas sheriff in the 1960s era film Shout (1991), which earned mixed reviews from critics but garnered the actor praise for his performance. This opened the door for the actor to play Loyola Marymount basketball coach David Spencer in Final Shot: The Hank Gathers Story (1992). In 1992-93, he landed his first series regular role in the short lived series Secrets (1992), and on NBC’s Trade Winds (1993). He was then cast as the lead in Seasons of the Heart (1993), playing a weary, Civil War-era man relocated to Oregon, where his children are dying of cholera. In 1994, John Badham cast him as a rogue, skydiving, DEA agent opposite Gary Busey in Drop Zone (1994), which starred Wesley Snipes. CBS then cast Hennings as a killer in The Magnificent Seven: One Day Out West (1998). That same year, he was cast in Point Last Seen (1998), starring Linda Hamilton. He finished the decade with a recurring role on Pensacola: Wings of Gold (1997).