Renny Roker

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Born(1942-09-06)September 6, 1942
DiedDecember 20, 2022(2022-12-20) (aged 80)
Florida
OccupationsActor, promoter, record label executive
Renny Roker
Born(1942-09-06)September 6, 1942
DiedDecember 20, 2022(2022-12-20) (aged 80)
Florida
OccupationsActor, promoter, record label executive

Renny Roker (September 6, 1942 – December 20, 2022) was an American actor, sports and music promoter, and youth sports advocate credited for helping raise the profile of BMX racing in the United States.

In 1978, Roker created the JAG BMX World Championship.

Roker also founded several record labels with his brother Wally Roker in the 1970s. As a record and concert promoter, he worked with such bands and performers as Kiss (helping them achieve platinum album status for Destroyer), Donna Summer, and The Commodores. For a time, he was head of Casablanca Records's Black music division.[1]

His acting career sparked after Nat King Cole introduced Roker to film director Otto Preminger, who cast him in a small part in 1968's Skidoo. Roker went on to a recurring role that year on the TV sitcom Gomer Pyle, a featured turn as a detective on ABC's short-lived comedy Nobody's Perfect (1980), and five episodes as attorney Byron Brown on Hill Street Blues. He also had starring roles in two films from groundbreaking Black film director Horace Jackson: 1974's Tough and Deliver Us From Evil.

Roker was born on September 6, 1942, in New York City, New York.[2] He also lived in South Carolina, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico before retiring in Florida.

He had acting aspirations from the age of ten. He studied drama, speech and broadcasting at the Interamerican University of Puerto Rico, earning money as an award-winning D.J. in his spare time.[3]

His work organizing the JAG BMX racing championships ended in 1986, though he returned to promoting the sport in 2010.[4]

Roker's daughter, Sineta Roker, auditioned for American Idol in 2007. Their distant family includes Al Roker, actress Roxie Roker, and performer Lenny Kravitz.[5]

Roker's book Positivity: Your Key To Success, a mix of life advice and memoir, was published in 2015.[6]

Film and television career

Roker's first professional acting role came at the age of 15 with a recurring part in Recuerdos de Maria, a Puerto Rican soap opera (he played one of Maria's neighbors).[7]

From the late 1960s through the mid 1980s, he guest-starred in episodes of such TV hits as Julia, Mission: Impossible, The Mod Squad, and director Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stories. His final role was as Lieutenant Galey in the 1999 TV movie Kidnapped in Paradise, directed by Rob Hedden.[8]

Filmography

Film
Title Role Director Year Notes #
Skidoo Prison guard Otto Preminger 1968
Terror in the Sky Phone operator Bernard L. Kowalski 1971 Made for television
Melinda Dennis Smith Hugh A. Robertson 1972 [9]
The Ballad of Billie Blue Al Ken Osborne 1972 [10]
The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat Robert Taylor 1974 Voice
Tough Phil Horace Jackson 1974 Also assistant to the producer
Sky Heist Lee H. Katzin 1975
Joey Chris Townes Horace Jasckson 1975
Brothers Lewis Arthur Barron 1977
And Baby Makes Six Mailman Waris Hussein 1979 Made for television
Honky Tonk Freeway Sheriff John Schlesinger 1981
Mysterious Two Williams Gary Sherman 1982 Made for television
The Versace Murder Barnie Rogers Menahem Golan 1998
Kidnapped in Paradise Lieutenant Galey Rob Hedden 1999 Made for television
Technopolis Nathan Andre Dixon 2015 Short[11]

Music career

After graduating college in Puerto Rico, Roker worked in New York as national promotion director of K.C. Records. From there, he was a freelance promoter for several acts, including The Exciters, The Cadillacs, Theola Kilgore, and Wilson Pickett. In June 1962, Liberty Records announced that he was appointed to national R&B promo-sales representative, headquartered in the label's east coast office.[12]

Roker Records, which Renny ran with his brother Wally, released singles from 1969 to 1971, including songs by The Four Monitors, Irma Thomas, Swamp Dogg, The Whispers, and Gloria Lynne.[13] By March 1970, their Roker Record Group was operating not just the Roker label, but also the RRG, Soulclock and Stardom labels.[14]

In 1972, Roker and Swamp Dogg were set to appear on TV show Target, which was broadcast on WPVI-TV in Philadelphia. Their two appearances were connected to the release of the single "Sam Stone" which tells of the plight of a Vietnam Vet who returns home with a heavy drug habit. The single was released through Cream Records which Roker was connected with.[15][16]

In the late 1970s he was president of R&B Productions, which was based in Los Angeles.[17] Also in the late 1970s, he organized the First Funk Fest in Soldier Field, Chicago, an event that was attended by 70,000.[18]

Youth Sports Advocacy

References

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