Stephen Furst's Bio
Stephen Furst
Actor, Director, Producer, Diabetic, Kidney Patient
Stephen Furst began his film and television career 28 years ago, starring in
National Lampoon's Animal House (the People's Choice Movie of the Year) as the
bumbling and overweight freshman, Flounder. Other feature film acting credits
include The Dream Team, with Michael Keaton and Christopher Lloyd, and Midnight
Madness, with Michael J. Fox. He recently co-starred in Sorority Boys, a comedy
feature from Touchstone, and in a film adaptation of Stephen King's thriller,
Autopsy Room 4.
Stephen's television credits are extensive and include roles on a number of Emmy
Award- winning series such as the medical drama St. Elsewhere, in which he
co-starred as Dr. Elliot Axelrod, and the apocalyptic mini-series The Day After,
co-starring with Jason Robards and John Lithgow. Most recently, Stephen starred
as Vir Cotto in the award-winning science fiction series from Warner Bros.,
Babylon 5. As a voice-over artist, he starred in the animated film Little
Mermaid II: Return to the Sea and in the animated series Buzz Lightyear of Star
Command, with Tim Allen.
In 1994, Stephen made a leap in his career by writing, directing, and starring
in a family film, The Magic Kid, which ran on HBO for more than a year. He also
directed a number of episodes of Babylon 5 and has been directing ever since.
Stephen directed for Columbia Tri-Star the live-action musical feature Baby
Huey's Great Easter Adventure, for which he won the Director's Gold Award at the
Santa Clarita International Film Festival. His film Dragon Storm was the
most-watched original two-hour movie in the history of the Sci-Fi Channel. One
of his latest television movie projects, Path of Destruction―a story about
nanotechnology gone wrong―premiered on the Sci-Fi Channel in March 2005.
As a producer, Stephen currently is in development with New Line Cinema for the
adaptation of the best-selling novel, My Sister's Keeper (a drama about a young
woman who needs a kidney transplant, and the reluctance of her sister to be a
donor). He also is producing a feature based on another best-selling novel,
Keeping Faith, for Lifetime Television. Stephen is in pre-production as a
producer on the romantic comedy Christmas in Boston for ABC Family.
Real Life Off- Screen
As a result of being diagnosed with diabetes at age 17 - in the same year
that his father died of diabetic complications - Stephen wrote and released, in
2002, his award-winning book, Confessions of a Couch Potato (Or, If I'm So
Skinny, Why Do I Still Feel Like Flounder?), published by the American Diabetes
Association and distributed by McGraw-Hill. This humorous and inspirational
memoir looks at his experiences as a diabetic and the events that ultimately
changed his life for the better. It features his personal recipes and tips for
weight loss... something that Stephen can authoritatively speak of first-hand,
having gone from the "320-pound out-of-control diabetic person" that he was to
the "180-pound healthy diabetic person of today."
Stephen is a spokesperson for the American Diabetes Association, to which he
donates the proceeds from sales of his celebrity photos. He has worked
extensively with the Association, writing, producing, directing, and starring in
an inspirational comedy video, Diabetes for Guys, which is based on his life and
demonstrates the benefits of sensible diabetes management. He also was the
national spokesperson for the American Heart Association during their campaign,
"The Heart of Diabetes," designed to bring awareness of cardiovascular disease
to those with diabetes.
As a result of being diagnosed with renal failure earlier this year, Stephen can
add being a member of the Advisory Board of the Renal Support Network - a
patient-run organization that helps people with chronic kidney disease and their
families - to his list of credits. He will be elevated to full Board-member status
early next year.
An Epiphany
It was during a hospital admission in 1996, when he was 40, that the severely
overweight and diabetic actor hit "a rock- hard bottom," causing him to finally
understand that he alone was responsible for the consequences of having
neglected his health. Stephen had been admitted for a seemingly routine blister
on his foot that had become infected.
"I was in the hospital complaining about the small portions of food they were
giving me, while the doctors were in the next room deciding whether they were
going to have to amputate my foot." Stephen says that he did what any other
320-pound guy would do in a similar situation: He called out for Chinese
take-out to be delivered to his hospital bed... enough for five people!
The nurse found out about the Chinese food, it was confiscated, and the
telephone was removed from his room. The doctors were able to save his foot, and
Stephen lost 12 pounds while in the hospital. "I took this as a sign. The saving
of my foot, getting caught with the food, and then losing the 12 pounds. I
decided once and for all to change my lifestyle and continue to live."
The now fit actor/director/producer- who was discovered for the role of Flounder
after pasting his publicity photo and resume on the inside lids of pizza boxes
that he delivered in Hollywood-has been married to his wife, Lorraine, for 28
years. They have two sons: Griff, who is an actor, and Nathan, who is an
award-winning film composer.
After achieving his weight-loss goal, Stephen bought a bracelet inscribed with
the well-known 12-Step prayer: "God grant me the serenity to accept the things I
cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know
the difference."
"The magic," says Stephen, "is that you can change more things than you could
ever dream of."
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