Robert Alan Beuth (born November 30, 1957) is an American actor, artist, and dramatist best known for portraying television character roles, with more than 50 to his name over a career now spanning four decades. He has worked prolifically in both comedy and drama, but is most notable for portraying the role of Mueller on two seasons of the syndicated talk-show spoof Night Stand with Dick Dietrick, in 1996 and 1997. Beuth also has an extensive repertoire in commercials, in feature films, and (in particular) on stage, where his work encompasses acting, playwriting, and – most renownedly – the design and sculpting of theatrical masks and puppets.

Life and career

Early life

Beuth was born on November 30, 1957, in Albany, New York, third of four children to Philip R. Beuth, a program director at television station WTEN, and Elizabeth C. née Yost, a homemaker. At that time, Philip was just starting out on what would prove to be a long and prestigious career with the Capital Cities Television Corporation, the broadcasting conglomerate newly founded by various members of WTEN's management team; consequently, the family moved around repeatedly during Robert's youth, as Philip advanced through a succession of managerial positions at Capital Cities-owned stations such as WSAZ in Huntington, West Virginia and, ultimately, KFSN in Fresno, California. There, Beuth attended Tenaya Junior High School and Bullard High School, graduating from the latter in 1975.

Career beginnings

Beuth's interest in the dramatic arts began in childhood, but was initially stymied by lack of opportunities in his then-hometown of Huntington. However, the family's aforementioned move to Fresno in 1971 brought them into contact with "dozens of lifestyle amenities absent in Appalachia", including local theater; accordingly, Beuth quickly became a fixture in the Fresno Community Theater's children's program. By 1974, he had graduated to the main troupe, earned a reputation for ably portraying "rascal[ly characters] who make up in brass for what they lack in size", and was singled out for particularly rave reviews for his performance as the Cowardly Lion in their staging of The Wizard of Oz that December.

Following his high school graduation, Beuth briefly joined the Good Company Players, a dinner theater troupe operating out of the Fresno Hilton, before enrolling in the theater program at Fresno State University. A highlight of his two-year tenure at Fresno State was his performance at the 1976 American College Theatre Festival in Washington, D.C. as part of the cast of The Liberty Dance of Henry Sparrow, an original play authored by one of his own professors, Edward F. EmanuEl. Beuth also continued his work with the Fresno Community Theater during this time, garnering a Best Character Actor award for his turn as Herod in their production of Jesus Christ Superstar.

After leaving Fresno State in 1977, Beuth relocated to New York City and enrolled in acting classes at the William Esper Studio on the advice of family friend Wayne Rogers to secure professional work. Although he kept busy on a part-time basis in regional and summer-stock theater (notably with a 1981 stint with Montclair State University's Summerfun Theater, in which his performance as Ensign Pulver in Mister Roberts earned him comparisons to "a young Jack Lemmon", and a headline-making star turn in the Lake George Dinner Theatre's staging of Greater Tuna), Beuth later described this period of his life as a "jump into obscurity", in which success proved stubbornly elusive and he was forced to supplement his income with stints working as a waiter and a house painter.

Television

Although at first wholly devoted to theater, by 1982 Beuth had made some sporadic guest appearances on daytime soap operas, and worked for three years as a studio page for NBC's Saturday Night Live. In 1986, disillusioned with his lack of career advancement and with the encouragement of his father (who had recently been promoted as vice-president of early morning programming at ABC Entertainment), Beuth left New York for Los Angeles to try his hand in earnest at television acting. He initially regarded the move solely as a means of earning enough exposure and name recognition to one day return to the New York stage; however, his signing with the talent agency of Cunningham, Escott & Dipene led almost immediately to a steady flow of work. Within a year, he accumulated credits for guest appearances on L.A. Law, Remington Steele, and Newhart, and a television commercial in which he featured opposite Australian actor Paul Hogan just after Hogan's breakout role in Crocodile Dundee. Notwithstanding this new dimension to his career, Beuth still managed to retain a presence on the live stage, principally as a player in the Sunday Company of the improv and sketch comedy troupe The Groundlings.

The apex of Beuth's career in television came in 1996, midway through the first season of the syndicated talk show spoof Night Stand with Dick Dietrick, when he was cast in the role of Mueller. Taking over for Peter Siragusa, who had played the essentially identical character "Miller" for the series' first 25 episodes, Beuth was the doggedly loyal but perpetually browbeaten showrunner and sidekick opposite the show's host and namesake, portrayed by fellow Groundlings alum Timothy Stack. (Indeed, the supporting cast of Night Stand was also replete with former Groundlings, prominently including Lynne Marie Stewart, Shirley Prestia, and Christopher Darga.) Beuth's role as Mueller would continue for the remainder of the series' two-season run, totaling 72 episodes in all.

In the years since the cancellation of Night Stand, Beuth has continued to accumulate a lengthy résumé of television work. A notable highlight of his later career is Slanted, a 2010 comedic web series created by Andrea Lwin and adapted from her autobiographical one-woman show of the same name, which chronicled her life as a second-generation Chinese-American aspiring to be a Hollywood actress. Beuth took an integral part in conceiving and developing the character of sleazy talent agent Marty Phister, which he played for two of the series' six episodes and for which he received an award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series at the 2011 LAWebFest.

Feature films

Beuth has also acted in a number of feature films over the course of his career, again generally in small character roles, including Hollywood blockbusters such as When Harry Met Sally..., In the Line of Fire, and Outbreak. New York Times critic Janet Maslin credited Beuth's appearance as mill worker Cy Ippeston in the 1990 horror movie Graveyard Shift for helping lend a certain "quirky appeal" to an otherwise uneven film adaptation of Stephen King's identically-titled short story.

Playwriting

Beuth's most notable effort as a playwright is Stories of the Season, which he created and wrote in collaboration with Robert George Harrison, an old acquaintance from his community theater days in Fresno. First staged as a production of the Pacific Theatre Ensemble of Culver City, California, the play's initial run in December 1992 earned praise from Los Angeles Times drama critic Sylvie Drake for its unusual structure and thematic influences: performances typically began with light hors d'oeuvres in the playhouse lobby and then proceeded to a stage sparsely appointed with a small selection of costumes and theatrical masks along with ten elaborately gift-wrapped boxes, five of which would be chosen by audience members to come onstage and open. Each box contained a printed story – described by the critic as "regenerative fables [that] draw heavily on mythology, miracles, and American Indian lore" – which would then be acted out by the production's five-person cast. These segments were interwoven with Christmas carol singalongs, conversations between cast and audience regarding personal holiday traditions, and other participatory elements.

Stories of the Season was revived the following year in an updated version that incorporated several new stories, some with a Hanukkah theme, and in the years since has itself become something of a holiday tradition among Southern California's theatrical community. Subsequent revivals have been staged locally by the Gascon Theater Center and the Echo Theater Company, and the show has also occasionally been taken on the road to out-of-town destinations such as Santa Fe, New Mexico and Stony Brook, New York.

In 2003, Beuth followed up the success of Stories of the Season with a second dramatic effort, In the Valley of the Mist, again with Harrison as co-writer. Using 55 custom-designed puppets and masks as well as a cast largely drawn from the youth acting troupe of Santa Monica, California's not-for-profit Virginia Avenue Project, In the Valley of the Mist tells the story of Raj, a young boy who runs away from his village into the wilderness and encounters a parade of fantastical characters on his journey to the play's titular destination.

Beuth's most recent foray as a dramatist is a one-man adaptation of the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn that was staged at the Moving Arts Theatre in Los Angeles in February and March 2026. Directed by Peter Van Norden, the production once again made prominent use of Beuth's repertoire of masks and puppets, and was lauded for its "gentle and genial... humanity", especially in light of the ongoing critical reappraisal of Mark Twain's original work.

Sculpture

Aside from performance, Beuth's career as an artist mainly takes the form of the design and fabrication of theatrical masks and puppets, an interest that began while he was at the Fresno Community Theater. There, in addition to acting in the troupe, he was also employed as a custodian for the Fresno Memorial Auditorium, and thus had access to storage rooms where set elements and props were kept: an experience he likened to "a kid [being given] the keys to Disneyland at night". However, Beuth did not begin pursuing the craft in earnest until 1981, when he answered an ad that had been placed in a trade publication by Julie Taymor, a then-unknown but now-renowned theatrical artist who was soliciting students for an eight-week maskmaking course. Beuth soon began spending large amounts of his spare time sculpting masks in a workspace in his Manhattan studio apartment, first using Silastic and later neoprene. His handiwork is featured in all of his aforementioned self-written theatrical works, but also comprises custom fabrications for a variety of Southern California theater companies. He has also taught courses in theatrical maskmaking at the Harvard-Westlake School in Los Angeles.

After completing work on In the Valley of the Mist, Beuth began to expand his purview as a sculptor, studying for twelve years under Santa Monica-based artist Jonathan Bickhart and developing an additional specialty in the medium of cast bronze.

Filmography

Films

YearFilmRoleDirectorNotes
1989Ghostbusters IIStore ManagerIvan Reitman
When Harry Met Sally...Man on AisleRob Reiner
1990Graveyard ShiftCy IppestonRalph S. Singleton
1993Reckless KellyBeverly Hills Bank TellerYahoo Serious
In the Line of FireMan at BankWolfgang Petersen
1994The Fantastic FourDr. HauptmanOley SassoneUnreleased. Credited as Robert Beuth
No Dessert, Dad, till You Mow the LawnNeighborHoward McCain
1995OutbreakGeorge ArmisteadWolfgang Petersen
Captain Nuke and the Bomber BoysAgent BobCharles GaleDirect-to-video release
1999The Story of UsObstetricianRob Reiner
Kiss Toledo GoodbyeHarryLyndon ChubbuckDirect-to-video release
2001The Shrink Is InMan in ElevatorRichard Benjamin
HeartbreakersMaître d'David Mirkin
2003Grand Theft ParsonsReporterDavid Caffrey
2005Fun with Dick and JaneMale Globodyne EmployeeDean Parisot
2006It's a Wonderful iLifePCJ. P. PierceShort film
2007Buddy SystemMr. RoyceJ. P. PierceShort film
2009Thanks for DyingDon QuigleyR. J. McFarlane
2010It's a Horrible LifeMr. PotterGregg BinkleyShort film
2016Sensitivity TrainingGeorgeMelissa Finell
2021The United States vs. Billie HolidayCongressman J. RankinLee Daniels

Television

Year(s)TitleRole(s)Notes
1987L.A. LawAttorney JonesS1E15 "December Bribe". Credited as Robert Beuth
Remington SteeleS5E3 "Steele Hanging in There: Part 1"
NewhartBarry DrobesS5E23 "Good-Bye & Good Riddance, Mr. Chips"
Our HouseS2E1 "Sounds from a Silent Clock: Part 1"; S2E2 "Sounds from a Silent Clock: Part 2"
The New GidgetCouncilmanS2E2 "Bred to Shred"
1988ALFHowardS2E22 "Movin' Out". Credited as Robert Beuth
Just in TimeS1E2 "All the Editor's Men"
On the FritzNetwork ExecutiveTV movie. Credited as Robert Beuth
DynastyMorgue AssistantS9E4 "Body Trouble"
1989Anything but LoveStar Squad Commander AdamsS2E11 "Woman on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown"
1990Open HouseThe ClientS1E22 "The Real Estate Thing"
1990–1991General HospitalConcierge; Desk Clerk3 episodes
1991A Triumph of the Heart: The Ricky Bell StoryPR ManTV movie
Santa BarbaraAuditorEpisode #1778
1992Camp WilderS1E9 "Something Wilder"
1993Reasonable DoubtsAgent DawkinsS2E15 "Thank God, It's Friday"
1994The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Hollywood FolliesMannyTV movie
1995CoachDesk ClerkS7E15 "Close Encounters of the Worst Kind"
1995–1997Night Stand with Dick DietrickMuellerMain role in final 72 episodes of series, beginning with S1E25 "Athletes as Role Models" (1996). Also played the role of Donny in S1E21 "Mistrial of the Century" (1995). Credited as Robert Beuth or Robert Alan Booth (sic) for some episodes.
1996Murphy BrownRobertS8E23 "Stepping Out"
Norma Jean & MarilynCommissary PhotographerTV movie
Alien AvengersNervous CustomerTV movie
Life with LouieS2E1 "Caddy on a Hot Tin Roof" (voice)
1997Chicago HopeHarry DerkinS3E12 "Split Decisions"
1998Team Knight RiderCal Tech Engineer #1S1E20 "Apocalypse Maybe". Credited as Bob Beuth
Party of FiveWillardS5E2 "Separation Anxiety"
1999Caroline in the CityRealtorS4E16 "Caroline and the Ancestral Home"
PayneMinisterS1E8 "Wedding Fever"
2000Rude AwakeningArthurS2E20 "Star 80 Proof"
Suddenly SusanHowieS4E16 "Girls Night Out"
2002Son of the BeachTown CrierS3E8 "Hamm Stroker's Suck My Blood"
Malcolm in the MiddleTomS4E3 "Family Reunion"
2003CSI: MiamiPrincipal RolandS1E20 "Grave Young Men"
The West WingTranslatorS4E20 "Evidence of Things Not Seen"
FriendsProfessor KlarikS9E23 "The One in Barbados". Uncredited
CharmedSalesmanS6E4 "The Power of Three Blondes"
2005Fielder's ChoiceMitchellTV movie
2006ERICU ChiefS12E12 "Split Decisions"
2009Lie to MeAngry GuestS1E4 "Love Always"
MonkD.A. Charles FriedkenS8E5 "Mr. Monk Takes the Stand"
2010Rules of EngagementCity OfficialS4E6 "Third Wheel". Credited as Robert Beuth
2011SlantedMarty PhisterWeb series. S1E2 "Marty Phister"; S1E3 "Doubt This"
Accidentally in LoveDoctorTV movie
Law & Order: LALarry PhillipsS1E20 "El Sereno"
2012AwakeStan DrakeS1E2 "The Little Guy"
2013BonesBert HogueS9E9 "The Fury in the Jury"
BetasInvestor #3S1E8 "Show & Tell"
2014Grey's AnatomyMr. GorderS10E18 "You Be Illin'"
StalkerRonS1E2 "Whatever Happened to Baby James?"
2015Kirby BucketsMr. SandsS2E2 "The Gil in My Life"
2018The Guest BookStanS2E2 "Under Cover"
2022As We See ItMarcusS1E2 "I Apologize for My Words and Actions"
2023The ConnersBig Belly ManS5E11 "Two More Years and a Stolen Rose"
MinxCliffS2E2 "I Thought the Bed Was Gonna Fly"
Lessons in ChemistryFrank Marsten3 episodes
2025MatlockJudge Sheldon FlecherS1E10 "Crash Helmets On"

Video games

YearTitleRoleNotes
2011L.A. NoireBarton Keyes

External links