Gilbert "Gil" Gerard was born on January 23, 1943 in Little Rock,
Arkansas, and did a good deal of acting in high school. He attended the
University of Arkansas but dropped out before graduation. He landed a
job as an industrial chemist. He became regional manager of a large
chemical company, headed by (1967-1971) Arkansas Governor "Win"
Winthrop Rockefeller. After a few years, Gil's employers said they
would name him the firm's vice-president if he pursued his master's degree.
Gil resigned rather than tell everyone he did not have a college diploma.
He moved to New York where he studied drama by day and drove a cab at
night. By chance, Gil picked up a fare who showed a lively interest in the
problems of unknown, unemployed actors. Before that passenger left the
cab, he told Gil to report in a few days to the set of Love Story (1970),
which was being filmed on location in New York City. When Gil arrived on the
"Love Story" set, he was hired as an extra. Later that day, he was singled
out for a "bit" role, which eventually wound up on the cutting room
floor, but Gil now had his first professional credit.
During the next few years, Gil did most of his acting in television
commercials, some four hundred of them, including a stint as spokesman
for the Ford Motor Company. Then came a leading role in the daytime
soap opera The Doctors (1963). He
formed his own production company in partnership with a
writer-producer, co-authored a screenplay called Hooch (1977) and
filmed it as a starring vehicle for himself. With "Hooch" completed, he
was summoned to California to co-star with
Yvette Mimieux in
Ransom for Alice! (1977)
and to play Lee Grant's youthful lover
in Universal's Verschollen im Bermuda-Dreieck (1977). A
guest shot on
Unsere kleine Farm (1974)
impressed producer-star
Michael Landon, who cast him in
the leading role in an ambitious television movie,
Killing Stone (1978). He
signed for his best known role as Captain Buck Rogers in the television
series
Buck Rogers (1979).