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KPUT Bios
and Future Obits
Steve Scholz
Steve began writing and performing comedy pieces and songs in junior high and high school.  He attended the University of Iowa where he  created, wrote, produced and acted in KPUT with Ben, Glen and Hector.

After graduating, he moved to Chicago for training and shows with Player's Workshop, the Second City Training Center, IO (formerly ImprovOlympic) and the Annoyance Theater.  He has written and performed scripts for radio, TV and theatrical revues including "Postage From The Edge, or Lick It and Stick It" at Players Workshop, and the Second City Level 5 show "Keeping Our Day Jobs."  He has also created ads for radio, print and the Internet.

He acted in seven different improvised productions at IO Chicago directed by the late Del Close, including "The Carousel Players in SHOW" and "Underlined Passages by Spoo in SHOW".  He performed with the Carousel Players at the first annual Chicago Improv Festival (CIF), and with Spoo at the Fourth Annual Big Stinkin' International Improv and Sketch Comedy Festival in Austin, Texas (BS4).  In 1999, he wrote and acted in his first independent theatrical production.  The sketch-comedy revue "Bugged By The Millennium, or Et Tu, Y2K?" opened September 1999 and ran six weeks in the Del Close Theater at IO (see review excerpts below right).

Steve has been a Harold team member at IO, a 98-pound weakling in Illinois Lottery print ads, and an undercover cop in the ABA's Chicago Seven Trial video.  He performed in the solo improv show "Sybilization" at The Playground Theater.� He received acclaim in the play BEDLAM (review excerpt below) and played Bob Cratchit on radio and TV for the Iowa Lottery's "Bah Humbucks" campaign (hear it at the link).� In 2003, he performed his one-person satricial show "TRUST FUNNIN' " at WNEP Theater in Chicago (review excerpt at right).  He followed it up with "TRUST FUNNIN' 2, You Gotta Be Kidding" at Prop THTR in 2005 and Live Bait Theater in 2006 (review excerpts at right).  And if you're in Northern Wisconsin, you may see him on TV walking through a puddle for Security Health Plan.

Steve is a member of SAG and AFTRA.  He lives in Chicago where he pursues acting, writing, modeling and voiceover work.
Excerpts from reviews of
BUGGED BY THE MILLENNIUM, OR ET TU, Y2K? (at IO)


"It's one of the few winning attempts at true political
and social satire since the mock presidential debates
at Second City nearly four years ago.�ImprovOlympic veteran Steve Scholz has scripted a revue that has
both a soul and a conscience. . . .When Scholz hits
the mark--as he does more often than not--the results
are impressive."
--Chicago Reader, September 25, 1999

"Scholz's satire, which also takes aim at the futile
posturing of world leaders and the skewed politics of
right-wing extremists, makes some powerful points."
--Chicago Sun Times, September 22, 1999
Steve is represented by:

Encore Talent Agency
Iris Talent Agency

For print, film, commercial, industrial and
voiceover work.
Glen Keenan
Glen is originally from Grinnell, Iowa, where he performed in many high
school and community theater productions--including "The Music Man",
"Arsenic And Old Lace", "The Pajama Game", "Guys And Dolls", "A
Thousand Clowns", "Kiss Me, Kate", "The Miracle Worker" and "Storybook
Theatre". He also served on the Grinnell Community Theater (GCT) Board
of Directors and produced "Once Upon A Mattress" for GCT. He attended
Grinnell College where he majored in Theater Arts, but later transferred to
the University of Iowa, where he graduated with a B.A. in Communication
Studies.


At the U of I, Glen studied film production, and wrote, directed and edited
many student film projects--including an animated short for which he was
nominated for an Iowa Film Award (an annual, statewide award for
professional and student film and video). He also took classes in acting,
screenwriting, TV production and audio production--including an advanced
audio production class taught by Duck's Breath Mystery Theater member
Dan Coffey, a.k.a. Dr. Science. In this class, Glen met Steve, Ben and
Hector, and the four of them later created, wrote and produced the half-
hour sketch comedy radio series "KPUT", which aired on KRUI, 89.7 FM in
Iowa City. He co-wrote, co-produced, acted in and edited a half-hour sketch
comedy TV program called "The Desk Show", which aired on PATV in Iowa
City, and he wrote comedy pieces for Dan Coffey's series "The Iowa Radio
Project", which aired on many National Public Radio stations.
Ben DeJean
Raised in Louisville, Kentucky, Ben attended the J. Graham Brown school,
where he acted in and worked tech for all of the school plays. He also
helped run the video department, videotaping basketball games and other
school events. In addition, he borrowed the video equipment to make two
short videos, "Plan 10 From Outer Space" (a sequel of sorts to the 1954 Ed
Wood movie) and "The Verlif Toothpaste Commercials of 1985", which
placed in a local competition and aired on Kentucky Public Television.

Ben attended the University of Iowa and majored in Communication Studies.
He was a member of the university's video club, taping lectures and
concerts, and also borrowed club video equipment to produce a collection
of skits called "The Lori Wunder Show". He was also a member of a writer's
support group, The Dead Screenwriters Society.

Ben moved to Los Angeles after collaborating on two episodes of "KPUT"
(considered by many to be the finest two episodes in the series), but he
continued to write for the show. Ben also wrote material for Dan Coffey's
public radio show, "The Iowa Radio Project".� He joined another writers
support group, The Alameda Writers Group (AWG), and eventually served
as President.

He currently works for a major Hollywood studio in a humiliating, low-level
position with no chance of promotion and no overtime.
Gromius Klipp
Copyright 2006 KPUT Komedy, Ink.
All rights reserved
Click below to go to the
KPUT Archives
Click below to go to
KPUT Komedy Korner
(Main Page)
e-mail Steve at
[email protected]
e-mail Ben at
[email protected]
(773-638-7300)
(312-563-1005)
Click here to hear
Glen in a few of the
many KPUT skits
that he's written
e-mail Glen at
[email protected]
Click here to hear
Ben in a few of the
many KPUT skits
that he's written
Click here to hear
Gromius in a few of the
many KPUT skits
that he's written
Click here to hear
Steve in a few of the
many KPUT skits
that he's written
Updated June 2006
Ben DeJean

Gromius Klipp

Steve Scholz

Glen Keenan
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Excerpts from a review of the play
BEDLAM (at The Playground Theater):


"Steve Scholz offers strong work in several roles, especially a schoolmarmish drag turn. . . ."
--Chicago Reader, March 15, 2002
A native of Louisville, Kentucky, Gromius currently lives in New York, where
he has worked for a succession of publishing companies. The latest is
Cooper Square Press.

As a university student in Iowa City, Gromius joined Radio Comedy
classmates Steve and Glen as a writer/producer/actor for the radio show
"KPUT", created by Steve, Glen, and Gromius's cousin Ben. The show was
broadcast for a year on KRUI, 89.7 FM in Iowa City.

Gromius's first writing job was for the "Iowa Radio Project", a nationally-
syndicated radio show based in Iowa City. He has written for small-town
newspapers such as "The Big Bend Sentinel" (Marfa, Texas) and "The
Newton TAB" (Newton, Massachusetts), and he recently did a stint as a
columnist for "CUPS: The Magazine of Cafe Culture". These days, he
doesn't have much to say, unless it's about green tea or one of his other
obscure obsessions.
Hear Steve's VO Demo

To hear the Steve Scholz
voiceover demos
(Commercial and
Character) please

Listen to Steve as

Bob Cratchit in
The Iowa Lottery
"Bah Humbucks"
Radio Spot

Click Here
Excerpt from a review of
TRUST FUNNIN' (at WNEP Theater)

�[H]e's a capable performer who's mastered a variety of ethnic accents, never makes concessions to political correctness, and succeeds at the muted mannerisms and precise object work usually lost in this type of comedy. Recent experiments with the solo-improv Sybil are evident in his finely etched character work, and overall the material is admirably polished. . . .Some clever video footage--including mudslinging TV spots by two brothers running for the same office--helps sustain interest while Scholz darts behind the curtain and back again.�
--Chicago Reader, September 15, 2003
e-mail Steve at
[email protected]
Excerpts from a review of
TRUST FUNNIN' 2: You Gotta Be Kidding (at Prop THTR)

"Scholz's knack for physical and vocal mannerisms...
brings his targets alive. And though some sketches
end happily, all take an accurate measure of our
culture's shortcomings."
--Chicago Reader, December 2, 2005

"BEST BET!"
--Chicago Red Eye & Metromix, April 14, 2006
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