After graduating from UCLA, Pyke began his career as a character actor in low-budget and independent films. Pyke also has a small part in the
John Milius film
Dillinger (1973). Although many of his better known films are in the
horror genre, Pyke acted in everything from
blaxploitation to musical comedies. He had a uniquely manic acting style, with a penchant for exaggerated physical comedy, marked by a distinctive, raspy voice. Besides his film work, Pyke acted in theater, musical revues, etc. During the 1970s, Pyke appeared in the 1975 horror film ''Lemora: A Child's Tale of the Supernatural
, Dolemite (1975), The First Nudie Musical (1976) and Spawn of the Slithis
(1978). Pyke played the part of Bebe Rebozo in the Richard Nixon satire White House Madness''. Pyke became more known for his role as Taffey Lewis in the
science fiction movie
Blade Runner (1982). Other noteworthy 1980s appearances include the teen comedy film
Bad Manners (1984), starring
Martin Mull and
Karen Black, and the horror comedy film
Vamp (1986), starring
Grace Jones. Towards the end of the 1980s, Pyke's acting career slowed down and he began acting in television commercials. His last movie role was in the low-budget,
straight-to-video 1988 horror film
Hack-O-Lantern. Pyke last lived in Los Angeles, performing as a nightclub comedian after surviving quadruple bypass surgery. In 2004, he contributed to a book about obscure 1970s genre films,
Gods in Polyester, reminiscing on
Lemora,
Dolemite and others, in a style very much in tune with his on-screen persona. Pyke also contributed pieces on
Blade Runner and
Hack-O-Lantern to the book ''Gods In Spandex, A Survivor's Account of 80's Cinema Obscura
(2007), a sequel to Gods In Polyester
. He was also interviewed for an E! True Hollywood Story'' episode on
David Carradine in 2000. Pyke's final film appearance was in
Dealing, released posthumously in 2012. ==Legacy==