A few days after graduation, he moved to New York in 1980 to pursue his acting career. While working as an apartment cleaner, he met
John Travolta's manager, Bob LeMond of LeMond/Zetter Management. LeMond saw great potential in Hexum.
Voyagers! aired on Sundays and did not fare well in the ratings against
60 Minutes, the highest rated primetime show at the time. As a result, the series was cancelled. Hexum was then cast opposite
Joan Collins in the 1983 made-for-television movie
Making of a Male Model, produced by Aaron Spelling. The TV movie was a ratings hit, ranking in the Top 10 for the week it premiered on ABC.
Making of a Male Model featured Hexum's character shirtless in various scenes. This, combined with the high ratings, made Hexum a sex symbol. Despite this, Hexum expressed some misgivings about doing the movie afterward, calling it "trashy." Shortly before his death, Hexum said, "it turned out to be a lot more exploitative than I anticipated. I didn't realize how they were going to package the show, how many scenes were going to be shirtless for no apparent reason." Fresh off
Making of a Male Model, Hexum was a guest star in another Spelling production, a 1984 episode of
ABC's primetime drama
Hotel. In his appearance, Hexum played Prince Erik, a
Prince Charming–type character who woos a Cinderella-type character played by
Emma Samms. Later in 1984, Hexum was cast opposite
Jennifer O'Neill in the
CBS primetime series
Cover Up, playing Mac Harper, an undercover
CIA operative posing as a model. He was the subject of a profile in the November 1984 issue of
Playgirl and appeared clothed and shirtless but not nude in photographs taken for the magazine. That same year Hexum played the terminally ill
quarterback Pat Trammell, a small role in the feature film
The Bear, a tribute to the
University of Alabama football coach
Paul "Bear" Bryant, played by
Gary Busey. To prepare for the role, Hexum cut his hair short to match Trammell's appearance and before filming visited Alabama and met with Trammell's family and teammates.
The Bear would be Hexum's sole feature film performance, released just three weeks before his death. Shortly before his death, Hexum set up a company to produce and direct films. == Personal life ==