Hill's acting break came when he was scouted at a Los Angeles beach and offered the small part of a lifeguard in a production called
One of a Kind. Hill was able to capitalize on his athletic background to keep his career going: he played a college football star (albeit from
Michigan) in
Detour to Terror, an
NBC telefilm starring and produced by
O.J. Simpson, and had a recurring role as another football player on the daytime drama
Days of Our Lives. He also guest-starred as a varsity football player on an episode of ''
Charlie's Angels, another Spelling production. In 1981, he was cast in Today's FBI, a re-imagining of classic show The FBI'', which ran for a single season on
ABC. In 1983, Hill made his theatrical debut in
Deathstalker, which was part of a wave of
heroic fantasy films that followed
Conan The Barbarian in its wake. The film was profitable for
Roger Corman's
New World Pictures, and Hill subsequently starred in several action films for Corman (including the
third Deathstalker sequel) and his associate
Cirio Santiago. Hill also appeared in
Warrior Queen, a film aping the
Deathstalker template but made by another exploitation producer,
Harry Alan Towers. In 1994, he played a secondary protagonist in the final installment of the
Class of... series,
Class of 1999 II. Around the same time, the actor made another push for a leading role with
Immortal Soldier, an android film which he co-wrote and was to feature genre veterans
Maria Conchita Alonso,
Jeff Wincott,
Robert Davi,
Michael Ironside and
Louise Fletcher. However the project, promoted by upstart Hatch Entertainment, did not materialize. In the 1980s, Hill was a member of the Hollywood All-Stars, a touring celebrity softball team raising money for various charitable causes. ==Writing career==