After appearing in a Chicago production of
The Rainmaker with
Burt Reynolds, Urich decided to pursue acting full-time after Reynolds encouraged him to move to Los Angeles and do more acting.
1970s–1980s , and
Jack Hogan pose for a publicity photo for the TV series
The Specialists, 1974 Urich made his television debut in a guest starring role in
The F.B.I., in 1972. The following year, he won a lead role in
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice. It was a television adaptation of the
1969 film of the same title. It struggled in the ratings and was canceled after six episodes. He made his film debut later that same year opposite
Clint Eastwood in the Dirty Harry film
Magnum Force playing a vigilante motorcycle-patrol police officer. In 1975, Urich was cast in the action/crime drama series
S.W.A.T.. According to the executive producer
Aaron Spelling,
Burt Reynolds convinced Spelling to allow Urich to read for the part. Spelling was impressed with his reading and cast him in the role of "Officer Jim Street". A
mid-season replacement, it earned high enough ratings to warrant a second season. However, it was canceled in 1976 due to its violent content. Urich's next role was on the sitcom
Soap as Peter the Tennis Player in 1977. That same year he was cast as Paul Thurston, a handsome, ego-driven talk show host in the
Bewitched spin-off series
Tabitha, starring
Lisa Hartman. Its ratings were initially strong, but schedule changes caused ratings to drop, and the show was canceled in 1978 after 13 episodes. Shortly after, he was cast in another Aaron Spelling produced series, called
Vega$. Urich portrayed the series' lead character, Dan Tanna, a private detective who solves various crimes in
Las Vegas.
Vega$ was a hit for
ABC and he received two
Golden Globe Award nominations for his work on it. By the third season, ratings had started to decline, and with little network support,
Vega$ was canceled at the end of the third season in June, 1981. Shortly after, Urich signed with
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) and focused on film roles. His first film for MGM was
Endangered Species (1982), a science fiction film directed by
Alan Rudolph. After filming
Endangered Species, Urich returned to television and starred in
Gavilan. He played the title character who was a former
CIA agent turned
oceanographer. The series, however, was canceled after seven episodes. In 1984, he starred in two more films
The Ice Pirates, and
Wes Craven's
Invitation to Hell. In 1985, Urich co-starred in the film
Turk 182, although it was not a commercial success. In 1985, Urich returned to episodic television as the title character in
Spenser: For Hire. It was a hit and aired for three seasons. He also reprised the role in several television films after it was canceled:
Spenser: Ceremony (1993),
Spenser: Pale Kings and Princes (1994),
Spenser: The Judas Goat (1994), and
Spenser: A Savage Place (1995). In 1988, he hosted the documentary series
National Geographic Explorer. He won a
CableACE Award for his work on the series. In 1989, he portrayed Jake Spoon in the acclaimed television miniseries
Lonesome Dove, a role for which he received many positive reviews.
1990s–2000s In the 1990s, Urich mainly appeared in television films and several short-lived television series. From 1990 to 1991, he starred in the sitcom
American Dreamer and the TV movie ''83 Hours 'Til Dawn
. The following year, he starred in Crossroads, a drama series that aired on ABC for ten episodes. In 1993, he and Faye Dunaway starred in the sitcom It Had to Be You. It was critically panned and canceled after four episodes. In 1995, he narrated an extremely rare one-night showing of a Disney television documentary called Alien Encounters: From New Tomorrowland
. It has never been shown again. In 1996, he starred in the TNT western series The Lazarus Man''. It earned strong enough ratings to be picked up for a second season but shortly after it was renewed, he announced he had been diagnosed with
synovial sarcoma. Its production company,
Castle Rock Entertainment, opted to cancel it due to that. In 1999, he commented on their choice to do so, "There's really a law against what they did. They found out I had cancer, and they just canceled the show. They didn't ask the doctors if I could work. They didn't ask if I could go back to work." In 2000, he sued them for
breach of contract. The lawsuit was later settled with both parties agreeing not to publicly disclose the terms. While undergoing cancer treatments, Urich hosted the medical documentary series
Vital Signs in 1997 and the
PBS series
Boatworks. After a year of treatment, he was declared cancer-free and returned to television in 1998 as Captain Jim Kennedy III in
Love Boat: The Next Wave. It aired on
UPN for two seasons. In 2000, he made his Broadway debut as Billy Flynn in the musical
Chicago and also starred in the North American tour of the musical, in 1999 and in 2000. The next year, he costarred in
Emeril, a sitcom starring celebrity chef
Emeril Lagasse. While it was critically panned, he received good notices for his work on it. It would be his last role in a television series. Urich's final television film,
Night of the Wolf, aired on
Animal Planet the night before his death. ==Personal life==