- (1987) He played Caliban in William Shakespeare's "The Tempest" at Chicago's Goodman Theatre.
- (1988) Played the dictator known as the Marshal in the U.S. premiere of Karel Capek's long unproduced play "The White Plague" at Northlight Theatre, then in Evanston, IL. James Marsters played his son, and Gwen Arner directed.
- (1983) Played the protagonist in the stage adaptation of Joe Haldeman's allegorical science fiction novel "The Forever War," produced by Chicago's Organic Theater and directed by Stuart Gordon. Also in the cast: Gary Houston, Alex Kerr, Linda Kimbrough, Richard Lavin, J. Pat Miller and Carolyn Purdy-Gordon.
- (August 5, 1986) He acted in William Shakespeare's play, "King Henry V," in a Chicago Shakespeare Workshop production at the Red Lion Pub Theatre in Chicago, Illinois with Si Osborne (King Henry V); Bernie Landis; Ernest Perry Jr. (Bardolph); Tony Mockus Jr. (Dolphin); Katherine Lynch (Boy); and Robert Scogin (Pistol) in the cast. Barbara Gaines was director and adapter.
- (1984) Was one of the authors of the play "E/R (Emergency Room)" that became the basis for the Norman Lear sitcom of that title starring Elliott Gould, Mary McDonnell, Conchata Ferrell, Lynne Moody, Shuko Akune and Bruce A. Young along with George Clooney and Jason Alexander. The other authors were Ron Berman, M.D., Zaid Farid, Richard Fire, Stuart Gordon, Gary Houston, Carolyn Purdy-Gordon and Tom Towles.
- (1980 - 1990) Improv Theater Company: Dungeon Master Theater. In the 1980s, Bruce Young, aka "Moose," founded and ran "Dungeon Master Theater" in Chicago, IL. A combination of improv theater with audience participation fused with a classic Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game, Bruce acted as the Dungeon Master as adventurers were chosen from the audience, then guided through scenes in their improv adventure.
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