Atlanta Journal/Atlanta Constitution, Leisure Guide, 10/25/86, p. 15
Excerpt from: "Catching some rising stars: Supporting actors who are attracting attention"
by Scott Cain, Staff Writer
...JAMES BOOTH, a veteran English actor who usually plays grumbling and
opportunistic scoundrels, has been living in the United States since he came to
America in '75 to tour with Tom Stoppard's "Travesties," in which he played
James Joyce.
Being a dependable artist, Booth gets choice assignments from time to time. He
was chosen best actor in Los Angeles in '83 for his role in the play, "Sus," and
was the star of "Aufwiedersehen," [sic] a 13-week TV series which was the No. 1 rated
show in England last season.
But Booth is not content to sit around waiting for opportunities to fall into
his lap. He has begun writing movie scripts which contain juicy roles for
himself. The latest is "Avenging Force" in which he is Adm. Brown, a beady-eyed
senior CIA official keeping track of Louisiana fascists, whose organization
known as Pentangle includes deranged politicians, maniacal businessmen, mean
dilettantes and savage martial-arts experts.
Matt Hunter (played by Michael Dudikoff) is given the task of destroying the
group. At the end of the film, four principal members of Pentangle are dead, but
the fifth not only gets away, he has not even been identified. Booth's eyes dart
back and forth, and the clear inference is that he is the guilty party and that
Dudikoff will have to deal with him in a sequel.
Booth also wrote "Pray for Death," the best movie yet from Sho Kosugi, the martial-arts whiz. Booth was the villain, a Cockney-accented Los Angeles gangster
of almost inhuman strength and cunningness.
Booth has written "American Ninja II," a sequel to the action flick which made
Dudikoff a star, and it's a safe bet that there's a choice role for Booth in it.
..