How is acting like karate? It may sound like a riddle, but Eric Ritter has a serious answer. โ[Acting is] a lot like karate,โ he says, sitting in the paper-strewn office of his karate gym. โItโs technical, takes a lot of work. Itโs very hard to make a living, but you get to where youโre very happy doing it.โ
And, as his muscular physique and black Martial Arts Training Academy jacket make clear, he should know. The 28-year-old Reno native is not only an award-winning martial-arts expert; heโs also a TV and film actor who just wrapped up an episode of CSI: New York with Gary Sinise.
Ritter began studying martial arts when he was just 4 years old, at his fatherโs behest. โI needed discipline,โ says Ritter, laughing. His gamble paid off: โ25 years later, I became disciplined.โ Ritter ended up loving karate and studied various martial arts over the years. He now holds a fifth-degree black belt in karate, a third-degree black belt in goju kenpo, and first-degree black belts in both aki-jujitsu and tae kwon do. In addition, heโs been state champion in both Nevada and California, and he was inducted into the USA Martial Arts Hall of Fame in 2004.
At age 20, Ritter joined the Marines and was stationed at Camp Pendleton, outside San Diego. He stayed for two and a half years, until a wrist injury led to an honorable discharge. Whatโs the next career step for a karate star and ex-Marine? Why, acting, of course. Ritter moved to Los Angeles and began working as an actor and studying at the Beverly Hills Playhouse and the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute, where he met his wife, Michelle, also an actor.
Ritterโs martial-arts experience helped him get his foot in the door, but soon he was getting jobs based on just his acting. โMy first year and a half in L.A. was great,โ he recalls. โI worked all the time. Then we had the commercial strike, we had the writersโ strike, we had 9/11โnow, itโs a totally different Hollywood today than it was when I first went out there.โ
When he started out, Ritter says, the market for independent films was much greater than it is today, as low-budget movies like Clerks and The Blair Witch Project became hits. โThere were unknown people making unknown films using unknown names. โฆ Theyโd sell them to the studios, and they would get big, and people would work their way up the ladder.โ
These days, he says, major studios control most projects, and lesser-known actors are forced to compete with big-name stars for work.
โIn the scheme of things, Iโm a no-name,โ Ritter says. โI work, I get paid, but Iโm not an A-list actor, so itโs hard when I go for an audition, and itโs like, โItโs you and John Travolta. Good luck!’โ
Action photo? Headshot? Sparring demo? All of the above. Eric Ritter acts on television, teaches martial arts and helps get local schools involved with Operation Iraqi Children.
Photo By David Robert

Like karate, acting requires hard work, discipline and perseverance, says Ritter.
โI donโt care what actor you can think of, somebody out there thinks they were sleeping on a park bench and got found one day as Steven Spielberg stepped off of a bus,โ he laughs. In reality, being a successful actor means making the most of any roleโeven a thankless one. โItโs hard, because everybody wants to go out and be the action hero. They think theyโre going to go to Hollywood and jump off a building and save the damsel in distress. Well, your jobs arenโt like that. Your jobs are to be believable in whatever you are, and that is a very difficult thing to do.โ For Ritter, those roles have included street urchins, drug addicts, gang members, serial killers and the occasional murder victim.
Ritter prefers film actingโheโs appeared in Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, Showgirls and Coyote Ugly, among othersโbut also has done television work on shows like Star Trek Voyager and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. Most recently, he worked with Gary Sinise on the new CSI spin-off, CSI: New York.
In CSI: New York, โIโm the victim,โ explains Ritter, โso thereโs this scene where Iโm in the medical examinerโs office, and Iโm on that cold, stainless-steel table, and Iโm naked, and they have to clean me off and figure out all the wounds. โฆ [Sinise] washes me and picks rocks out of my cheeks and looks at my hands, and I told him, โYou realize I get the better version of this story. I get to say I did a nude scene with Academy Award nominee Gary Siniseโitโs very sensual, he holds my hand, he bathes me, and then at the end he gets my rocks off.โ โ
Joking aside, he says, working with Sinise was a wonderful experience. Thatโs how he was introduced to Operation Iraqi Children (www.operationiraqichildren.org), a charitable organization founded by Sinise and Seabiscuit author Laura Hillenbrand. While touring in Iraq to entertain the troops, Sinise noticed appalling conditions in the local schools. โThey had one-room classrooms, no floor, no windows or anything,โ says Ritter. โTheyโd do their lesson plans in the dirt.โ Returning to the United States, Sinise noticed the excess supplies at his own childโs school and realized that he could help.
Through Operation Iraqi Children, donations of school supplies are assembled into kits and sent to Iraq, where U.S. soldiers distribute them to children. โYouโve never seen kids so happy to get a pencil, to get paper to write on,โ Ritter adds. Locally, he has gotten Reno High School involved with the program and is working with Spanish Springs Elementary as well.
Celebrities have a great deal of social influence, says Ritter, and heโs happy to see actors like Sinise using their fame to do good. โYou look at someone like Gary Sinise, who makes no money on Operation Iraqi Children, who gets very little recognition for it. โฆ What he cares about is that kids over there have paper. Itโs great to see people like that.โ
In addition to his other endeavors, Ritter owns the Martial Arts Training Academy, which he opened in 2003. He teaches a blend of several martial arts to students of all ages. โWe have self-defense-oriented classes, we have sports-oriented classes, and we have traditional classes,โ he says. As the sole instructor, he stays pretty busy but welcomes anyone whoโs interested in learning more about martial arts.
So whatโs in store for Eric Ritter? Heโd love to work with Quentin Tarantinoโone of his favorite directorsโor even write and direct his own independent film with some actor buddies. But as long as heโs working and doing what he enjoys, whether thatโs acting or karate, heโs a happy man.
โTo me, strenuous is sitting in a cubicle,” Ritter says. “Iโve got to be able to express, and thatโs what I love about karateโyouโre constantly expressing yourself. With acting, youโre constantly expressing something.”
