<P> Conrad Dunn is an American actor . He began his screen career with the role of Francis "Psycho" Soyer in Stripes (1981). Working for some ten years under the name George Jenesky, he achieved soap - opera stardom in Days of Our Lives as Nick Corelli, a misogynistic pimp who evolved from bad guy to romantic lead . He returned to the name Conrad Dunn and began working extensively in Canadian as well as U.S. film and television . He excels as a villain, and has found depth in such TV films as We the Jury (1996) and the miniseries The Last Don (1997--98). For two seasons he portrayed the freelance detective Saul Panzer in the A&E TV series A Nero Wolfe Mystery (2001--02). </P> <P> Born and raised in Los Angeles, Conrad Dunn studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts - Los Angeles and with Stella Adler in New York . After seeing him on the stage, a casting director asked him to read for the role of Francis "Psycho" Soyer in Stripes (1981), his first feature film . His introductory speech, described by one reviewer as "Conrad Dunn's adroit tribute to Travis Bickle", was singled out by film critic Roger Ebert: "The movie has especially good writing in several scenes . My favorite comes near the beginning, during a session when recruits in the new platoon get to know one another . One obviously psycho draftee, who looks like Robert De Niro, quietly announces that if his fellow soldiers touch him, touch his stuff, or interfere in any way with his person or his privacy, he will quite simply be forced to kill them ." The response from drill sergeant Warren Oates--"Lighten up, Francis"--became a popular movie quote . </P> <P> Taking the name George Jenesky, Dunn performed over seven seasons (1981--90) in the NBC daytime soap opera, Days of Our Lives . His character, Nick Corelli, became a fan favorite, a despicable pimp who evolved into a romantic lead and one of the show's main characters . Nick's murder was one of the series' notable whodunits . </P>

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