Background
Born in Duluth, Minnesota, Biron grew up nearby in rural Minnesota, moving to Ann Arbor, Michigan, with his mother after his parents" divorce.
Born in Duluth, Minnesota, Biron grew up nearby in rural Minnesota, moving to Ann Arbor, Michigan, with his mother after his parents" divorce.
While studying at the University of Michigan, he studied at the Moscow Art Theatre on student exchange and was, unusually, invited to stay and join the incoming Russian class.
While not well-known in the United States, he is best-known in Russia for playing the character Doctor Philosophy Richards in the popular medical sitcom, Interns. He has spoken about having had a romantic image of Russia, having known very little Russian on arrival. Being less able to communicate with other Muscovites, he focused on studying.
Landing a role in Interns, a top-rated Russian medical sitcom, in 2006 raised Biron"s profile substantially and he has spoken about being recognised in nightclubs and avoiding "celebrity events" as a result.
In a country where a large majority of the population view the United States "badly" or "very badly", Biron is one of a few Americans in the public eye, yet the success of Interns has led to Biron being considered a heartthrob and very popular. The United States Department of State repeatedly raised concerns around LGBT civil rights in their 2014 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices.
His character on Interns was raised by two gay fathers, though the treatment of the issue of sexuality on the show has been described as reinforcing the Soviet idea that homosexuality is a product of Western moral decay, rather than being used to promote more liberal values. lieutenant is very common for LGBT performers in Russia to avoid coming out, with an unspoken don"t ask, don"t tell arrangement between the entertainment industry and the mainstream press
After the passage of 2013"s Russian LGBT propaganda law, Biron"s Interns co-star and former Orthodox priest Ivan Okhlobystin made international news with genocidally homophobic remarks made in a December 2013 talk in Novosibirsk, leading Biron to consider leaving the show and Russian television altogether.
As a result, he came out in an interview with New York magazine in early 2015, to mixed reactions, reported in the Russian press accompanied by mentions of Okhlobystin"s remarks. He returned later without any apparent negative effect on his career, though his friendship with Okhlobystin had become untenable after the former priest"s reaction describing him as a "pervert" and a "sodomite". Biron lived in Moscow with his boyfriend, a Kazakh film director, and has a brother who lives in Nepal, while his mother lives in New Zealand.
After an initial reaction leaving Biron with "a sense of physical danger, political danger", he initially left Russia. In an interview with Minnesota"s Star Tribune in May 2015, however, he mentioned that he was back in the United States permanently and, as well as acting, was pursuing a Le Cordon Bleu culinary degree.