Background
Muller was born in The Netherlands, the eldest of five children.
Muller was born in The Netherlands, the eldest of five children.
His family emigrated to the United States when he was five. Muller was a classically trained actor who began his career working on stage and doing commercials. He also played supporting roles on television in shows like Law & Order, Life Goes On, Harry and the Hendersons, and All My Children.
lieutenant is as an audiobook narrator, however, that he was most famous.
In 1979, Henry Trentman founded Recorded Books and hired Muller as its first narrator to record its first book, The Sea Wolf by Jack London. The company began by publishing audiobook recordings of public domain works such as Call of the Wild and A Tale of Two Cities but later expanded into copyrighted works as audiobooks began to grow in popularity.
Muller soon became the narrator of choice for such authors as Stephen King, John le Carré, John Grisham, Elmore Leonard and many others They celebrated together at this exciting prospect, and off he went on his trip.
Two hours later, Muller lost control of his motorcycle on the freeway when he accidentally clipped a construction barrel and was sent skidding into a median barrier at about 65 miles per hour.
Muller flew off the bike landing on his head on the concrete. He sustained multiple fractures, lacerations, and abrasions, and was taken to Antelope Valley Hospital Medical Center in Lancaster, California and went into cardiac arrest three times. He also suffered severe head trauma, which was subsequently diagnosed as diffuse axonal injury.
He died on June 4, 2008 at Duke University Hospital, Durham, North Carolina. In 2002, Stephen King, who had also experienced a life-threatening auto accident, organized a benefit for Muller with Pat Conroy, John Grisham, and Peter Straub.
King went on to help found The Haven Foundation, an organization dedicated to helping "mid-list writers, audio readers, and freelancers in the book and publishing industry.".
He spent many years on the New York stage, where he became a company member of the Riverside Shakespeare Company, for which he played the title role in King Henry V, Edmund the Bastard in The History of King Lear, and the title role in Cyrano de Bergerac, as well as performing with the Roundabout Theater Company and the New York Shakespeare Festival among others