Will-Harris started performing as a teenager in local theater, and a singing dancing group (similar to the show choir now seen on the TV program "Glee) called "The Bright Side," lead by Don and Bonnie Ward in San Diego. Other notable performers in The Bright Side include Broadway star Brian Stokes Mitchell www.brianstokesmitchell.com, Broadway director Casey Nicholaw, and Broadway performers Russel Garret, Jamie Torcelini, Kelly Ward, Kirby Ward. The group toured the US and Japan, appearing in a Japanese network TV Christmas special. With the Bright Side he appearing with such stars as Red Skelton, Milton Berle, Jack Benny, Dinah Shore, Regis Philbin, and the Incomparable Hildegarde. He created and hosted an early cable comedy show called "Tar Pit Theater" that became an late night LA classic. As an actor, he worked for producer Roger Corman in the film Saturday the 14th Strikes Back with Ray Walston, Avery Schriver, and "Bad Seed" Patty McCormack. On TV, he appeared on Cagney and Lacey in scenes with Tyne Daley and Sharon Gless, and the TV movie "Having it All" with Dyan Canon. In recent years, he has played leading roles in indie features including The Uniform Motion of Folly which premiered at the Santa Barbara Film festival, Moonlight Sonata, "Reality TV Movie" [www.realitytvmovie.com] (a parody of reality TV shows), and the upcoming "Pushing Boundaries" [http://www.denisonentertainment.com/pushingboundaries/] which he also co-wrote and co-produced. He created and produced a new, improv-ed comedy show on the web called "Kinda Like That" that can be seen at [www.LOLchemedia.com] . He's performed at BATS improv in San Francisco, doing both longform and completely improvised musicals. As of January 2011, he performs live improv onstage with Marinprov (www.mariprov.com), and sings in a barbershop called the MartinTones (www.marintones.com). Will-Harris is the inventor of Wallet Reading (like palm reading, but with wallets), and is the world's foremost Walletologist. As a designer, MoMA (The Museum of Modern Art) calls Will-Harris a "pioneer," and his work "truly unique." His designs are also in the Guggenheim and museums around the world. He designed MoMA's signature Fritted Watch. His watches can be seen at [http://www.projectswatches.com]