Moses had been studying martial arts since age thirteen, becoming a student of notable instructors including Bruce Lee, Ed Parker and Bob Ozman.
[1] Moses began his acting career in 1967, at age fifteen, in an Equity production of The Fifth Season at the Santa Monica Playhouse.
[2] He appeared in a production of Jean-Paul Sartre's Dirty Hands (Les Mains Sales) at the Gallery Theatre in Hollywood.
Ailes arranged an audition for Moses to perform for Budd Friedman, the owner of the well known New York night club The Improv.
Moses became the only male singer to work the club regularly during that period along with the then unknown comedians Jay Leno, Richard Lewis, and Andy Kaufman.
Moses worked a number of east coast night clubs, including Host's Farm in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and Michael's Pub in Manhattan, for several years, returning weekly to the Improv.
[3] In 1977, Moses played the title role in the prime-time action adventure drama Young Dan'l Boone[4] on CBS.
In 1978, Moses played the role of Bruce Scott in the feature film Avalanche[5] which starred Rock Hudson and Mia Farrow.
Moses is probably best known for playing Jefferson Smith Hutchins "(Hitman) Hutch" in the day-time soap opera General Hospital, from 1979 to 1980 on ABC.
[9] The title song of the album was derived from the short film Jack Takes a Vacation that was co-produced, co-written and directed by Moses.
[10] In an interview with Internet journalist Luke Ford, Moses related that, after his sons, "Judaism became the singular most important thing to me.