Blue Streak


11:00 pm - 01:00 am, Thursday, November 20 on WCTX Rewind TV (8.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Martin Lawrence stars as a jewel thief in this hilarious, action-packed comedy. After getting out of jail, Miles (Lawrence) sets out to retrieve a diamond he hid at the construction site of what turns out to be a police station. His plan: Pose as a detective and infiltrate the building. Luke Wilson, Peter Greene.

1999 English Stereo
Action Action/adventure Crime Drama Comedy Crime Comedy-drama

Cast & Crew
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Martin Lawrence (Actor) .. Miles Logan
Luke Wilson (Actor) .. Carlson
Peter Greene (Actor) .. Deacon
William Forsythe (Actor) .. Hardcastle
Dave Chappelle (Actor) .. Tulley
Graham Beckel (Actor) .. Rizzo
Robert Miranda (Actor) .. Glenfiddish
Olek Krupa (Actor) .. LaFleur
Saverio Guerra (Actor) .. Benny
Richard C. Sarafian (Actor) .. Uncle Lou
Tamala Jones (Actor) .. Janiece
Julio Oscar Mechoso (Actor) .. Diaz
Steve Rankin (Actor) .. Agent Gray
Carmen Argenziano (Actor) .. Captain Penelli
John Hawkes (Actor) .. Eddie
Timothy Dale Agee (Actor) .. Cop in Alley
Bayani Ison (Actor) .. Uniform Outside Station
Scott Sowers (Actor) .. Prison Guard No. 37
Frank Medrano (Actor) .. Frank
Eddy Donno (Actor) .. Guard One
Troy Gilbert (Actor) .. Guard Two
Kenny Endoso (Actor) .. Clerk
Googy Gress (Actor) .. Desk Sergeant
Robert LaSardo (Actor) .. Twitchy Suspect
Bill Ferrell (Actor) .. Cop in Elevator
Billy Williams (Actor) .. Cop in Gem Store Elevator
Greg Montgomery (Actor) .. Cop in Precinct
Jason Kravits (Actor) .. Customs Guy
Henry Hayashi (Actor) .. FBI Tech
James Gavin (Actor) .. Helicopter Pilot
Anne Marie Howard (Actor) .. Female Officer
Jane Carr (Actor) .. Museum Official
Brandon Michael DePaul (Actor) .. Little Friend
Amy Oberer (Actor) .. Terrified Woman
Ash Winfield (Actor) .. Briefing Room Detective
Erik Rondell (Actor) .. Francois
J. Kenneth Campbell (Actor) .. Peterson
Joel Hurt Jones (Actor) .. Tipsy Cop
Darryl Brunson (Actor) .. Officer Porter
Michael A. Grasso (Actor) .. Swat Team Officer
John McCarthy (Actor) .. Swat Team Officer
Jeff Xander (Actor) .. Thug
Damian Foster (Actor) .. Thug
Yetta Ginsburg (Actor) .. Repelled Passer-By
Daniel Rogerson (Actor) .. Chinese Delivery Man
Shawn Elaine Brown Chiquette (Actor) .. Friendly Officer
Christian J. Christiensen (Actor) .. S.W.A.T. Team Member
Toby Jaffe (Actor)
Nicole Ari Parker (Actor) .. Melissa Green
Octavia Spencer (Actor) .. Shawna
Christopher Stapleton (Actor) .. K-9 Cop
Billy Sly Williams (Actor) .. Cop in Gem Store Elevator
Eidan Hanzei (Actor) .. FBI Tech
James W. Gavin (Actor) .. Helicopter Pilot
Brandon De Paul (Actor) .. Little Friend

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Martin Lawrence (Actor) .. Miles Logan
Born: April 16, 1965
Birthplace: Frankfurt, West Germany
Trivia: Actor/comedian Martin Lawrence started the 21st century off with a bang, starring and executive producing Big Momma's House, the story of an FBI agent posing as a corpulent Southern matriarch, which went on to gross more than 100 million dollars, despite universally negative reviews. The success of this film pushed Lawrence ever closer to joining the much-coveted 20-million-dollar club, cementing his reputation as one of the biggest comic stars for years to come.Lawrence was born in Frankfurt, Germany, on April 16, 1965, and eventually settled with his family in suburban Maryland around his sixth birthday. Soon after, his father left the family; Lawrence claims he got his start as a comedian by cheering up his mother, who was forced to support her six children by cashiering in various department stores. He attended Eleanor Roosevelt High School in Landover, MD, dabbling in sports and sticking with comedy, even agreeing to stop acting up in an art class in return for performing his stand-up routine in front of the other students.Soon after graduating, the bug-eyed performer earned a chance to perform on Star Search, which led to a role in 1985's What's Happening Now! Lawrence kept honing his frenetic schtick and by 1989, won two big breaks -- a supporting role in Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing and MCing HBO's Def Comedy Jam. Lawrence continued to rack up scene-stealing roles throughout the early '90s, including parts in House Party, House Party 2, and Boomerang, eventually landing his own series on Fox in 1992, appropriately named Martin. The show became a huge success, its risqué humor making it a ratings stalwart for more than five years and winning two NAACP Image Awards in the process, although some detractors criticized Lawrence for promoting the image of an oversexed, insensitive black man.Two years after Martin's successful launch, Lawrence released You So Crazy!, a raunchy, vulgarity-laced comedy that originally received the NC-17 rating and was later released unrated. Its crudeness, however, didn't matter much to audiences, as You So Crazy! went on to become one of the highest-grossing concert films of its time.Lawrence appeared to have it all, professionally and privately; in 1995 he married former beauty queen Patricia Southall in a lavish ceremony and the pair had a daughter, Jasmine. Around this time, however, Lawrence's success story began to slip away, his off-camera behavior setting up what should someday be a fascinating E! True Hollywood Story.On the set of his directorial debut, A Thin Line Between Love and Hate, Lawrence erupted in a violent outburst and began taking psychotropic drugs. A few months later, he was arrested for another disturbance, where he reportedly brandished a pistol and screamed at tourists and others on Ventura Boulevard. Over the next two years, his behavior became even more erratic as he racked up a series of gun-related arrests. He landed in drug rehab and filed for divorce from Southall after she got a temporary restraining order against him for yet another vicious eruption.But the most bizarre and unsettling charges were yet to come. Tisha Campbell, Lawrence's co-star on Martin and the House Party films, filed suit against the star and the show's producers, HBO Studios, claiming Lawrence sexually harassed her to the point that she feared for her safety. The studio brokered a settlement that allowed Campbell to finish the show's final season, although she and Lawrence would never be on the soundstage together again.Despite all the trauma, Lawrence seemed as popular as ever. He starred in four hugely commercial successes between 1995 and 1999, including Bad Boys with Will Smith, Nothing to Lose with Tim Robbins, Life with Eddie Murphy, and on his own in Blue Streak. These films made Lawrence extremely bankable -- his salary broke the ten-million-dollar mark for Big Momma's House and it seemed as if his previous troubles were behind him.Then in 1999, while jogging to lose an extra few pounds before filming began on Big Momma's House, Lawrence collapsed into a severe coma due to heat exhaustion, delaying the production's start and firing up the old rumors of drug use and unpredictable behavior. But after recuperating, Lawrence said the coma scare put him back on the straight and narrow.His career trajectory certainly supported this -- after the success of Big Momma's House, he reportedly earned 13 million dollars for What's the Worst That Could Happen? with Danny DeVito. He earned upwards of 16.5 million dollars for Black Knight, which featured Lawrence as a down-on-his-luck employee of a theme restaurant who finds himself transported back to medieval times. Lawrence's next film appearance, Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat, once again found the popular but controversial funnyman taking to the stage, though this time in a far more personal bid to humorize the sometimes startling headlines that had left many fans fearing for both his health and sanity. Seemingly purged of his current demns and eager to settle back into a lucrative film career, Lawrence took to the screen opposite Steve Zahn for the high-speed action comedy National Secuity (2003) before gearing up for the sequel to Bad Boys. After a relatively quiet 2004, Lawrence attempted to broaden his appeal by playing a basketball coach in the family-oriented comedy Rebound. In 2006 Lawrence performed in his first animated film, Open Season, opposite Ashton Kutcher, and released the sequel to one of his biggest comedy hits Big Momma's House 2. That same year he filmed the biker road comedy Wild Hogs alongside Tim Allen and John Travolta.
Luke Wilson (Actor) .. Carlson
Born: September 21, 1971
Birthplace: Dallas, Texas, United States
Trivia: Although he made his film debut in the acclaimed independent film Bottle Rocket, actor Luke Wilson, born on September 21st, 1971, initially got more recognition for his real-life role as Drew Barrymore's boyfriend than for his acting. Fortunately for Wilson, his onscreen talents outlasted his relationship with Barrymore, and he has enjoyed steady employment and increasing visibility through substantial roles in a number of films.A native Texan, Wilson was born in Dallas in 1971. The son of an advertising executive and a photographer, he was raised with two brothers, Owen and Andrew. The three would all go on to make their careers in film, with Wilson discovering his love of acting while a student at Occidental College. In 1993, the brothers Wilson collaborated with Wes Anderson to make Bottle Rocket, which was initially a 15-minute short. The gleefully optimistic story of three Texans who aspire to become successful thieves, Bottle Rocket premiered at the 1993 Sundance Festival, where it attracted the attention of director James L. Brooks. With Brooks' help, the short became a full-length feature film released in 1996. That same year, Wilson also appeared in the coming-of-age drama Telling Lies in America.After large roles in three 1998 comedies, Bongwater, Home Fries, and Best Men (the latter two co-starring Barrymore), Wilson went on to star in another three comedies the following year. The first, Dog Park, was a Canadian film directed by Kids in the Hall alum Bruce McCulloch and featured Wilson as one of a group of twenty-somethings undergoing the trials and tribulations of love. Blue Streak starred the actor as the sidekick of robber-turned-policeman Martin Lawrence, while Kill the Man (which premiered at the 1999 Sundance Festival) cast him as the owner of a small copy center competing with a large chain store across the street.Though he would stick closely to comedy through 2001 with roles in Charlie's Angels (2000) and Legally Blonde (2001), Wilson took a turn for the sinister in the thrillers Preston Tylk and Soul Survivors (both 2001), before reteaming with his brother Owen and Wes Anderson to give one of his most memorable performances as Richie, the suicidal tennis pro in The Royal Tenenbaums.In 2003, Wilson reprised two past roles, appearing in both Charlies Angels: Full Throttle and Legally Blonde 2: Red, White and Blonde. That same year, he also scored a hit as one of the stars of Todd Phillips' Old School. 2004 saw Wilson embark on The Wendell Baker Story, a film he stars in, co-directs with brother Andrew Wilson, and co-writes with brother Owen Wilson. Laced with supporting roles and cameos from such iconic friends as Harry Dean Stanton, Kris Kristofferson, and Eddie Griffin, this quirky low-budgeter made the festival rounds in 2005-6 and the responses were encouragingly supportive; Variety's Joe Leydon observed, "The co-directing Wilson siblings smartly refrain from pushing anything too hard or too often, making the unpredictable eruptions of straight-faced absurdity all the more effective. Luke Wilson is extremely engaging in lead role." Many praised the Wilson brothers' directorial and scriptwriting intuition and their willingness to take risky-yet-triumphant gambles onscreen.Wilson joined the cast of early 2006's box-office sleeper hit The Family Stone, a family drama with an ensemble that includes Diane Keaton, Craig T. Nelson and Sarah Jessica Parker; the remainder of the year sees Wilson appearing in a string of supporting roles in light and dark comedies. In a minor performance in May 2006's Hoot, Wilson plays Officer David Delinsky, who attempts to sabotage a plot by local children to blow up a pancake house. His appearance in July 2006's My Super Ex-Girlfriend marks director Ivan Reitman's return to the big screen since 2001's box-office disappointment Evolution; it stars Uma Thurman as a superhero who gets even with her ex-beau (Wilson) after he casts her aside. He also highlights summer 2006's Mini's First Time, a black comedy about an incestuous daughter and stepfather who have the mother committed to a mental hosiptal; co-stars include Jeff Goldblum and Carrie-Anne Moss. Idiocracy, directed by cult fave (and Beavis and Butthead creator) Mike Judge, has Wilson as a moron hurled a thousand years into the future by the U.S. Government, only to discover he is the most intelligent person on the planet.In the tradition of 8mm, 2007's jet-black paranoid thriller Vacancy will co-star Wilson and Sex and the City's Sarah Jessica Parker as husband-and-wife who check into a hotel and unwittingly become the targets of a snuff film, while, in that same year's semi-spoof Dallas (2007) (adapted from the early-eighties TV sensation and directed by Gurinder Chadha) Wilson will tentatively co-star as Bobby Ewing, alongside Jennifer Lopez as Sue Ellen, Shirley MacLaine as Miss Ellie, and John Travolta as the infamous J.R.. Wilson's additional film roles throughout 2007 include Barry Munday (an indie pic helmed by Chris d'Arienzo and adapted from Frank Hollon's novel Life is A Strange Place, about a chauvinist who wakes up and discovers his own emasculation); and Last Seduction helmer John Dahl's mafioso comedy You Kill Me. In 2010, Wilson appeared in the films Death at a Funeral and Middle Men.
Peter Greene (Actor) .. Deacon
Born: October 08, 1965
Trivia: An actor with publicized demons, Peter Greene made a name for himself with his ability to convey raw yet quiet menace. Born and raised in New Jersey, Greene headed to New York as a teenager, but did not discover acting until his mid-20s. Trained at the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute, Greene acted in several plays and made his film debut as one of the central thieves in Nick Gomez's edgy New York story Laws of Gravity (1991). Burnishing his baleful screen presence with performances as an insane father in the violent indie Clean, Shaven (1993) and a gangster in Judgment Night (1993), Greene relocated to Hollywood and made his intense presence felt in a trio of hit films. Following a substantial supporting role as one of the bad guys in the Jim Carrey comedy The Mask (1994), Greene played small yet crucial parts in two key 1990s gangster films: the infamous sadist (and chopper owner) Zed in Pulp Fiction (1994) and the sinister fence Redfoot in The Usual Suspects (1995). Following his performance as a blackmailer in The Rich Man's Wife (1996), Greene went into rehab to kick a near-lethal drug addiction. After his release, Greene returned to playing the heavy in both indie and Hollywood productions, including a bad cop in Bang (1997), Martin Lawrence's former criminal partner in Blue Streak (1999), and one of Ben Stiller's drug buddies in the addiction memoir Permanent Midnight (1998).
William Forsythe (Actor) .. Hardcastle
Born: June 07, 1955
Birthplace: New York City (Brooklyn), New York
Trivia: Moving easily from comedies to drama, character actor William "Bill" Forsythe has been busy in feature films since the early '80s, when he debuted with a small role in Smokey Bites the Dust (1981). In addition, he frequently appears on television and on stage, where he launched his career. The stocky, moon-faced, and gap-toothed Brooklyn native began acting in local productions in his early teens and by age 16, had become a professional, appearing on and off Broadway. As a young man, Forsythe moved to Southern California. Shortly after his film debut, he also made his first television appearance in the TV-movie The Miracle of Kathy Miller. This started him on a series of guest-starring roles on shows ranging from CHiPS to Fame. At this early stage, Forsythe was usually cast in villainous roles, as in his breakthrough feature Once Upon a Time in America (1984), in which he played the sweet-faced but ruthless gangster Cockeye. One of Forsythe's most memorable performances was also his first lead, that of a rebellious wheelchair-bound patient who turns a hospital ward topsy-turvy, in the ensemble piece The Waterdance (1991). The same year, Forsythe starred as Al Capone in the short-lived television resurrection of The Untouchables. His other television credits include a leading role opposite Emilio Estevez, in Gene Quintano's tribute to spaghetti Westerns A Dollar for the Dead (1998). The actor stayed busy throughout the 2000s, appearing in Scary Movie 3 (2003), Hammerhead (2005), and Freedomland (2006). In 2007 he took on a supporting role in Rob Zombie's reboot of Halloween, and continued to find work (mainly in the horror genre) throughout the late 2000s.
Dave Chappelle (Actor) .. Tulley
Born: August 24, 1973
Birthplace: Washington, DC
Trivia: Like future co-stars Martin Lawrence, Eddie Murphy, and Norm MacDonald, Dave Chappelle entered the movie business via standup comedy. Born in Ohio and raised in Washington, D.C., Chappelle studied acting at D.C.'s Duke Ellington School of the Arts and honed his skills as a laid-back yet socially attuned comic in the city's clubs. After making his movie debut as one of the merry men in Mel Brooks' Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993), Chappelle concentrated primarily on his comedy career and appeared regularly on late night and cable television. He returned to films with small yet key parts in two summer blockbusters: as a comic who helps spoil a date for Murphy's rotund scientist in The Nutty Professor (1996) and as a manic inmate aboard the hijacked convict plane in Con Air (1997). Hitting his movie stride in 1998, Chappelle co-wrote and starred in the prison/pothead caper Half Baked (1998), played a randy schemer in Woo (1998), and revealed that he could also play it (somewhat) straight as Tom Hanks' best friend in Nora Ephron's popular romantic comedy You've Got Mail (1998). Maintaining his dual professions, Chappelle turned a cameo role as Lawrence's former criminal partner into a full-fledged supporting turn in Blue Streak (1999), co-starred with MacDonald in the ill-received Screwed (2000), and returned to Washington, D.C., and HBO with his special Dave Chappelle: Killin' Them Softly (2000).Chappelle had better luck with his next film, the blaxploitation spoof Undercover Brother (2002). As the B.R.O.T.H.E.R.H.O.O.D.'s terminally paranoid agent Conspiracy Brother, Chappelle was a hilariously twitchy comic highlight in the hit-or-miss satire; Undercover Brother became a small hit amid the summer blockbusters. Chappelle's cutting humor could also be heard on TV that same season, with Chappelle lending his voice as a prank caller to Comedy Central's ribald puppet "reality" show Crank Yankers (2002). His characters on that show were a hit with audiences in search of a hearty laugh, and the following year Comedy Central gave the comedian his own series - the aptly titled Chappelle's Show. Perhaps one of the most controversial series - comedy or otherwise - to hit the airwaves in recent memory, Chappelle's Show offered searing social commentary while frequently pushing the boundaries of good taste. With sketch subjects including a blind black man who - not realizing his true race - heads the Ku Klux Klan and collaborators including former Sanford and Son writer Paul Mooney, the series frequently courted controversy much to the delight of its loyal legions of fans. 2005 marked the released of the comedian's brainchild, Dave Chappelle's Block Party, which documented a free, unpublicized, all-star hip-hop concert in the Clinton Hill neighborhood of Brooklyn, NY.
Graham Beckel (Actor) .. Rizzo
Born: December 22, 1949
Trivia: Beckel is a supporting actor onscreen from the '70s.
Robert Miranda (Actor) .. Glenfiddish
Olek Krupa (Actor) .. LaFleur
Born: August 31, 1955
Birthplace: Rybnik
Saverio Guerra (Actor) .. Benny
Born: August 25, 1964
Birthplace: New York City
Richard C. Sarafian (Actor) .. Uncle Lou
Born: April 28, 1932
Tamala Jones (Actor) .. Janiece
Born: November 12, 1974
Birthplace: Pasadena, California, United States
Trivia: Actress Tamala Jones launched her career as a model, appearing in magazine ads and television commercials, before landing her first acting job on an episode of the preteen sitcom California Dreams, but her interest in the craft goes back to early childhood, when Jones and her cousin would stage backyard shows. Los Angeles-born and raised, Jones first studied drama in the sixth grade. As a young woman, she guest starred on series ranging from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air to E.R. to The Wayans Brothers. She had her first regular television role playing a student in the ABC network's short-lived drama Dangerous Minds. Jones entered feature films with a small role in How to Make an American Quilt (1995) and had her first starring film role in Booty Call (1997). In 1998, Jones starred in the short-lived NBC summer replacement sitcom For Your Love. After appearing in Blue Streak and The Wood the following year, Jones began to gain even more momentum in 2000 with roles in Ice Cube's Next Friday and the Tim Meadows SNL vehicle The Ladies Man. Jones would later share the limelight with a talented cast in Kingdom Come in 2001. She continued to work steadily in a variety of projects including Head of State, Daddy Day Camp, Who's Your Caddy?, and What Love Is before being cast on the television show Castle as Lanie Paris. In 2010 she starred in and co-produced the romantic comedy 35 & Ticking.
Julio Oscar Mechoso (Actor) .. Diaz
Born: May 31, 1955
Steve Rankin (Actor) .. Agent Gray
Carmen Argenziano (Actor) .. Captain Penelli
Born: October 27, 1943
Trivia: Argenziano, a supporting actor, appeared onscreen from the '70s.
John Hawkes (Actor) .. Eddie
Born: September 11, 1959
Birthplace: Minnesota, United States
Trivia: Prolific character actor John Hawkes earned a new level of recognition with his role as Bugsy, the slow-witted fisherman who provides Wolfgang Petersen's The Perfect Storm (2000) with a degree of comic relief. Hailing from Austin, TX, Hawkes, who bears a vague resemblance to Tom Selleck, began his career as an actor and musician. After relocating to Los Angeles, where he moved to do further stage work, the actor wrote and performed Nimrod Soul, a one-man show staged at the Theatre at the Improv. He subsequently found work on television and broke into film in the late '80s. In addition to doing supporting turns in a large variety of films, including Flesh and Bone (1993), From Dusk Till Dawn (1996), and I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (1998), Hawkes also did guest work on such long-running TV shows as E.R. and The X-Files. In 1999, he was cast in one of his first leading roles in A Slipping-Down Life, a well-received big screen adaptation of Anne Tyler's novel of the same name that also starred Lili Taylor and Guy Pearce. With his casting the following year in The Perfect Storm, a summer smash that featured him acting alongside the likes of George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg, and John C. Reilly, it seemed that Hawkes' career was entering a new and possibly more lucrative phase. Over the next several years, he would appear in a number of films, like Identity, Miami Vice, American Gangster, Winter's Bone, and Higher Ground.
Timothy Dale Agee (Actor) .. Cop in Alley
Bayani Ison (Actor) .. Uniform Outside Station
Scott Sowers (Actor) .. Prison Guard No. 37
Born: November 05, 1963
Frank Medrano (Actor) .. Frank
Born: May 20, 1958
Eddy Donno (Actor) .. Guard One
Born: July 24, 1935
Troy Gilbert (Actor) .. Guard Two
Kenny Endoso (Actor) .. Clerk
Born: July 22, 1940
Googy Gress (Actor) .. Desk Sergeant
Robert LaSardo (Actor) .. Twitchy Suspect
Born: September 20, 1963
Bill Ferrell (Actor) .. Cop in Elevator
Billy Williams (Actor) .. Cop in Gem Store Elevator
Born: June 03, 1929
Trivia: In the 1960s, British cinematographer Billy Williams (the son of lighting cameraman Billy Williams) earned an international reputation for his ability to work with color film. Excellent examples of his work can be seen in Ken Russell's Billion Dollar Brain (1967) and Women in Love (1969). Williams won an Oscar for his work on Gandhi (1982).
Greg Montgomery (Actor) .. Cop in Precinct
Jason Kravits (Actor) .. Customs Guy
Born: May 28, 1967
Henry Hayashi (Actor) .. FBI Tech
James Gavin (Actor) .. Helicopter Pilot
Born: December 21, 1919
Anne Marie Howard (Actor) .. Female Officer
Born: March 31, 1960
Jane Carr (Actor) .. Museum Official
Born: January 01, 1908
Died: January 01, 1957
Brandon Michael DePaul (Actor) .. Little Friend
Born: January 23, 1990
Amy Oberer (Actor) .. Terrified Woman
Born: August 11, 1973
Ash Winfield (Actor) .. Briefing Room Detective
Erik Rondell (Actor) .. Francois
J. Kenneth Campbell (Actor) .. Peterson
Born: July 22, 1947
Joel Hurt Jones (Actor) .. Tipsy Cop
Born: September 10, 1960
Darryl Brunson (Actor) .. Officer Porter
Michael A. Grasso (Actor) .. Swat Team Officer
John McCarthy (Actor) .. Swat Team Officer
Jeff Xander (Actor) .. Thug
Damian Foster (Actor) .. Thug
Yetta Ginsburg (Actor) .. Repelled Passer-By
Daniel Rogerson (Actor) .. Chinese Delivery Man
Shawn Elaine Brown Chiquette (Actor) .. Friendly Officer
Christian J. Christiensen (Actor) .. S.W.A.T. Team Member
David Eggby (Actor)
Trivia: David Eggby made his feature film debut as a full-fledged cinematographer with George Miller's futuristic adventure Mad Max (1980). Since then, the Australian lighting director's services have been in high demand, not only in his native country, but also in Hollywood. Some of his other films include Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story (1993), Dragonheart (1996), and Daylight (1997).
Les Mayfield (Actor)
Born: November 30, 1959
Edward Shearmur (Actor)
Toby Jaffe (Actor)
Michael Berry Jr. (Actor)
Daniel Melnick (Actor)
Born: April 21, 1932
Died: October 13, 2009
John Blumenthal (Actor)
Neal H. Moritz (Actor)
Born: June 06, 1959
Stephen Carpenter (Actor)
Allen Shapiro (Actor)
Nicole Ari Parker (Actor) .. Melissa Green
Born: October 07, 1970
Birthplace: Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Trivia: A graduate of the Tisch School for the Performing Arts as well as a published poet, Nicole Ari Parker began acting in small-stage productions in Harlem before landing her film debut in The Incredibly True Adventure of Two Girls in Love (1995). She would go on to appear in other independent features, such as The End of Violence, Boogie Nights, and 200 Cigarettes. She also began working in television, starring in a Rosie Perez-produced episode of Subway Stories and getting a reoccurring role on The Cosby Show. In 2001, she gained two NAACP Image award nominations: one for her work in the feature film Remember the Titans, and the other for her role as the lawyer Teri on the Showtime original series Soul Food. Parker would go on to play another lawyer a year later in the romantic comedy Brown Sugar, with Taye Diggs. In the years to come, Parker would find ongoing success with movies like Black Dynamite and Pastor Brown and tje TV series The Deep End.
Octavia Spencer (Actor) .. Shawna
Born: May 25, 1972
Birthplace: Montgomery, Alabama, United States
Trivia: Alabama native Octavia Spencer was working as part of the crew for the 1996 thriller A Time to Kill when she was handed the chance of a lifetime: Director Joel Schumacher thought she was right for a small role in the film, and Spencer's acting career was born. In addition to honing her craft on the professional stages of Los Angeles, Spencer continued to act on screen, appearing in a multitude of projects, including Never Been Kissed, Blue Streak, Big Momma's House, Dinner for Schmucks, and Peep World. Spencer also became a familiar TV face, with starring and recurring roles on LAX, Ugly Betty, Halfway Home, and Raising the Bar. A major boon for Spencer arrived in 2011 when, after 15 years in the industry, her performance in the critically acclaimed period movie The Help earned her an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.
Christopher Stapleton (Actor) .. K-9 Cop
Born: February 18, 1971
Billy Sly Williams (Actor) .. Cop in Gem Store Elevator
Eidan Hanzei (Actor) .. FBI Tech
James W. Gavin (Actor) .. Helicopter Pilot
Born: March 13, 1935
Brandon De Paul (Actor) .. Little Friend
Crystal Chappell (Actor)
Born: August 04, 1965
Birthplace: Silver Spring, Maryland, United States
Trivia: Silver Springs, MD, native Crystal Chappell immersed herself in poetry and classic literature as a young girl, eventually discovering her love of acting while essaying the lead in a high-school production of Dark of the Moon. Awarded a drama scholarship for her remarkable prowess on the stage, Chappell subsequently studied computer science and acting at Coast Carolina College in South Carolina, later supporting herself as an aerobics instructor while attending the University of Southern Carolina. It was during a year-long break in her studies that Chappell learned of an audition for a University of Maryland production of Beauty and the Beast, and though she landed the lead role, it was under the strict understanding that she would enroll in the school's acting program as well. Later cast in a University of Maryland production of Spring's Awakening that eventually made it to the finals at the National College Theater Festival, the emerging actress finally realized that her dreams were in sight while performing the expressionist classic at the Kennedy Center. Upon graduation, Chappell moved to New York and earned her keep as a waitress while becoming a regular on the audition circuit, yet it was a reading of Sanford Meisner on Acting that would compel her to write the author -- who in turn invited her to his West Indies home to hone her craft. Later moving back to New York City, Chappell landed a role on the long-running daytime drama All My Children, and her career officially shifted into high gear. Her relationship with Meisner wasn't over yet, however, and after relocating to Los Angeles for a role on Santa Barbara, Chappell continued her studies with the famed acting coach. If the initial disappointment at learning of her character's quick demise packed a bit of a sting, a subsequent offer to appear on Days of Our Lives provided just the kind of boost needed to keep her spirits lifted. In the years that followed Chappell made frequent appearances on such television shows as Diagnosis Murder, Walker, Texas Ranger, and Silk Stalkings. But it was in the realm of the soap opera that Chappell was most comfortable, and in 1999 she became a regular fixture on Guiding Light. In 2002, Chappell won her first Daytime Emmy as a result of her role on the series, with subsequent nominations in the following years proving without question that she was one of the most beloved actors in daytime drama.

Before / After
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