Babies


08:00 am - 10:00 am, Friday, January 23 on WXTV MovieSphere Gold (41.2)

Average User Rating: 0.00 (0 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

The physical and emotional trauma of three friends who are trying to have children. Yvonne: Lindsay Wagner. Laura: Dinah Manoff. Cindy: Marcy Walker. David: Adam Arkin. Jake: John Walcutt. Andrea: Valerie Landsburg. Dr. Liu: Nancy Kwan. Sam: Robert Harper. Loren: Robert Pine. Sylvia: Abigail Van Alyn. Michael Rhodes directed.

1990 English
Drama

Cast & Crew
-

Lindsay Wagner (Actor) .. Yvonne
Dinah Manoff (Actor) .. Laura
Marcy Walker (Actor) .. Cindy
Adam Arkin (Actor) .. David
John Walcutt (Actor) .. Jake
Valerie Landsburg (Actor) .. Andrea
Nancy Kwan (Actor) .. Dr. Liu
Robert Harper (Actor) .. Sam Clarington
Robert Pine (Actor) .. Loren
Abigail van Alyn (Actor) .. Sylvia Straus
Sarah Lundy (Actor) .. Samantha
Denny Delk (Actor) .. Hayden
Janice Fuller (Actor) .. Sperm Bank Receptionist
Corey Fisher (Actor) .. Dr. Singer
Fredi Olster (Actor) .. Jane Swan
Maureen Coyne (Actor) .. Cryobank Nurse
Damara Reilly (Actor) .. Dr. Daniels' Nurse
Ken Grantham (Actor) .. Dr. Armon
Eva Gholson (Actor) .. Model
Nomi Mitty (Actor) .. Labor Room Nurse

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Lindsay Wagner (Actor) .. Yvonne
Born: June 22, 1949
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Born in a tough Los Angeles suburb, actress Lindsay Wagner quickly became accustomed to having to work hard and fight harder for the things she wanted out of life. The blonde, 5'11" Wagner supplemented her modelling and singing income by teaching theater arts to schoolchildren. In 1971, she was signed to a $162-per-week contract at Universal Pictures, under whose auspices she played supporting roles in such TV series as The Bold Ones and Owen Marshall, M.D. and co-starred in the theatrical features Two People (1972) and The Paper Chase (1973). Though she received good reviews for her work in the last-named film (in which she was cast as the daughter of imperious law professor John Houseman), Lindsay was summarily dropped by her studio in 1975. At the same time, Universal executives were looking for a tall, athletic actress to play a "bionic woman" opposite Lee Majors in a special two-part installment of the weekly TV series The Six Million Dollar Man. Lindsay's contract was extended an extra few days to permit her to play the role of Jaime Sommers -- and when the two-parter was spun off into the Bionic Woman TV series in 1976, Lindsay, still bitter over her firing, demanded a then-staggering sum of $17,500 per program, and a percentage of the merchandising profits. After the cancellation of Bionic Woman in 1978, Lindsay kept her star shining brightly such made-for-TV movies as The Incredible Journey of Dr. Meg Laurel (1979), Callie and Son (1981), I Want to Live (1983), Convicted (1986), The Taking of Flight 847: The Uli Dedrickson Story (1989), and I Want to Keep My Daughter (1995). She has also appeared in several TV-movie sequels to The Bionic Woman, including 1993's Bionic Ever After. In addition to maintaining her successful acting career, Lindsay Wagner has entered the booming instructional-video market with Lindsay Wagner's New Beauty: The Accupressure Facelift.
Dinah Manoff (Actor) .. Laura
Born: January 25, 1958
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Actress Dinah Manoff is the daughter of actress/director Lee Grant and playwright Arnold Manoff. A graduate of California School of the Arts, Dinah made her first acting appearance in a PBS special. She won a Tony award as the neurotic daughter of an irresponsible movie screenwriter in Neil Simon's I Ought to Be in Pictures; she re-created this role in the 1982 film version, acting opposite Walter Matthau and her mother Lee Grant. On television, Manoff played Elaine Lefkowitz on the serial satire Soap (1978-79), securing a niche in TV history as the first sitcom regular to be "murdered" on-camera. Dinah Manoff later co-starred as Carol Weston opposite fellow Soap alumnus Richard Mulligan on the weekly comedy Empty Nest (1988-1993).
Marcy Walker (Actor) .. Cindy
Adam Arkin (Actor) .. David
Born: August 19, 1956
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: The oldest of three sons of Broadway star Alan Arkin, American actor Adam Arkin has had stage and movie work, but is best known for his TV assignments. In 1977 Arkin was starred in his first series, the one-season sitcom Bustin' Loose, wherein the 21-year-old actor played a man finally escaping his overprotective parents. Arkin went on to play an inner-city biology teacher in the brief 1982 TV series Teachers Only; a Chicago bookie in the short-lived 1986 weekly Tough Cookies; and an attorney in 1988's A Year in the Life, which lasted eight months of our lives. In 1990, just when it seemed as though Arkin was going to become the King of Cancellation, he made the first of many guest appearances on the quirky CBS series Northern Exposure as Adam, the sociopathic, in-your-face hermit/gourmet chef. The character reappeared sporadically until 1993, sometimes as a welcome touch of anarchy, other times as merely a loud-mouthed royal pain. In 1994, Adam Arkin was given his most recent crack at regular weekly series work, playing a dedicated but mercurial doctor on the TV drama Chicago Hope, where he was matched insult for insult by the equally obstreperous Mandy Patinkin. Though that well-regarded series came to a close in 2000, Arkin continued to work steadily in both movies and TV appearing in a diverse string of projects including A Slight Case of Murder, the sitcom Baby Bob, and the Will Smith vehicle Hitch. He had a major part on the short-lived TV series Life starting in 2007, and in 2009 appeared in the Coen Brothers Best Picture nominee A Serious Man. He also maintained a steady career as a director of series television helming episodes of Monk, Ally McBeal, and Grey's Anatomy. In 2012 he could be seen in The Sessions, a film that won the audience award at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival.
John Walcutt (Actor) .. Jake
Valerie Landsburg (Actor) .. Andrea
Born: August 12, 1958
Nancy Kwan (Actor) .. Dr. Liu
Born: May 19, 1939
Birthplace: Hong Kong
Trivia: Actress Nancy Kwan was born in Hong Kong to a Chinese father and English mother. Raised in England, Kwan studied and performed with the Royal Ballet, then returned to Hong Kong to maintain her own dance school. She achieved film stardom when she replaced the ailing France Nuyen in The World of Susie Wong (1961); ironically, the makeup men were obliged to make her look "more Chinese." She followed this box-office success with Flower Drum Song (1961), where she sang (or perhaps lip-synched) the Rodgers and Hammerstein standard "I Enjoy Being a Girl." Roles tapered off in quality over the next few years, and by 1967 her career was dwindling. Nancy Kwan has since sustained her movie career in Hong Kong-produced cheapies, and has recently made a TV comeback of sorts promoting a line of cosmetics on a series of late-night infomercials.
Robert Harper (Actor) .. Sam Clarington
Born: May 19, 1951
Robert Pine (Actor) .. Loren
Born: July 10, 1941
Birthplace: Scarsdale, New York
Abigail van Alyn (Actor) .. Sylvia Straus
Sarah Lundy (Actor) .. Samantha
Denny Delk (Actor) .. Hayden
Janice Fuller (Actor) .. Sperm Bank Receptionist
Corey Fisher (Actor) .. Dr. Singer
Fredi Olster (Actor) .. Jane Swan
Maureen Coyne (Actor) .. Cryobank Nurse
Damara Reilly (Actor) .. Dr. Daniels' Nurse
Ken Grantham (Actor) .. Dr. Armon
Eva Gholson (Actor) .. Model
Nomi Mitty (Actor) .. Labor Room Nurse
Died: August 24, 1994
Trivia: A supporting actress on stage, television, and film, dark-eyed Nomi Mitty was a child when she made her Broadway debut, in the 1951 production of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. From there, she was a regular on the 1950s radio show The Goldbergs. Mitty made the first of a handful of screen appearances in Serpico (1973). Her television credits include Knots Landing, L.A. Law, and Picket Fences.

Before / After
-