Wagons East!


01:02 am - 03:21 am, Sunday, May 10 on WXTV MovieSphere Gold (41.2)

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About this Broadcast
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An alcoholic wagonmaster leads a group of discontented pioneers away from the Old West.

1994 English Stereo
Comedy Western Satire

Cast & Crew
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John Candy (Actor) .. Harlow
Richard Lewis (Actor) .. Phil
John C. McGinley (Actor) .. Julian
Ellen Greene (Actor) .. Belle
Robert Picardo (Actor) .. Ben
Ed Lauter (Actor) .. Slade
Rodney A. Grant (Actor) .. Little Feather
William Sanderson (Actor) .. Zeke
Russell Means (Actor) .. Chief
Charles Rocket (Actor) .. Larchmont
Melinda Culea (Actor) .. Constance Taylor
Joe Bays (Actor) .. River Townsman
Abraham Benrubi (Actor) .. Abe Ferguson
Jill Boyd (Actor) .. Prudence Taylor
Douglas Carlson (Actor) .. Bar Patron
Ryan Cutrona (Actor) .. Tom
Ricky Damazio (Actor) .. Smith
Bud Davis (Actor) .. Desperado Leader
Bill Day Dodge (Actor) .. Elder
Thomas F. Duffy (Actor) .. Clayton Ferguson
David Dunard (Actor) .. Harry Bob Ferguson
Marvin J. McIntyre (Actor) .. Irving Ferjuson
Steve Eastin (Actor) .. Bartender
Roger Eschbacher (Actor) .. Reporter
Stuart Grant (Actor) .. White Cloud
Randy Hall (Actor) .. Pony Express Rider
Chad Hamilton (Actor) .. Ricky Jones
Don Lake (Actor) .. Lieutenant Bailey
Marvin McIntyre (Actor) .. Irving Ferguson
Robin McKee (Actor) .. Lindsey
Joel McKinnon Miller (Actor) .. Zack Ferguson
Mauricio Martinez (Actor) .. Card Player
Denver Mattson (Actor) .. Card Player
Lochlyn Munro (Actor) .. Billy
Ingrid Nuernberg (Actor) .. Henrietta Wheeler
Patrick Thomas O'Brien (Actor) .. Stranger
Ethan Phillips (Actor) .. Smedly
Jimmy Ray Pickens (Actor) .. Scout
Tony Pierce (Actor) .. Junior Ferguson
Derek Senft (Actor) .. Jeremiah Taylor
Marcie Smolin (Actor) .. Woman on Trail
William Tucker (Actor) .. Reporter
Martin Wells (Actor) .. Taylor

More Information
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Did You Know..
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John Candy (Actor) .. Harlow
Born: October 31, 1950
Died: March 04, 1994
Birthplace: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: Canadian comic actor John Candy was geared toward a performing career even while studying for a journalism degree in college. Candy's bulky frame and built-in likability enabled him to secure small roles in Canadian film and TV productions. In the early '70s, Candy joined Canada's Second City Troupe, sharing the spotlight with such potent talent (and subsequent close friends) as Joe Flaherty, Eugene Levy, Dave Thomas, Andrea Martin, and Catherine O'Hara. Second City TV, popularly known as SCTV, entered the Canadian TV airwaves in 1975 and was syndicated to the United States two years later. Candy scored an instant hit with such characters as porcine poseur Johnny LaRue, overly unctuous talk show sidekick William B., and ever-grinning "Lutonian" musician Yosh Shmenge. So popular did Candy become that suddenly many of his obscurer pre-starring Canadian films (It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time, The Clown Murders) became hot properties on the video rental circuit. Candy stayed with the various SCTV syndicated and network programs until 1983, earning two Emmys in the process. One of the few genuine nice guys in the realm of comedy, Candy was beloved by both co-workers and fans -- even when this lovability was stretched to the breaking point in substandard films. He scored in supporting roles (Splash [1984], Brewster's Millions [1985]), but such thinnish starring features as Summer Rental (1985) and Who's Harry Crumb (1989) seemed to suggest that Candy couldn't carry a film by himself. Then he starred in Uncle Buck (1989), a disarming comedy about a ne'er-do-well with hidden nobility. Receiving relatively little promotion, Uncle Buck was a surprise hit, and stands today as perhaps Candy's best-ever vehicle after Planes, Trains and Automobiles. Unfortunately, most of his follow-up films were on a par with the disastrous Nothing but Trouble (1990) and Delirious (1992). At the same time, Candy's leading role in Only the Lonely (1991) and his supporting performance in JFK (1992) proved that a major talent was being squandered by the film industry. Candy was as frustrated as his fans, manifesting this frustration in excessive eating, drinking, and smoking. The actor's superlative seriocomic turn as a disgraced Olympic star in Cool Runnings (1993), which Candy also co-produced, seemed to point toward a career upswing. But while filming Wagons East in Mexico, 43-year-old John Candy suffered a heart attack and died in his sleep. Wagons East was released in the summer of 1994, utilizing Candy's existing footage as well as possible; it proved, sadly, an inadequate epitaph for one of film comedy's funniest and most ingratiating stars.
Richard Lewis (Actor) .. Phil
Born: June 29, 1947
Died: February 27, 2024
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Standup comedians are famous for their neuroses, but Richard Lewis takes anxiety to a new level. On-stage, he energetically frets and overanalyses the most personal aspects of his life and wallows in his low self-esteem until the audience convulses with sympathetic laughter. He was born in Brooklyn, but raised in New Jersey. While attending Ohio State University as a marketing major, Lewis also studied communications. Upon graduation, he worked as the lead copywriter for an advertising agency. Four years into his career, he abandoned it to become a standup comedian, making his club debut in Greenwich Village in 1972. His first break came when he won a regular gig at Budd Friedman's the Improv comedy club and then debuted on The Tonight Show. Lewis became really well known in 1979 when he co-wrote and starred in Diary of a Young Comic, a show which gained him a cult following. Its success led him to become a television writer. In 1982, he made his first appearance on David Letterman's late-night talk show and from there embarked upon a three-year cross-country tour. Lewis had great success with his first cable TV special, I'm in Pain, in 1986. His second special, The Richard Lewis I'm Exhausted Concert, earned him a nomination for a Cable ACE award in 1988. Two years later his third special, I'm Doomed, was similarly nominated. He and Jamie Lee Curtis starred in the popular ABC sitcom Anything but Love from 1989 to 1992. In the early '90s, he took a break from standup. He launched his film career in 1988 with That's Adequate and continued to occasionally appear in supporting or character roles, notably in the independent film Drunks (1995) in which he won kudos for his dramatic portrayal of an alcoholic junkie. Lewis starred in a short-lived sitcom, Daddy Dearest (1993), and did not again try a television series until he and comic Kevin Nealon co-starred in Hiller and Diller in 1997. His 1995 standup routine "Magical Misery Tour" won considerable kudos and was the basis for a well-received 1996 cable special, shot live from the Bottom Line club in New York. Since 1987, Lewis was actively involved with HBO's annual Comic Relief benefits, large star-studded comedy shows in which all proceeds go toward helping the homeless.
John C. McGinley (Actor) .. Julian
Born: August 03, 1959
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: John McGinley, often credited as John C. McGinley, has become one of the most prolific character actors in Hollywood since he first got noticed in Oliver Stone's Platoon (1986). The intense, unblinking actor specializes in sarcasm, cynicism, and a used car dealer's unctuous insincerity, meaning he can play either wacky or sinister in both comedies and dramas. Although he has appeared in six Stone films, his breakout performance came in a very different format, as the acerbic and piercingly straightforward Dr. Perry Cox on the hit NBC sitcom Scrubs (2001).McGinley was born on August 3, 1959, in New York City. Growing up in Millburn, NJ, he was more involved in sports than theater. He began studying acting at Syracuse University, continuing at N.Y.U.'s Tisch School of the Arts. McGinley then toiled both on and off-Broadway, as well as two years on the soap opera Another World, scoring his first film role in the Alan Alda-directed Sweet Liberty (1986). It was while he was serving as John Turturro's understudy on the play Danny and the Deep Blue Sea that a casting scout in Stone's employ spotted him and got him an audition for Platoon. McGinley was cast as the sycophantic Sgt. Red O'Neill in the eventual Oscar winner.McGinley followed up Platoon with another one-two punch of Stone movies, Wall Street (1987) and Talk Radio (1988). In interviews, McGinley has described theirs as a "strong working relationship," not a friendship per se with the demanding director. He appeared in a handful of other films before his fourth Stone collaboration, Born on the Fourth of July (1989), which was quickly followed by his first screenwriting effort. McGinley co-scripted and co-starred in the 1990 film Suffering Bastards, alongside Talk Radio's Eric Bogosian.The 1990s were a period of intense work for the actor, who appeared in an average of three movies a year, sometimes as many as seven -- a necessary but no less tricky feat for a character actor earning modest paychecks. The most heralded of these were David Fincher's Seven and Stone's Nixon (both 1995); the most forgettable were Highlander II: The Quickening (1991) and the Steven Seagal starrer On Deadly Ground (1994). For most moviegoers, he remained under the radar.Two showy roles in 1999 ably demonstrated McGinley's facility for comedy. As a callous efficiency expert brought aboard to reorganize (i.e., downsize) the tech firm at the heart of Office Space, McGinley grinned and joked his way through a round of heartless layoffs. A similar oiliness informed his loud, obnoxious, kiss-ass portrayal of a Jim Rome-type sports interviewer in Stone's Any Given Sunday. It was soon after, in 2001, that McGinley was brought aboard for the role destined to identify him beyond any single film. As the default mentor on Scrubs, McGinley alternated hard-knocks frankness, biting wit, and a genuine desire to be left alone, in turn creating a hilarious persona and sealing his fate as an unwitting cult figure to the young surgeons. The sitcom work schedule has given him the necessary stability to spend time with his young son, Max, who has Down's syndrome.
Ellen Greene (Actor) .. Belle
Born: February 22, 1951
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Supercharged American stage and screen actress Ellen Greene was educated at Ryder College. After her leading-lady film debut in Next Stop Greenwich Village (1978), Ellen's career was steady but unspectacular until she was cast as airheaded heroine Audrey in the 1982 Broadway musical hit Little Shop of Horrors. She was among the few cast members to recreate her role for the 1986 screen version; so winning was her performance in this film and the subsequent Talk Radio (1988), that critics and pundits predicted major stardom. So far as Ellen was concerned, she was already a star, and behaved accordingly. Cast as a neurotic rock 'n' roller-turned-evangelist in the 1989 TV movie Glory! Glory!, Ms. Greene became difficult and demanding, throwing her weight around in a manner suggesting that she been on top long enough to be permitted this behavior. Evidently her imperiousness paid off; Glory! Glory! was an excellent effort, thanks in no small part to the towering performance of its leading lady. After Glory! Glory!, Ellen Greene continued to get good roles on stage and in television; in 1992, the actress joined several other musical comedy veterans as a voice artist for the animated cartoon feature Rock a Doodle.
Robert Picardo (Actor) .. Ben
Born: October 27, 1953
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Yale alumnus Robert Picardo made his off-Broadway debut in David Mamet's one-act play Sexual Perversity in Chicago. That was in 1975; two years later, Picardo was first seen on Broadway in Gemini. He launched his TV career in the 1980 miniseries The Dream Merchants, and in 1981 made his first film, The Howling--one of several assignments for director Joe Dante. During his early TV years, he was all too often cast in "first husband" or "wrong boyfriend" supporting roles. Things improved in 1986, when he was hired to play the much-feared high school gym teacher Coach Cutlip in the weekly dramedy The Wonder Years. He went on to co-star as Dr. Dick Richard in the highly acclaimed Vietnam-era series China Beach (1989-91). A busy voiceover artist, Picardo has supplied a variety of vocal characterizations for such series as Dinosaurs and Batman. Undoubtedly you'll be reading even more about Robert Picardo in the future, by virtue of his being cast as the holographic Doc Zimmerman on TV's Star Trek: Voyager(1995- ). In the post Star Trek years, Picardo would find ongoing success on shows like The Lyon's Den, Stargate SG-1, and Stargate Atlantis.
Ed Lauter (Actor) .. Slade
Born: October 30, 1940
Died: October 16, 2013
Birthplace: Long Beach, Long Island, New York
Trivia: An English major in college, Ed Lauter worked as a stand-up comic before entering films in 1971. The tall, menacing Lauter has generally been typecast as humorless, easily corruptible authority figures. He was at his meanest as the vindictive Captain Knaur in Robert Aldrich's The Longest Yard. His TV credits include such roles as Sheriff Cain in BJ and the Bear (1979-80) and General Louis Crewes in Stephen King's The Golden Years (1991). In 1976, Ed Lauter was afforded a rare leading role--and a sympathetic one to boot--in the made-for-TV murder mystery Last Hours Before Morning (1976). Lauter appeared in the 2005 remake of The Longest Yard and had a small role in the Oscar-winning film The Artist (2011). He also had a recurring role on the TV series Shameless. Lauter passed away in 2013 of mesothelioma at age 74, with several films in post-production, awaiting release.
Rodney A. Grant (Actor) .. Little Feather
Born: March 09, 1959
Trivia: Intense Native American actor Rodney A. Grant achieved celebrity as the mercurial Lakota Sioux warrior Wind In His Hair in Kevin Costner's Dances with Wolves (1990). Thereafter, Grant trafficked almost exclusively in "firebrand" characterizations. He has been featured in such roles as Crazy Horse in the television miniseries Son of the Morning Star (1991), Mangas in Geronimo: An American Legend (1993) and Little Feather in Wagons East (1994). On a weekly basis, Rodney A. Grant was seen as Chingachgook in the 1994 syndicated TVer Hawkeye.
William Sanderson (Actor) .. Zeke
Born: January 10, 1944
Birthplace: Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Trivia: Gangly American character actor William Sanderson has done all right by himself in "Bubba" roles. He was seen in such bucolic characterizations as Lee Dollarhide in Coal Miner's Daughter (1980), Sleets in Rocketeer (1989), Zeke in Wagons East (1994), and Lippy in the first two Lonesome Dove TV miniseries. He rose to prominence in the early 1980s as one-third of the backwoods trio Larry, Daryl and Daryl on the TV sitcom Newhart (1982-90); Sanderson was Larry, the interpreter for his two tight-lipped, dull-witted siblings. Despite the illusion created by his specialty, Sanderson is no hayseed. Following his military discharge, Sanderson graduated from Memphis State University and after that became a law student until the acting bug bit and led him to drop out of school to launch a successful theater career in New York; Sanderson moved into television and feature films. As a change of pace, William Sanderson was heard as urbane, authoritative robotmaster Karl Rossum in the daily Fox TV Network attraction Batman: The Animated Series (1992). In 1998, William Sanderson co-starred opposite Beau Bridges in the satirical television series Maximum Bob.
Russell Means (Actor) .. Chief
Born: November 10, 1939
Died: October 22, 2012
Birthplace: Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota, United States
Trivia: Once described as "the most famous American Indian since Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse," Oglala/Lakota Sioux Russell Means made a name for himself as an activist two decades before he became an actor. Born in Pine Ridge, SD, near the storied Black Hills, Means joined the late '60s cultural foment as an avid advocate for American Indian rights and recognition. As the first national director of the American Indian Movement (he disdained the term "Native American") and a participant in the 1972 standoff with the government at Wounded Knee, Means became a prominent voice calling for self-determination and the preservation of American Indian heritage. Furthering his activist reach during the 1980s, Means traveled abroad to support freedom for other indigenous peoples worldwide, and ran for president as the Libertarian Party candidate in 1988. Seeing the potential in synergy, Means became a multimedia presence in the 1990s. Along with recording two albums and authoring his autobiography Where White Men Fear to Tread, Means also went into acting. Making his movie debut in Michael Mann's florid adaptation of James Fenimore Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans (1992), Means starred as the titular Chingachgook, father figure to Daniel Day-Lewis' Hawkeye. Taking his cue from such prior Native American actors as Chief Dan George and Will Sampson, Means portrayed Indians in a range of films and with humor as well as dignity. Following the ultra-serious Last of the Mohicans, Means appeared in the Western spoof Wagons East! (1994), and played the spiritually portentous Old Indian in Oliver Stone's bloody media satire Natural Born Killers (1994). Along with voicing Chief Powhatan in Disney's animated features Pocahontas (1995) and Pocahontas: Journey to a New World (1998), Means put his stamp on other well-known American Indian tales, reprising his role as Chingachgook in an adaptation of Cooper's The Pathfinder (1996), and appearing in the movie version of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem The Song of Hiawatha (1997). Responding to charges that his Hollywood career was a sell-out, Means noted that he poured his earnings back into such activist projects as American Indian education and continued to act. Means finished the decade with several films, including the crime drama Black Cat Run (1998) and the children's fantasy Thomas and the Magic Railroad (2000). He died of throat cancer in 2012, a few weeks before his 73rd birthday.
Charles Rocket (Actor) .. Larchmont
Born: August 24, 1949
Died: October 07, 2005
Melinda Culea (Actor) .. Constance Taylor
Born: May 05, 1955
Trivia: Best known to audiences as reporter Amy Allen on the hit series The A-Team, Chicago native Melinda Culea began her career in show business as a model in the early '80s. Unsatisfied with mere posing, she soon left her agency in New York to pursue a career as a TV actress in L.A., where she scored roles on numerous shows like Family Ties, St. Elsewhere, and Knots Landing.
Joe Bays (Actor) .. River Townsman
Abraham Benrubi (Actor) .. Abe Ferguson
Born: October 04, 1969
Birthplace: Bloomington, Indiana, United States
Trivia: Born October 4th, 1969, Abraham Benrubi first became beloved to Gen-Xers when he played misunderstood high schooler "Koob" on the cult-hit comedy series Parker Lewis Can't Lose. His 6'7" linebacker stature combined with his soft-spoken voice made him unforgettable in his long-running portrayal of Jerry Markovic on ER, though his contributions to the Cartoon Network series Robot Chicken feature his voice only, and are just as memorable. In 2006, Benrubi joined the cast of the one-hour dramedy Men in Trees, playing the intriguing, peculiar character of bartender/millionaire Ben Tomasson. After returning for the final season of ER in 2008, Benrubi starred in ABC's short-lived television series Happy Town, and played the role of Detective Sgt. JC Lightfoot in TNT's Memphis Beat. Benrubi continues to be active in film and television.
Jill Boyd (Actor) .. Prudence Taylor
Douglas Carlson (Actor) .. Bar Patron
Ryan Cutrona (Actor) .. Tom
Born: July 29, 1949
Ricky Damazio (Actor) .. Smith
Bud Davis (Actor) .. Desperado Leader
Born: December 23, 1936
Bill Day Dodge (Actor) .. Elder
Thomas F. Duffy (Actor) .. Clayton Ferguson
Born: November 09, 1955
David Dunard (Actor) .. Harry Bob Ferguson
Marvin J. McIntyre (Actor) .. Irving Ferjuson
Steve Eastin (Actor) .. Bartender
Born: June 22, 1948
Roger Eschbacher (Actor) .. Reporter
Stuart Grant (Actor) .. White Cloud
Randy Hall (Actor) .. Pony Express Rider
Born: January 01, 1960
Chad Hamilton (Actor) .. Ricky Jones
Don Lake (Actor) .. Lieutenant Bailey
Born: November 26, 1956
Marvin McIntyre (Actor) .. Irving Ferguson
Robin McKee (Actor) .. Lindsey
Joel McKinnon Miller (Actor) .. Zack Ferguson
Birthplace: Rockford, Minnesota, United States
Trivia: Studied opera and theatre in college before leaving two classes shy of his degree to pursue his career; he re-enrolled in 2007 and received his diploma. Toured with the American National Theatre and Academy for a year. Studied with John Houseman's The Acting Company in New York for three years. Hadn't publicly sung opera in decades when the producer of Brooklyn Nine-Nine asked him to sing in the show.
Mauricio Martinez (Actor) .. Card Player
Denver Mattson (Actor) .. Card Player
Born: July 12, 1937
Lochlyn Munro (Actor) .. Billy
Born: February 12, 1966
Birthplace: Lac La Hache, British Columbia, Canada
Trivia: Born Richard Laughlin Munro in the small town of Lac La Hache in British Columbia, Canadian-born actor Lochlyn Munro made a name for himself with high-strung comic performances in such films as Scary Movie, Dead Man on Campus, and A Guy Thing, as well as turns in more dramatic roles. A gifted sportsman who won awards as a competitive athlete, Munro was in his mid-'20s when he began to focus on a career in acting. His first professional credits were guest appearances on such TV series as Wiseguy and Neon Rider, and while he made his big-screen debut with a bit part in Cadence, he spent much of the early to mid-'90s doing television work, and began building a fan base when he was cast as a regular on the Canadian drama Northwood. He also starred in the short-lived crime series Two, and played recurring roles on JAG and Charmed. Munro's breakthrough was the comedy Dead Man on Campus, in which he played an overly intense college student whose roommates, in hopes of scoring an easy A, attempt to lead him to his death; he was cast as another tightly wound young man in A Night at the Roxbury. In 2000, Munro appeared in the top-grossing horror film spoof Scary Movie, as well as a more straightforward terror tale, Dracula 2000, and Bruce Paltrow's karaoke-themed comedy drama Duets.
Ingrid Nuernberg (Actor) .. Henrietta Wheeler
Patrick Thomas O'Brien (Actor) .. Stranger
Born: January 26, 1951
Ethan Phillips (Actor) .. Smedly
Born: February 08, 1955
Birthplace: Garden City, New York
Jimmy Ray Pickens (Actor) .. Scout
Tony Pierce (Actor) .. Junior Ferguson
Derek Senft (Actor) .. Jeremiah Taylor
Marcie Smolin (Actor) .. Woman on Trail
William Tucker (Actor) .. Reporter
Martin Wells (Actor) .. Taylor
Richard B. Lewis (Actor)
Born: March 15, 1957

Before / After
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The Duel
10:44 pm
The Kid
03:21 am