Crazy Like a Fox: The Geronimo Machine


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About this Broadcast
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The Geronimo Machine

Season 1, Episode 9

A vintner facing a competency hearing may be crazy like the Foxes: they've all seen a UFO in her vineyards. Jack Warden, John Rubinstein. Colonel Glendon: Joshua Bryant Cindy: Penny Peyser.

repeat 1985 English Stereo
Comedy Crime Drama Crime Mystery & Suspense

Cast & Crew
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Jack Warden (Actor) .. Harry Fox
John Rubinstein (Actor) .. Harrison K. Fox
Penny Peyser (Actor) .. Cindy Fox
Robby Kiger (Actor) .. Josh Fox
Tony Goodstone (Actor) .. Arms Buyer
Marcelo Tubert (Actor) .. Deputy #2

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Jack Warden (Actor) .. Harry Fox
Born: September 18, 1920
Died: July 19, 2006
Trivia: A former prizefighter, nightclub bouncer and lifeguard, Jack Warden took to the stage after serving as a paratrooper in World War II. Warden's first professional engagement was with the Margo Jones repertory troupe in 1947. He made both his Broadway and film debuts in 1951, spending the next few years specializing in blunt military types and short-tempered bullies. Among his most notable screen roles of the 1950s was the homicidally bigoted factory foreman in Edge of the City and the impatient Juror #7 in Twelve Angry Men (both 1957). He was Oscar-nominated for his portrayal of the cuckolded Lester in Warren Beatty's Shampoo (1975) and for his work as eternally flustered sports promoter Max Corkle in another Beatty vehicle, Heaven Can Wait (1978). He has also played the brusque, bluff President in Being There (1978); senile, gun-wielding judge Ray Ford in ...And Justice For All (1979); the twin auto dealers--one good, one bad--in Used Cars (1980); Paul Newman's combination leg-man and conscience in The Verdict (1982); shifty convenience store owner Big Ben in the two Problem Child films of the early 1990s; the not-so-dearly departed in Passed Away (1992); and Broadway high-roller Julian Marx in Woody Allen's Bullets Over Broadway (1994). Extensive though his stage and screen credits may be, Warden has been just as busy on television, winning an Emmy for his portrayal of George Halas in Brian's Song (1969) and playing such other historical personages as Cornelius Ryan (1981's A Private Battle) and Mark Twain (1984's Helen Keller: The Miracle Continues). Barely stopping for air, Jack Warden has also starred or co-starred on the weekly TV series Mister Peepers (1953-55), The Asphalt Jungle (1961), Wackiest Ship in the Army (1965), NYPD (1967-68), Jigsaw John (1975), The Bad News Bears (1979) and Crazy Like a Fox (1984-85); and, had the pilot episode sold, Jack Warden was to have been the star in a 1979 revival of Topper. Though this was not to be for Warden, the gruff actor's age and affectionately sour demeanor found him essaying frequent albiet minor feature roles through the new millennium. Remaining in the public eye withn appearances in While You Were Sleeping (1995), Ed (1996), Bullworth (1998) and The Replacements (2000), the former welterweight fighter remained as dependable as ever when it came to stepping in front of the lens.
John Rubinstein (Actor) .. Harrison K. Fox
Born: December 08, 1946
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: John Rubinstein was born in Los Angeles in 1946, the same year that his celebrated father, 59-year-old concert pianist Arthur B. Rubinstein, became an American citizen. A fine musician in his own right, John has worked on the scores of such films as The Candidate (1972) and Jeremiah Johnson (1972). The younger Rubinstein is, however, far better known as an actor. He made a well-received Broadway debut in the popular musical Pippin and later co-starred in Children of a Lesser God and A Soldier's Tale. A familiar TV and movie face since 1970, Rubinstein starred in the 1972 theatrical feature Pippin, was featured as Meredith Baxter's ex-husband in the Mike Nichols-produced TV series Family (1976-1980), and was cast as MGM mogul Irving Thalberg in the 1980 TV movie The Silent Lovers. He was most familiar for his three-season (1984-1986) portrayal of uptight attorney Harrison K. Fox on the tongue-in-cheek private eye weekly Crazy Like a Fox. John Rubinstein is married to actress Judy West.
Penny Peyser (Actor) .. Cindy Fox
Born: February 09, 1951
Robby Kiger (Actor) .. Josh Fox
Born: June 11, 1973
Natalie Schafer (Actor)
Born: November 05, 1912
Died: April 10, 1991
Trivia: Though born in New York, actress Natalie Schafer built her stage reputation upon playing British aristocrats. She entered films in 1944, co-starring with Lana Turner and Robert Walker in Marriage Is a Private Affair. Her most famous role was as social butterfly Lovey Howell on the zany TV sitcom Gilligan's Island, a part she essayed from 1964 through 1967, then reprised in the many Gilligan TV-movie and cartoon sequels of the 1970s and 1980s. From 1934 through 1942, Natalie Schafer was the wife of actor Louis Calhern.
William Bogert (Actor)
Born: January 24, 1936
Don Galloway (Actor)
Born: July 27, 1937
Died: January 08, 2009
Birthplace: Augusta, Kentucky
Trivia: American leading man Don Galloway started his television career in the 1950s in the New York-based soap opera The Secret Storm. In 1963, Galloway was among the first regular cast members of ABC's General Hospital, playing Buzz Stryker. His first regular nighttime video stint was on Tom Dick and Harry, one-third of the 90-minute weekly sitcom 90 Bristol Court (1964). From 1967 through 1975, Galloway was seen as officer Ed Brown on the Raymond Burr prime-time vehicle Ironside, reprising the character for a made-for-TV "reunion" film in the late 1980s. He later appeared with Burr in a brace of Perry Mason TV movies, playing a different character in each. Don Galloway's movie credits include the role of Richard in The Big Chill (1983).
Jason Bernard (Actor)
Born: May 17, 1938
Died: October 16, 1996
Trivia: African-American character actor Jason Bernard is one of those performers who seems to have never been out of work. Bernard's cinematic stock-in-trade has been stern authority figures: the parole officer in Car Wash (1976), the Mayor in Blue Thunder (1983), Judge Bochco in The Star Chamber (1983), Major Donovan in No Way Out (1987), and so forth. Bernard has appeared numerous times on television as a guest star and as a recurring character. Some of his most famous TV roles include Preston Wade in the daytime drama Days of Our Lives, mechanical whiz Fletch in the 1983 prime-timer High Performance, and the chronically humorless publishing executive Mr. Paul Bracken in the 1991 Fox sitcom Herman's Head. For his supporting role in the Lifetime network movie Sophie and the Moonhanger (1995), Bernard received a Cable Ace nomination. His last feature-film role was that of a judge in the Jim Carrey comedy Liar, Liar (1997). On October 16, 1996, the 58-year-old Bernard was driving in Hollywood when he suffered a fatal heart attack.
Harvey Jason (Actor)
Born: February 29, 1940
Trivia: British character actor, onscreen from the late '60s.
Tony Goodstone (Actor) .. Arms Buyer
Marcelo Tubert (Actor) .. Deputy #2

Before / After
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Riptide
5:00 pm