The Joe Louis Story


2:17 pm - 3:57 pm, Today on WPCB The365 (40.3)

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

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

The life and times of the great Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis who struggled with prejudice throughout his successful and record-breaking career.

1953 English
Biography Drama Boxing Other

Cast & Crew
-

Coley Wallace (Actor) .. Joe Louis
Hilda Simms (Actor) .. Marva Louis
Paul Stewart (Actor) .. Tad McGeehan
James Edwards (Actor) .. Chappie Blackburn
John Marley (Actor) .. Mannie Seamon
Dotts Johnson (Actor) .. Julian Black
Evelyn Ellis (Actor) .. Mrs. Barrow
Carl Rocky Latimer (Actor) .. Arthur Pine
John Marriott (Actor) .. Sam Langford
P. Jay Sidney (Actor) .. Handler
Isaac Jones (Actor) .. Johnny Kingston
Royal Beal (Actor) .. Mike Jacobs
Buddy Thorpe (Actor) .. Max Schmeling
Ruby Goldstein (Actor) .. Himself
Ralph Stanley (Actor) .. Nick, the Announcer
Anita Ellis (Actor) .. Herself - Nightclub Vocalist
Ellis Larkins Trio (Actor) .. Themselves
Herb Ratner (Actor) .. Newspaper man
David Kurlan (Actor) .. Bartender
Norman Rose (Actor) .. Lieutenant
Ossie Davis (Actor) .. Bob

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Coley Wallace (Actor) .. Joe Louis
Born: January 01, 1928
Died: January 30, 2005
Hilda Simms (Actor) .. Marva Louis
Born: April 15, 1920
Died: February 06, 1994
Trivia: Actress/singer Hilda Simms gained her first professional experience with the American Negro Theater in the early '40s. She debuted on Broadway in a 1944, all-black production of Anna Lucasta. When the show went to London, she went too. Finding Europe to her liking, Simms moved to Paris and, billing herself as Julie Riccardo, built a successful nightclub career as a singer. In 1953, she returned to the U.S. and obtained a co-starring role in The Joe Louis Story (1953). The film was a hit, but Simms preferred the stage. She would only appear in one more film, The Black Widow (1954). During the 1960s, Simms played the role of Nurse Ayres on the dramatic television series The Nurses (1962-1965).
Paul Stewart (Actor) .. Tad McGeehan
Born: March 13, 1908
Died: February 17, 1986
Trivia: He began acting in plays in his early teens, and was already a veteran by the time he joined Orson Welles's Mercury Theater in 1938; among his Mercury credits was a role in the infamous War of the Worlds radio broadcast. Like many Mercury performers, he followed Welles to Hollywood and debuted onscreen in Citizen Kane (1941). In a sporadically busy film career, he went on to play many character roles over the next four decades; he was often cast as insensitive, no-nonsense types, and sometimes played gangsters. He began a second career in the mid '50s as a TV director.
James Edwards (Actor) .. Chappie Blackburn
Born: January 01, 1918
Died: January 04, 1970
Trivia: African American leading man James Edwards came to acting by way of a near-tragedy. Seriously injured in an accident while serving in World War II, Edwards went through a painful convalescence as surgeons completely restructured his face. His vocal chords were also severely damaged, and it was suggested by his doctors that Edwards take elocution lessons to restore his voice. Upon recovering, Edwards decided to celebrate his "rebirth" by becoming an actor. After touring in the stage production Deep are the Roots, Edwards made his film debut as a boxer in RKO's The Set-Up (1949). He was starred in his next film, Home of the Brave (1949), appropriately cast as a wounded soldier. James Edwards' last film was the 1970 Best Picture winner Patton, starring George C. Scott; he died on January 4, 1970.
John Marley (Actor) .. Mannie Seamon
Born: January 01, 1907
Died: May 22, 1984
Trivia: John Marley's craggy face, cement-mixer voice and shock of white hair were familiar to stagegoers from the 1930s onward. Marley started out as one-half of a comedy team, but soon found that his true metier was drama. In films on an infrequent basis since 1941, Marley stepped up his moviemaking activities in the mid-1960s, playing such sizeable roles as Jane Fonda's father in Cat Ballou (1965). He won a Venice Film Festival award for his performance as a miserable middle-aged husband in John Cassavetes' Faces (1968), and was Oscar-nominated for his portrayal of Ali MacGraw's blue-collar dad in Love Story. Arguably Marley's most unforgettable assignment was The Godfather (1972), in which, as movie mogul Lou Woltz, he wakes up to find himself sharing his bed with a horse's head. John Marley's television work included a regular role on the obscure NBC daytime drama Three Steps to Heaven.
Dotts Johnson (Actor) .. Julian Black
Born: January 01, 1979
Died: January 01, 1986
Evelyn Ellis (Actor) .. Mrs. Barrow
Born: January 01, 1893
Died: January 01, 1958
Carl Rocky Latimer (Actor) .. Arthur Pine
John Marriott (Actor) .. Sam Langford
Born: January 01, 1893
Died: January 01, 1977
P. Jay Sidney (Actor) .. Handler
Born: April 08, 1915
Isaac Jones (Actor) .. Johnny Kingston
Royal Beal (Actor) .. Mike Jacobs
Born: January 01, 1899
Died: January 01, 1969
Buddy Thorpe (Actor) .. Max Schmeling
Ruby Goldstein (Actor) .. Himself
Ralph Stanley (Actor) .. Nick, the Announcer
Anita Ellis (Actor) .. Herself - Nightclub Vocalist
Born: April 12, 1926
Ellis Larkins Trio (Actor) .. Themselves
Herb Ratner (Actor) .. Newspaper man
David Kurlan (Actor) .. Bartender
Norman Rose (Actor) .. Lieutenant
Born: March 23, 1917
Died: November 12, 2004
Josef Draper (Actor)
Ossie Davis (Actor) .. Bob
Born: December 18, 1917
Died: February 04, 2005
Birthplace: Cogdell, Georgia, United States
Trivia: A performer widely regarded as one of the most distinguished and eloquent actors of his or any generation, Ossie Davis combined an overwhelming amount of dramatic talent and instinct (evident via both stage and film work) with an indomitable fervor for social crusade. A native of Cogdell, GA, and a graduate of Howard University, Davis moved to Harlem at an early stage and trained with the Rose McClendon players. The actor then drew a considerable amount of attention -- alongside wife since 1948 Ruby Dee -- for helping to spearhead the American civil rights movement in the 1940s, over 20 years before it caught fire with the general public and mass media. Their combined efforts culminated in involvement with the triumphant March on Washington of August 1963, where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his iconic "I Have a Dream" speech. In subsequent years, Davis also helped Dr. King raise money for the Freedom Riders and delivered a poignant eulogy at the funeral of Malcolm X. Meanwhile, Davis and Dee both established themselves as forces in theater and on film. Davis himself debuted on Broadway in 1946, and took his film bow with the 1950 No Way Out, but 13 years passed before his sophomore cinematic effort, the 1963 Gone Are the Days -- an adaptation of his own play Purlie Victorious. Unfortunately, the actor spent much of the '60s appearing in programmers that were either underappreciated (Shock Treatment, 1964) or unworthy of his talents (Sam Whiskey, 1969), and didn't fully realize his potential until he scripted and directed the 1970 Cotton Comes to Harlem, a gritty crime comedy (with a predominantly African-American cast including Godfrey Cambridge and Redd Foxx) that almost singlehandedly jump-started the blaxploitation movement and predated Sweet Sweetback and Shaft by a year. Several additional directorial projects followed throughout the 1970s and '80s and found Davis growing deeper and more profound, and setting his sights higher; these included the ambitious -- if not quite successful -- Kongi's Harvest (1971) and the finely-wrought, socially charged coming-of-age drama Black Girl (1972), arguably Davis' best film. Unfortunately, Davis' third and fourth efforts behind the camera, Gordon's War (1973) and Countdown at Kusini (1976), disappointed on many counts, relegating him (for better or worse) back to acting. He appeared in the racially themed, made-for-television dramas Roots (1977), King: The Martin Luther King Story (1978, in which he played Dr. King Sr.), and Roots: The Next Generations (1979), then -- around a decade later -- achieved a career resurgence thanks to the intelligence and bravura of wunderkind Spike Lee, who cast Davis in six major films: School Daze (1988), Do the Right Thing (1989), Jungle Fever (1991), Malcolm X (1992, as an off-camera narrator), Get on the Bus (1996), and She Hate Me (2004). Two of those films also included Dee in the cast. Davis also enjoyed a renewed profile on television during the early '90s when he was tapped to play a regular character on the charming and laid-back Burt Reynolds sitcom Evening Shade (1990-1994); he portrayed Ponder Blue, the series' narrator and the owner of a barbecue restaurant. Davis remained not only active but astonishingly prolific over the following ten years. Subsequent projects included small supporting roles in Grumpy Old Men (1993), The Client (1994), and Doctor Dolittle (1998), and participation in a series of documentaries, among them Christianity: The First Thousand Years (1998) and We Shall Not Be Moved (2001). Davis died in February 2005, in Miami, while shooting the movie Retirement. He was 87. Davis and Dee co-authored a dual autobiography, In This Life Together, in 1998.

Before / After
-