Robin Hood


01:00 am - 01:30 am, Thursday, December 18 on WCQT The Walk TV (27.1)

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About this Broadcast
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Retelling of the legends centering on the roguish medieval hero (Patrick Bergin). Maid Marian: Uma Thurman. Folcanet: Jurgen Prochnow. Daguerre: Jeroen Krabbe. Prince John: Edward Fox. Will Scarlet: Owen Teale. Little John: David Morrissey. Friar Tuck: Jeff Nuttal. Filmed on location in Great Britain. Directed by John Irvin.

1991 English Stereo
Action/adventure Drama Fantasy Adaptation Animated

Cast & Crew
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Patrick Bergin (Actor) .. Robin Hood
Uma Thurman (Actor) .. Maid Marian
Jürgen Prochnow (Actor) .. Sir Miles Folcanet
Jeroen Krabbé (Actor) .. Baron Daguerre
Edward Fox (Actor) .. Prince John
Owen Teale (Actor) .. Will Scarlett
David Morrissey (Actor) .. Little John
Jeff Nuttall (Actor) .. Friar Tuck
Alex Norton (Actor) .. Harry
Danny Webb (Actor)
Conrad Asquith (Actor) .. Lodwick
Barry Stanton (Actor) .. Miller
Gabrielle Reidy (Actor) .. Lily
Daniel Webb (Actor) .. Much the Miller
Richard & Moore (Actor) .. Abbot
Anthony O'donnell (Actor) .. Emlyn
Gabrielle Lloyd (Actor) .. Gammer Tanzie

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Patrick Bergin (Actor) .. Robin Hood
Born: February 04, 1951
Birthplace: Dublin, Ireland
Trivia: Patrick Bergin is a versatile actor who has yet to make it big in Hollywood. The son a trade union activist and founder of a political theater, Bergin was born and raised in Dublin, Ireland, but left for London when he was only 17. There he worked at different jobs and eventually set up an experimental theater group. Originally a high-school drop out, Bergin returned to night school and by his early 20s had become a school teacher. He worked as an educator for five years and then quit to go on an extensive tour of Europe. Upon his return to Britain, he began working in repertory theater, and occasionally on television before appearing in a short British Film School production. Bergin made his feature-film debut in 1988 with The Courier; that year he also won acclaim for his role as an IRA informer in the TV movie Act of Betrayal. His success with the latter film lead director Bob Rafelson to cast him as Sir Richard Burton in his epic Mountains of the Moon (1990). While in Britain, Bergin typically played heroes, but in Hollywood he is usually cast as a villainous lowlife. He was particularly nasty as the obsessed, abusive husband in Sleeping with the Enemy (1991).
Uma Thurman (Actor) .. Maid Marian
Born: April 29, 1970
Birthplace: Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Trivia: An actress noted as much for her exotic, almost otherworldly beauty as she is for her considerable talent, Uma Thurman is one of the most renowned actors of her generation. The daughter of celebrated professor of Buddhist studies Robert A.F. Thurman and Nena von Schlebrugge, a model and psychotherapist who was once married to Timothy Leary, Uma was born in Boston on April 29, 1970. Raised with three brothers in Amherst, where her father taught at Amherst College, she enjoyed a fairly bohemian upbringing, one that was marked by visits from Eastern holy men and Tibetan refugees. Encouraged to think for herself and be independent, Thurman, who had been interested in acting from an early age, left her Massachusetts boarding school at the age of 15 to pursue an acting career. Moving to New York, she earned a living by washing dishes and modeling, though the latter means of support never agreed with her.The fledgling actress made her debut in Kiss Daddy Goodnight (1987), a forgettable film that cast her as a teen vamp who seduces and robs unsuspecting men. She had a starring role in the teen comedy Johnny Be Good (1988) and also made an eye-catching appearance in Terry Gilliam's underseen fantasy adventure film The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988). But it wasn't until her casting in Stephen Frears' Dangerous Liaisons (1988) as Cécile de Volanges, the impressionable convent girl deflowered by John Malkovich's slimy Vicomte de Valmont, that Thurman first gained recognition. Her scenes with Malkovich, particularly the one in which he offers to teach her a few bedroom terms in Latin, proved to be some of the most memorable of the year, resulting in a sizable helping of fame for the young actress. Further recognition followed with Thurman's portrayal of Henry Miller's wife -- and the object of both his and Anaïs Nin's affections -- in Philip Kaufman's Henry & June (1990). Unfortunately, the actress' role in the NC-17 film -- which required her to take part in explicit love scenes with Maria de Medeiros -- inspired a great deal of unwelcome, stalker-like attention from any number of "fans," causing Thurman to shy away from doing a subsequent number of films. The projects she did take part in all proved to be forgettable affairs: Robin Hood (1991), Final Analysis (1992), Jennifer 8 (1992), Mad Dog and Glory (1993), and Gus Van Sant's Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (1994). By the time Thurman received the script for Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction, her career was in great need of resuscitation. Fortunately, Pulp Fiction provided just that. A huge, unanticipated success, it was the most talked-about film of the year, eventually becoming recognized as one of the most influential films of the decade. For her part, Thurman gave a sly, smoldering performance as Mia Wallace, the coke-snorting wife of gangster Marsellus Wallace (Ving Rhames), and soon found herself enjoying both a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination and an accompanying resurgence in Hollywood popularity. She followed the success of Pulp Fiction with three relatively modest romantic comedies: A Month by the Lake (1995), The Truth About Cats & Dogs (1996), and Beautiful Girls (1996). The 1997 future dystopia Gattaca did little for Thurman but introduce her to co-star and future husband Ethan Hawke. (The two married in May of 1998 and had a daughter later that year; Thurman had been married once before, to Gary Oldman). Batman & Robin, that same year, was less than a high point in Thurman's career. 1998 proved to be similarly disappointing, with both The Avengers, which cast the actress as the cat-suited Emma Peel opposite Ralph Fiennes' John Steed, and Bille August's Les Miserables experiencing swift deaths at the box office. Thurman resurfaced in 1999 in Woody Allen's widely acclaimed Sweet and Lowdown. The story of a famed jazz guitarist (Sean Penn) whose talent is inversely proportional to his merits as a human being, the film cast Thurman as his worldly, unfaithful wife. The following year, she had starring roles in two lavish period dramas, Merchant-Ivory's The Golden Bowl and Roland Joffé's Vatel. The former, a Henry James adaptation that premiered to great acclaim at the 2000 Cannes Festival, featured Thurman as a commoner caught up in a forbidden love affair with an impoverished prince (Jeremy Northam); the latter, which also premiered at Cannes, cast Thurman as a French noblewoman during the reign of King Louis XIV. Supporting performances in Richard Linklater's Tape and husband Hawke's Chelsea Walls (both 2001) were soon to follow, and though Thurman's performances were solid as ever, the limited release of both films found her gaining minimal exposure. Though Thurman was virtually unrecognizable in her role as a lovelorn Jersey girl in the HBO feature Hysterical Blindness (2002), her bravado performance earned her a Best Actress Golden Globe and the downbeat drama found audiences once again compelled by her marked versatility. Little did audiences know that her next role couldn't be more different. Thurman may had done action before in such efforts as Batman & Robin and The Avengers, but her role as the vengeful Bride in Quentin Tarantino's eagerly anticipated Kill Bill nevertheless found viewers' jaws planted firmly on the popcorn-littered multiplex floors. With the production initially delayed due to Thurman's pregnancy, the two-time mother quickly shed her excess weight shortly after giving birth to son Roan; after a vigorous training program, the violent revenge epic was back on track. Even though Thurman made no secret of the fact that balancing the difficult tasks of motherhood and superstardom often took their toll on her during the production of Kill Bill, the dedicated actress pulled off the physically demanding role without a hitch. Debuting in October 2003 to overwhelmingly positive reviews, Kill Bill Vol. 1 (the film was split into two halves after being deemed too long by studio Miramax) still managed to split audiences due to its virtually nonstop, extremely graphic violence. With Kill Bill Vol. 2 scheduled to roll into theaters four months later, fans wasted no time in speculating on The Bride's carnage-laden quest to even the score with the titular Bill (David Carradine) after the ruthless killer gunned her down on her wedding day.In the wake of the Kill Bill extravaganza, it seemed that Thurman was having an especially difficult time finding her footing at the box office when the Get Shorty sequel Be Cool, the romantic comedy Prime, and the musical comedy remake The Producers failed to make any real impact with viewers. Her career in serious need of a pick-me-up after three notable misfires, Thurman would make yet another grab for laughs when, in the summer of 2006, she starred as needy superhero who uses her powers to seek revenge against an ex-boyfriend attempting to move on in My Super Ex-Girlfriend. In 2010, Thurman joined the cast of Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief in the role of Medusa, the snake-haired gorgon who could turn a man to stone with no more than a look. The actress played a decidedly different type of character in Ceremony (2010), a critically acclaimed independent comedy that featured Thurman as a woman in her late thirties with a tendency to date the wrong type of guy. In 2012, Thurman co-starred in the period drama Bel Ami and had a recurring role on the musical TV series Smash. She had a supporting role in Lars von Trier's Nymphomaniac in 2013.
Jürgen Prochnow (Actor) .. Sir Miles Folcanet
Born: June 10, 1941
Birthplace: Berlin, Germany
Trivia: An actor since the age of 14, Berlin-born Jürgen Prochnow was firmly established on stage and TV when he was featured in his first film, Zoff, in 1971. Prochnow has been able to harness his well-modulated voice, versatile facial features, and athletic frame to portray both the most admirable of heroes and the most despicable of villains. It was for his portrayal of a character in the former category that the actor achieved international fame. He appeared as the stern but humanistic submarine commander in the 1981 Oscar-winning Das Boot. In the latter category, Prochnow all but entreated hisses and tossed tomatoes with his portrayal of the sadistic South African secret police captain in 1989's A Dry White Season. Prochnow's career has subsequently had its fair share of highs and lows, with his appearances in such high profile projects as The English Patient (1996), Air Force One (1997), and The Replacement Killers (1998) helping to sustain him as a fixture in international cinema. Over the coming decades, Prochnow would remain an active force on screen, appearing in a host of German projects, as well as projects like The Da Vinci Code and Beerfest, and the TV series 24.
Jeroen Krabbé (Actor) .. Baron Daguerre
Edward Fox (Actor) .. Prince John
Born: April 13, 1937
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: The brother of film star James Fox, British actor Edward Fox spent the first few years of his career in the shadow of his longer-established younger sibling. All this changed when Edward was cast as the charismatic but cold-blooded international assassin The Jackal in 1973's Day of the Jackal; so determined was Fox's character to go through with his assignment to kill Charles De Gaulle that at times the audience believed he was actually going to get away with it! Never a major box-office attraction, Fox has aged into a dynamic character player, busy throughout the 1980s in such films as Never Say Never Again (1983), The Shooting Party (1984) and Wild Geese II. In 1991, Fox could be seen by TV fans as King Richard in Robin Hood, the "rival" production to Kevin Costner's Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves.
Owen Teale (Actor) .. Will Scarlett
Born: May 20, 1961
Birthplace: Swansea, Wales
Trivia: As a teenager, occasionally worked at Porthcawl Little Theatre. Left school near the end of his final year to work as a children's entertainer at the Welsh theme park Barry Island Pleasure Park. Was accepted by the Guildford School of Acting in September 1980 and by Chistmas 1983 had received his Equity card. Spent four years with the Royal Shakespeare Company, appearing in plays such as Julius Caesar and Robin Hood. Made his Broadway debut in A Doll's House, opposite Janet McTeer, in 1997. Won Broadway's Tony Award as Best Actor for A Doll's House. Played First Voice in a 2014 touring production of Dylan Thomas' Under Milk Wood; he later played Dai Bread in the BBC TV movie.
David Morrissey (Actor) .. Little John
Born: June 21, 1964
Birthplace: Liverpool, England
Trivia: Extremely prolific British actor David Morrissey sounded off as a vociferous, intense player in English pictures such as Peter Greenaway's Drowning by Numbers (1988, as an unfortunate victim of mariticide), Stephen Gyllenhaal's drama Waterland (1992, as the simple-minded brother of Jeremy Irons), and Hilary and Jackie (1998, as a loving and devoted husband). He forsook British arthouse material for more mainstream Hollywood fare with key performances in the seamy Basic Instinct 2 (2006) and ascended to top billing as the male lead of Hilary Swank in The Reaping (2007), a religious-themed horror outing. That same year, Showtime tapped Morrissey to headline the series Meadowlands, as an English patriarch attempting at all costs to help his wife and children escape the family's crime-saturated past. Over the coming years, he would go on to find even more notable success on the zombie series The Walking Dead.
Jeff Nuttall (Actor) .. Friar Tuck
Born: July 08, 1933
Alex Norton (Actor) .. Harry
Born: January 27, 1950
Birthplace: Glasgow
Danny Webb (Actor)
Born: June 06, 1958
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: In 1983, appeared in the music video for Yes's "Owner of a Lonely Heart." Made his film debut in 1984 as David in A Year of the Quiet Sun. Starred as Sgt Dennis Tucker in Land Girls between 2009 and 2011. In 2011, won the Off West End Award for Best Actor, for his role in Blasted. Appeared as Professor Edwin Hobb in the Channel 4/AMC show Humans between 2015 and 2016.
Conrad Asquith (Actor) .. Lodwick
Barry Stanton (Actor) .. Miller
Phelim McDermott (Actor)
Born: August 21, 1963
Carolyn Backhouse (Actor)
Birthplace: Grimsby, Humberside,United Kingdom
Caspar De La Mare (Actor)
Cecily Hobbs (Actor)
Gabrielle Reidy (Actor) .. Lily
Stephen Pallister (Actor)
Kevin Pallister (Actor)
Daniel Webb (Actor) .. Much the Miller
Richard & Moore (Actor) .. Abbot
Born: October 04, 1925
Anthony O'donnell (Actor) .. Emlyn
Gabrielle Lloyd (Actor) .. Gammer Tanzie

Before / After
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Crossroads
12:30 am