Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman: The Great American Medicine Show


08:00 am - 09:00 am, Saturday, November 1 on WJLP WEST Network (33.4)

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About this Broadcast
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The Great American Medicine Show

Mike doesn't buy the sales pitch of an exploitative medicine-show man, especially when she faces a medical crisis involving Myra.

repeat 1993 English Stereo
Drama Action/adventure Western Medicine Family

Cast & Crew
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Jane Seymour (Actor) .. Michaela `Mike' Quinn
Joe Lando (Actor) .. Byron Sully
Orson Bean (Actor) .. Loren Bray
Chad Allen (Actor) .. Matthew Cooper
Shawn Toovey (Actor) .. Brian Cooper
Jim Knobeloch (Actor) .. Jake Slicker
Frank Collison (Actor) .. Horace Bing
Larry Sellers (Actor) .. Cloud Dancing
William Shockley (Actor) .. Hank Lawson
Helene Udy (Actor) .. Myra Bing
Robert Culp (Actor) .. Medicine Show Man
Pato Hoffman (Actor) .. Franklin
Seth Dillon (Actor) .. Lucas
Jack Ray Stevens (Actor) .. Emmett
Erika Flores (Actor) .. Colleen Cooper
Pato Hoffmann (Actor) .. Franklin

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Jane Seymour (Actor) .. Michaela `Mike' Quinn
Born: February 15, 1951
Birthplace: Hillingdon, England
Trivia: Born February 15th, 1951, the raven-haired daughter of a prosperous British gynecologist, Jane Seymour debuted onstage at 13 as a member of the London Festival Ballet, after training at the Arts Educational School. Five years later, she switched to acting, making her screen bow as part of a huge ensemble in Oh, What A Lovely War! (1968). She entered the fan-mag files with her portrayal of the enigmatic Solitaire in the 1973 James Bond epic Live and Let Die, following this with a ingenue turn in Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger (1974). While her subesquent film appearances were well-received (as was her engagement in the 1980 Broadway production of Amadeus), Seymour's larger fame rested on her prolific TV work, notably on such miniseries as "East of Eden" and "War and Remembrance." In 1988, she won an Emmy for her portrayal of Maria Callas in the TV miniseries "Onassis." Four years later, she landed one of her most successful roles to date, that of the title heroine of the TV series Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. In subsequent years, Seymour sustained her career with longform soapers - such as the 1998 A Marriage of Convenience and the 2002 Heart of a Stranger - before making a most welcome return to theatrical features in 2005. That year, she scored a neat comic turn as the wife of U.S. Treasury Secretary Christopher Walken (and the mother of some outrageously dysfunctional children) in the summer comedy smash Wedding Crashers. Two years later, ABC tapped Seymour to trip the light fantastic as one of the celebrity dancers on its blockbuster series Dancing with the Stars. On that program, Seymour danced opposite series vet Tony Ovolani.
Joe Lando (Actor) .. Byron Sully
Born: December 09, 1961
Birthplace: Prairie View, Illinois
Orson Bean (Actor) .. Loren Bray
Born: July 22, 1928
Died: July 02, 2020
Birthplace: Burlington, Vermont, United States
Trivia: "My name is Orson Bean. Harvard '47, Yale Nothing." Actually, that oft-repeated introduction is a double deception: actor Orson Bean didn't go to Harvard, and his name isn't really Orson Bean. As a boy magician, Dallas Frederick Burrows borrowed the first half of his stage name from another prestidigitator of note, Orson Welles. Bean made his legitimate stage bow in 1945, then worked up a nightclub comedy act which premiered in New York at the now-defunct Blue Angel (in 1954, he hosted a summer-replacement TV series emanating from this celebrated nightspot). Landing on Broadway in the 1953 production Men of Distinction, Bean won a Theatre World Award for his work in the 1954 revue John Murray Anderson's Almanac, and Critics' Circle Awards for his performances in Mister Roberts and Say Darling. His later stage credits included Broadway's Subways are for Sleeping (1962) and Never too Late (1964) not to mention his extensive tours in the Neil Simon-Burt Bacharah musical Promises, Promises. In films from 1955, Bean's best-received screen performance was as the testifying army physician in Otto Preminger's Anatomy of a Murder (1959). An inescapable presence on TV, Bean has participated in virtually every quiz show known to man, from the familiar (To Tell the Truth, I've Got a Secret) to the obscure (Laugh Line). He was also a regular as the ineffectual Reverend Brim on the Norman Lear syndicated series Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman (1977) and Forever Fernword (1978), and more recently was seen on a weekly basis as cranky general store owner Loren Bray on Dr. Quinn, Medicine Women (1993- ). Outside of his showbiz activities, Bean has proven a difficult subject to categorize: blacklisted for his outspoken liberal views in the early 1950s, he was an ardent supporter of Richard M. Nixon in 1968. A man of many interests, Orson Bean was the founder of the arts-oriented 15th Street School of New York, the author of the oddball 1971 volume Me and the Orgon, and one of the charter members of The Sons of the Desert, the famed Laurel & Hardy appreciation society.
Chad Allen (Actor) .. Matthew Cooper
Born: June 05, 1974
Birthplace: Cerritos, California, United States
Trivia: Actor/producer Chad Allen grew up in Hollywood, in the shadow of show business. A child actor from the age of four (when he appeared in a McDonald's commercial), he soon landed regular roles on series including Webster (1985-1986), Our House (1986-1988), and My Two Dads (1989-1990), in addition to a pivotal role on St. Elsewhere as the autistic and incommunicative child of Dr. Westphall (Ed Flanders), a boy whose delusions "created" St. Eligius. In the 1990s, Allen signed on to play Matthew Cooper, the adopted son of Dr. Michaela "Mike" Quinn on the western drama Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (1993-1998).Allen made headlines and then some beginning in 2001, when the thespian came out of the closet as a homosexual; in addition to embracing his status as a gay male (and discussing his orientation at length in a series of publications including The Advocate), he co-founded a production company, Mythgarden, devoted to dramatically expanding the number of LGBT themes explored in contemporary cinema and television. The Roman Catholic-raised actor stirred up some controversy in certain sectors when he signed on in 2005 to portray Nate Saint, a missionary murdered by Ecuadorian tribes, and Steve Saint, the missionary's son, in the inspirational religious drama End of the Spear (2005), though only because the feature found an audience among conservative evangelical audiences. In 2008, Allen produced and starred in the drama Save Me. The tale of a deeply confused gay man lured into a "Christian recovery center" by an evangelical couple, it critiqued conservative evangelical attitudes (and harsh hypocrisy) often directed toward the contemporary gay community.
Shawn Toovey (Actor) .. Brian Cooper
Born: March 01, 1983
Jim Knobeloch (Actor) .. Jake Slicker
Born: March 18, 1950
Frank Collison (Actor) .. Horace Bing
Born: February 14, 1950
Larry Sellers (Actor) .. Cloud Dancing
Born: October 02, 1949
William Shockley (Actor) .. Hank Lawson
Born: September 17, 1963
Helene Udy (Actor) .. Myra Bing
Born: November 01, 1962
Robert Culp (Actor) .. Medicine Show Man
Born: August 16, 1930
Died: March 24, 2010
Birthplace: Berkeley, California, United States
Trivia: Tall, straight-laced American actor Robert Culp parlayed his appearance and demeanor into a series of clean-cut character roles, often (though not always) with a humorous, mildly sarcastic edge. He was perhaps best known for three accomplishments: his turn as a Southern California documentary filmmaker who decides, along with his wife (Natalie Wood) to suddenly go counterculture with an "open marriage" in Paul Mazursky's Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969); his iconic three-season role as an undercover agent in the espionage-themed series I Spy (1965-8); and his three-season run as Bill Maxwell on Stephen Cannell's superhero spoof series The Greatest American Hero (1981-3). Born in Oakland, California in 1930, Culp attended several West Coast colleges while training for a dramatic career. At 21, he made his Broadway debut in He Who Gets Slapped. Within six years, he was starring in his own Friday night CBS Western, Trackdown (1957-9) as Hoby Gilman, an 1870s era Texas Ranger. During the two-year run of this program, Culp began writing scripts, a habit he'd carry over to other series, notably The Rifleman and Gunsmoke. These all represented fine and noble accomplishments for a young actor, but as indicated, I Spy delivered a far greater impact to the young actor's career: it made Culp (along with his co-star, Bill Cosby) a bona fide celebrity. The men co-starred in the NBC adventure yarn as, respectively, Kelly Robinson and Alexander Scott, undercover agents involved in globetrotting missions for the U.S. government. Both actors brought to the program a sharp yet subtle sense of humor that (coupled with its exotic locations) made it one of the major discoveries of the 1965-6 prime-time line-up. During the second of I Spy's three seasons, Culp made his directorial debut by helming episodes of Spy; he went on to direct installments of several other TV programs. The success of Bob & Carol at the tail end of the 1960s proved that Culp could hold his own as a movie star, and he later directed and co-starred in 1972 theatrical feature Hickey and Boggs, which reunited him with Cosby, albeit to much lesser acclaim. Unfortunately, as the years rolled on, Culp proved susceptible to the lure of parts in B-pictures, such as Sky Riders (1976), Flood! (1976) and Hot Rod (1979), though he delivered a fine portrayal in television's critically-acclaimed Roots: The Next Generations (1979). Culp rebounded further with the semicomic role of CIA chief Maxwell on American Hero, but many now-infamous behind-the-scenes issues (and external issues, such as the shooting of Ronald Reagan) beleaguered that program and ended its run after only three seasons. In the years that followed, Culp vacillated between exploitation roles, in tripe such as Big Bad Mama 2 and Silent Night, Deadly Night 3, and more respectable, mainstream guest turns in television series including The Cosby Show and Murder, She Wrote. He enjoyed one of his most prestigious assignments with a supporting role in the big screen John Grisham-Alan Pakula thriller The Parallax View (1993), opposite Denzel Washington and Julia Roberts. In the years that followed, Culp's on-camera presence grew less and less frequent, though he did make a cameo in the 1996 Leslie Nielsen laugher Spy Hard. Television continued to provide some of Culp's finest work: he rejoined old friend Cosby for a 1994 I Spy TV-movie reunion and made guest appearances in such series as Lonesome Dove, Law & Order and The Dead Zone. Following a period of semi-retirement, Culp died suddenly and rather arbitrarily, when he sustained a head injury during a fall outside of his Hollywood home in March 2010. He was 79 years old.
Pato Hoffman (Actor) .. Franklin
Seth Dillon (Actor) .. Lucas
Jack Ray Stevens (Actor) .. Emmett
Erika Flores (Actor) .. Colleen Cooper
Born: November 02, 1979
Birthplace: Grass Valley, California
Trivia: Former child actress and ingénue leading lady Erika Flores is best known for her portrayal of Colleen Cooper during the 1993 and 1994 seasons of Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. As a child actress, she first achieved prominence with a key guest role in "Disaster," an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation (1992), in which she worked opposite Patrick Stewart for much of the show's running time. An unusually serious performer even at a young age, Flores was reportedly the only cast member to regularly attend the writing sessions for Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, and left the series rather than sign a five-year contract. Since then, she has appeared in several TV movies, including The Secret (1997), Buried Secrets (1996), and Baseball in Black and White (1996).
Pato Hoffmann (Actor) .. Franklin
Born: August 23, 1956

Before / After
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Daniel Boone
07:00 am