The Proud and the Damned


3:00 pm - 5:00 pm, Monday, November 10 on WXNY Retro (32.5)

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About this Broadcast
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Civil war veterans upset the peace of a Colombian town when one of them beds a local woman while on a reconnaissance mission for a General embroiled in a revolution.

1972 English Stereo
Action/adventure Filmed On Location

Cast & Crew
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Chuck Connors (Actor) .. Will Hansen
Cesar Romero (Actor) .. Alcalde
Jose Greco (Actor) .. Ramon
Aron Kincaid (Actor) .. Ike
Peter Ford (Actor) .. Billy
Anita Quinn (Actor) .. Mila
Henry Capps (Actor) .. Hank
Smoky Roberds (Actor) .. Jeb
Maria Grimm (Actor) .. Maria
Nana Lorca (Actor) .. Dancer
Conrad Parkham (Actor) .. Juan
Alvaro Ruiz (Actor) .. Chico
André Marquis (Actor) .. Gen. Martinez
Pacheco (Actor) .. Lieutenant
Ignacio Gomez (Actor) .. Padre
Ernesto Uribe (Actor) .. Aide
Rey Vasquez (Actor) .. Innkeeper
Bernardo Herrera (Actor) .. Rollo

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Chuck Connors (Actor) .. Will Hansen
Born: April 10, 1921
Died: November 10, 1992
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Chuck Connors attended Seton Hall University before embarking on a career in professional sports. He first played basketball with the Boston Celtics, then baseball with the Brooklyn Dodgers and Chicago Cubs. Hardly a spectacular player -- while with the Cubbies, he hit .233 in 70 games -- Connors was eventually shipped off to Chicago's Pacific Coast League farm team, the L.A. Angels. Here his reputation rested more on his cut-up antics than his ball-playing prowess. While going through his usual routine of performing cartwheels while rounding the bases, Connors was spotted by a Hollywood director, who arranged for Connors to play a one-line bit as a highway patrolman in the 1952 Tracy-Hepburn vehicle Pat and Mike. Finding acting an agreeable and comparatively less strenuous way to make a living, Connors gave up baseball for films and television. One of his first roles of consequence was as a comic hillbilly on the memorable Superman TV episode "Flight to the North." In films, Connors played a variety of heavies, including raspy-voiced gangster Johnny O in Designing Woman (1957) and swaggering bully Buck Hannassy in The Big Country (1958). He switched to the Good Guys in 1958, when he was cast as frontiersman-family man Lucas McCain on the popular TV Western series The Rifleman. During the series' five-year run, he managed to make several worthwhile starring appearances in films: he was seen in the title role of Geronimo (1962), which also featured his second wife, Kamala Devi, and originated the role of Porter Ricks in the 1963 film version of Flipper. After Rifleman folded, Connors co-starred with Ben Gazzara in the one-season dramatic series Arrest and Trial (1963), a 90-minute precursor to Law and Order. He enjoyed a longer run as Jason McCord, an ex-Army officer falsely accused of cowardice on the weekly Branded (1965-1966). His next TV project, Cowboy in Africa, never got past 13 episodes. In 1972, Connors acted as host/narrator of Thrill Seekers, a 52-week syndicated TV documentary. Then followed a great many TV guest-star roles and B-pictures of the Tourist Trap (1980) variety. He was never more delightfully over the top than as the curiously accented 2,000-year-old lycanthrope Janos Skorzeny in the Fox Network's Werewolf (1987). Shortly before his death from lung cancer at age 71, Chuck Connors revived his Rifleman character Lucas McCain for the star-studded made-for-TV Western The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw (1993).
Cesar Romero (Actor) .. Alcalde
Born: February 15, 1907
Died: January 01, 1994
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Born in New York City to parents of Cuban extraction, American actor Cesar Romero studied for his craft at Collegiate and Riverdale Country schools. After a brief career as a ballroom dancer, the tall, sleekly handsome Romero made his Broadway debut in the 1927 production Lady Do. He received several Hollywood offers after his appearance in the Preston Sturges play Strictly Dishonorable, but didn't step before the cameras until 1933 for his first film The Shadow Laughs (later biographies would claim that Romero's movie bow was in The Thin Man [1934], in which he was typecast as a callow gigolo). Long associated with 20th Century-Fox, Romero occasionally cashed in on his heritage to play Latin Lover types, but was more at home with characters of indeterminate nationalities, usually playing breezily comic second leads (whenever Romero received third billing, chances were he wasn't going to get the girl). Cheerfully plunging into the Hollywood social scene, Romero became one of the community's most eligible bachelors; while linked romantically with many top female stars, he chose never to marry, insisting to his dying day that he had no regrets over his confirmed bachelorhood. While he played a variety of film roles, Romero is best remembered as "The Cisco Kid" in a brief series of Fox programmers filmed between 1939 and 1940, though in truth his was a surprisingly humorless, sullen Cisco, with little of the rogueish charm that Duncan Renaldo brought to the role on television. The actor's favorite movie role, and indeed one of his best performances, was as Cortez in the 1947 20th Century-Fox spectacular The Captain From Castile. When his Fox contract ended in 1950, Romero was wealthy enough to retire, but the acting bug had never left his system; he continued to star throughout the 1950s in cheap B pictures, always giving his best no matter how seedy his surroundings. In 1953 Romero starred in a 39-week TV espionage series "Passport to Danger," which he cheerfully admitted to taking on because of a fat profits-percentage deal. TV fans of the 1960s most closely associate Romero with the role of the white-faced "Joker" on the "Batman" series. While Romero was willing to shed his inhibitions in this villainous characterization, he refused to shave his trademark moustache, compelling the makeup folks to slap the clown white over the 'stache as well (you can still see the outline in the closeups). As elegant and affluent-looking as ever, Romero signed on for the recurring role of Peter Stavros in the late-1980s nighttime soap opera "Falcon Crest." In the early 1990s, he showed up as host of a series of classic 1940s romantic films on cable's American Movie Classics. Romero died of a blood clot on New Year's Day, 1994, at the age of 86.
Jose Greco (Actor) .. Ramon
Born: December 23, 1918
Aron Kincaid (Actor) .. Ike
Born: June 15, 1943
Died: January 06, 2011
Peter Ford (Actor) .. Billy
Born: February 05, 1945
Anita Quinn (Actor) .. Mila
Henry Capps (Actor) .. Hank
Smoky Roberds (Actor) .. Jeb
Maria Grimm (Actor) .. Maria
Nana Lorca (Actor) .. Dancer
Conrad Parkham (Actor) .. Juan
Alvaro Ruiz (Actor) .. Chico
André Marquis (Actor) .. Gen. Martinez
Pacheco (Actor) .. Lieutenant
Ignacio Gomez (Actor) .. Padre
Ernesto Uribe (Actor) .. Aide
Rey Vasquez (Actor) .. Innkeeper
Bernardo Herrera (Actor) .. Rollo

Before / After
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Wiseguy
2:00 pm
Heartland
5:00 pm