Ricki and the Flash


8:00 pm - 10:00 pm, Today on CHCH HDTV (51.1)

Average User Rating: 8.50 (2 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

An ageing rocker returns home to her estranged family after years on the road following her dreams, and must face the music as she tries to make things right with her loved ones.

2015 English Stereo
Comedy Drama Music Divorce Comedy-drama Musical

Cast & Crew
-

Meryl Streep (Actor) .. Ricki Rendazzo
Mamie Gummer (Actor) .. Julie
Kevin Kline (Actor) .. Pete Brummel
Rick Springfield (Actor) .. Greg
Audra McDonald (Actor) .. Maureen
Sebastian Stan (Actor) .. Joshua
Rick Rosas (Actor) .. Buster
Joe Vitale (Actor) .. Joe
Bernie Worrell (Actor) .. Billy
Ben Platt (Actor) .. Daniel
Peter C. Demme (Actor) .. Walt
Jim Roche (Actor) .. Provovative Dancer
Alexa Klienbard (Actor) .. Provocative Dancer
Keala Settle (Actor) .. Sharon
Joe Toutebon (Actor) .. Whitey
Jim Wheeler (Actor) .. Elvis Guy
Brooklyn Demme (Actor) .. Salt Well Drinker
Eamon O'Rourke (Actor) .. Salt Well Dancer
Aaron Moten (Actor) .. Troy
Adam Shulman (Actor) .. Total Foods Customer
Chinasa Ogbuagu (Actor) .. TSA Employee
Majora Carter (Actor) .. TSA Employee
Gus Halper (Actor) .. Impatient Traveler
Sister Carol (Actor) .. Waiting Woman
Cherise Boothe (Actor) .. Community Security Guard
Bill Irwin (Actor) .. Single Dad
Ripley Sobo (Actor) .. Journey
Lucy Owen (Actor) .. Restaurant Hostess
Nick Westrate (Actor) .. Adam
Hailey Gates (Actor) .. Emily
Josh Tobin (Actor) .. Waiter
Carmen Carrera (Actor) .. Hair Stylist
Li Jun Li (Actor) .. Nail Clerk
Gabriel Ebert (Actor) .. Max
Lisa Joyce (Actor) .. Nicole
Jimmy Kieffer (Actor) .. Bartender
Scott Ripley (Actor) .. Max's Friends
Kelsey Didion (Actor) .. Max's Friend
John Dreher (Actor) .. Max's Friend
Suzanne Lenz (Actor) .. Max's Friend
Scott Vicari (Actor) .. Max's Friend
Desi Domo (Actor) .. Max's Friend
Eliza Simpson (Actor) .. Selfie Girl
Emily Cass McDonnell (Actor) .. Goodwill Sales Lady
Cynthia Hopkins (Actor) .. Bodhi
Em Grosland (Actor) .. Wedding Waitress
Charlotte Rae (Actor) .. Oma
Beau Sia (Actor) .. Desmond
Jeff Biehl (Actor) .. Pete's Cousin Jeff
Victoria Haynes (Actor) .. Snobby Guest
Joshua Elrod (Actor) .. Wedding Officiant
Tubten Rabten (Actor) .. Harpist
Anna Robertson (Actor) .. Mother of the Bride
Tony Costa (Actor) .. Father of the Bride
Christopher Tierney (Actor) .. Julie's Escort
Isabella Way (Actor) .. Bridesmaid
Leah O'Donnell (Actor) .. Bridesmaid
Erin Mullin (Actor) .. Bridesmaid
Trevor Salter (Actor) .. Groomsmen
Mason Ames (Actor) .. Groomsmen
Katherine Crockett (Actor) .. Inquiring Woman
Jos Demme (Actor) .. Microphone Handler
Renee Albulario (Actor) .. Wedding Dancer
Leasen Almquist (Actor) .. Wedding Dancer
Barbara Christie (Actor) .. Wedding Dancer
Semhar Ghebremichael (Actor) .. Wedding Dancer

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Meryl Streep (Actor) .. Ricki Rendazzo
Born: June 22, 1949
Birthplace: Summit, New Jersey, United States
Trivia: Sydney Pollack -- one of Meryl Streep's collaborators time and again -- once proclaimed her the most gifted film actress of the late 20th century. Most insiders would concur with this assessment. To avid moviegoers, she represents the essence of onscreen dramatic art. Like Hoffman (and De Niro), she demonstrates a transcendent ability to plunge into her characters and lose herself inside of them, transforming herself physically to meet the demands of her roles. A luminous blonde with nearly translucent pale skin, intelligent blue eyes, and an elegant facial bone structure, Streep sustains a fragile, fleeting beauty that allows her to travel the spectrum between earthily plain (Ironweed), and ethereally glamorous and radiant (Manhattan, Heartburn).Born June 22, 1949, in Summit, NJ, Streep took operatic voice lessons, and subsequently cultivated a fascination with acting while she attended Bernards High School. Upon graduation, Streep studied drama at Vassar, Dartmouth, and Yale, where she appeared in 30 to 40 productions with the Yale Repertory Theater. With a five-star education and years of collegiate stage work under her belt, Streep headed for the New York footlights and launched her off-Broadway career. Streep's performance in Tennessee Williams' 27 Wagons Full of Cotton, for which she received a Tony nomination, constitutes a particularly strong theatrical highlight from this period. She made her television debut in Robert Markowitz's The Deadliest Season (1977). That year she also appeared onscreen for the first time in Fred Zinnmann's Julia (1977) as Anna Marie, opposite heavyweights Jane Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave, and Hal Holbrook. The following year, Streep picked up an Emmy for her performance in Marvin J. Chomsky's miniseries Holocaust. She first teamed with De Niro in Michael Cimino's The Deer Hunter (1978).Around this time, Streep became involved with the diminutive performer John Cazale, whom she met on the set of the Cimino film. Tragically, this marriage was ill-fated from day one, Cazale's frail body ridden with bone cancer. Forty-two at the time, he passed away in March 1978, nine months prior to the premiere of The Deer Hunter. Streep later wed Don Gummer, who was not associated with Hollywood in any capacity.Streep next appeared as Woody Allen's ruthless lesbian ex-wife in his elegiac comedy drama Manhattan (1979) and Alan Alda's Southern mistress in the scathing political satire The Seduction of Joe Tynan. Her shattering interpretation of the scarred and torn Joanna Kramer opposite Dustin Hoffman in Robert Benton's heartbreaking divorce saga Kramer vs. Kramer (1979), earned her a Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 1980 -- which she famously left on top of a toilet at the festivities -- alongside a plethora of L.A. Film Critics Association, New York Film Critics Circle, and Golden Globe Awards for the Allen, Benton, and Alda films.Streep continued her ascent over the next decade by establishing herself as Hollywood's top box-office draw and a critical darling. Her double performance in the innovative Karel Reisz/Harold Pinter triumph The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981), her gut-wrenching interpretation of the titular Holocaust survivor in Alan J. Pakula's haunting adaptation Sophie's Choice (1982), and her thoughtful evocation of Karen Silkwood in Mike Nichols' drama Silkwood were highlights of the period. In the latter, she portrays a real-life victimized nuclear-plant worker who mysteriously disappears just prior to turning in crucial evidence against her employers.Streep's decision to headline Sydney Pollack's lush epic Out of Africa (1985), as Karen Blixen, sustained her reputation. She would go on over the next decade to appear in projects like but Ironweed, Heartburn, She-Devil, Postcards from the Edge, and Death Becomes Her. In 1994, she again surprised her fans when she appeared as a muscular expert whitewater rafter who must fight a raging river and two dangerous fugitives to save her family in the action thriller River Wild (1994). In interviews, she said she did the film because she wanted to have an adventure like Harrison Ford and to overcome a few of her own fears.Streep returned to the depth and multifacetedness of her early roles -- with much concomitant success -- when she took a more low-key role as a dowdy, Earthbound farm wife who finds Illicit love with an itinerant photographer (Clint Eastwood) in The Bridges of Madison County. Following the critical and commercial heights of Bridges, Streep picked up yet another Oscar nomination for her performance as a terminally ill wife and mother in Carl Franklin's One True Thing (1998).Streep then signed on to replace Madonna as the lead in 1999's Music of the Heart, tackling what outwardly appeared to be a cookbook Hollywood plot (a teacher on a mission to teach violin to a class of inner-city youth in Harlem) with absolute commitment, teaching herself to play the violin by practicing six hours a day for eight weeks. In the new millennium, Streep hit audiences with the back-to-back with lauded performances in Adaptation and The Hours, earning an Oscar nomination for the former and a Golden Globe nomination for the latter.On the heels of this success, Streep won an Emmy in 2004 for her participation in longtime friend and collaborator Mike Nichols' Angels in America mini-series. She soon afterward won even greater audience and critic approval for her biting role as a corporate and political conspirator in Jonathan Demme's remake of the 1962 thriller The Manchurian Candidate. Streepfollowed this up with a part in the lighthearted comedies Prime, A Prairie Home Companion, and The Devil Wears Prada.In 2007 Streep starred in a pair of timely dramas about the Iraq War, Lions for Lambs and Rendition, before returning to the musical comedy milieu with 2008's Mamma Mia!. The adaptation of the smash stage musical shattered box-office records, becoming the highest grossing film in the history of the United Kingdom, and the biggest American hit of her illustrious career. She followed that up with the lead role in John Patrick Shanley's adaptation of his award-winning play Doubt, a performance that earned her fifteenth acting nomination from the Academy, as well as nods from the Screen Actors Guild, and the Hollywood Foreign Press.The renowned actress was nominated yet again for the Academy Award and the Screen Actors Guild the following year for her turn as Julia Child in the comedy Julie & Julia, a role that also garnered her a win for Best Actress from the New York Film Critics as well as the Golden Globes. That same year she played the lead for Nancy Myers in the box office hit It's Complicated, only to dive directly back into the Oscar spotlight again the next year with her acclaimed performance as English Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 2012's The Iron Lady. The role garnered Streep her 17th Academy Award nomination -- resulting in her third win, this time for Best Actress, in addition to Best Actress wins from the New York Film Critics Circle and the Golden Globes. She was back in the Oscar race in 2014, securing yet another nomination in the Best Supporting Actress category for her work as the wicked witch in Rob Marshall's big-screen adaptation of the musical Into the Woods.
Mamie Gummer (Actor) .. Julie
Born: August 03, 1983
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Raised in rural Salisbury, CT, and schooled at Northwestern, Mamie Gummer -- the eldest daughter of five-star actress Meryl Streep and sculptor Don Gummer -- followed in the footsteps of her wildly famous mother by entering the acting limelight. She did so at the wee age of 18 months -- appearing as the baby of Streep and Jack Nicholson -- in the disappointing Mike Nichols-Nora Ephron collaboration Heartburn (1986). (The scene reportedly required Gummer to scream her head off, and the filmmakers accommodated the infant by giving her a piece of candy and promptly tearing it away.) In addition to lead roles in many high-school stage productions, scattered film appearances ensued, with a young Gummer typically cast in supporting roles or bit parts of Streep pictures, including the 1993 The House of the Spirits and the 2006 The Devil Wears Prada. Gummer signed for her first substantial role in 2007, with her portrayal of a younger Streep in the poorly received Evening. Critics responded unevenly to Gummer's work in the film. Nearly all who commented on the blossoming ingenue in her early years belabored her striking and attractive (though not conventionally beautiful) allure. With a countenance that almost perfectly mirrored her mother's at a young age, the resemblance -- and the comparisons it engendered -- were inescapable.She appeared in the Iraq War drama Stop-Loss, and had a small role in Ang Lee's period comedy Taking Woodstock. She had major roles in 2010's The LIghtkeepers and 2011's The Ward. Gummer then tried her hand at television, appearing in two quickly-cancelled series. She first appeared in Shonda Rimes' short-lived 2011 series Off The Map (called "Grey's Anatomy in the jungle"). When the show wasn't picked up for a second season, she took the title role in the CW's medical drama Emily Owens, M.D. Low ratings plagued the show and it was cancelled after airing 13 episodes.
Kevin Kline (Actor) .. Pete Brummel
Born: October 24, 1947
Birthplace: St. Louis, MO
Trivia: One of the most versatile and respected actors of his generation, Kevin Kline has made a name for himself on the stage and screen. Equally comfortable in comedic and dramatic roles, he is one of those rare actors whose onscreen characterizations are not overshadowed by his offscreen personality; remarkably free of ego, he has impressed both critics and audiences as a performer in the purest sense of the word.A product of the American Midwest, Kline was born in Saint Louis, MO, on October 24, 1947. He became active in theater while growing up in the Saint Louis suburbs, performing in a number of school productions. He continued to act while a student at Indiana University at Bloomington, and following graduation, moved to New York, where he was accepted at the Juilliard School. In 1972, Kline added professional experience to his formal training when he joined New York's Acting Company, led at the time by John Houseman. He toured the country with the company, performing Shakespeare and winning particular acclaim for his portrayals of Romeo and Hamlet. This praise translated to the New York stage a few years later, when Kline won Tony and Drama Desk Awards for his role in the 1978 Broadway production of On the Twentieth Century. Three years later, he earned these same honors for his work in the Broadway production of The Pirates of Penzance (he later reprised his role for the musical's 1983 film adaptation). After a stint on the soap opera Search for Tomorrow, Kline made his film debut in Alan Pakula's 1982 Sophie's Choice. It was an inarguably auspicious beginning: aside from the wide acclaim lavished on the film, Kline earned a Golden Globe nomination for his portrayal of Nathan Landau. The following year, he again struck gold, starring in The Big Chill, Lawrence Kasdan's seminal exploration of baby-boomer anxiety. Two years later, Kline and Kasdan enjoyed another successful collaboration with Silverado, an homage to the Westerns of the 1950s and '60s. After turning in a strong performance as a South African newspaper editor in Cry Freedom, Richard Attenborough's powerful 1987 apartheid drama, Kline won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his relentlessly hilarious portrayal of dimwitted petty thief Otto West in A Fish Called Wanda (1988). The award gave him international recognition and established him as an actor as adept at comedy as he was at drama, something Kline again proved in Soapdish; the 1991 comedy was a major disappointment, but Kline nonetheless managed to turn in another excellent performance, earning a Golden Globe nomination.The '90s saw Kline -- now a married man, having wed actress Phoebe Cates in 1989 -- continue to tackle a range of diverse roles. In 1992, he could be seen playing Douglas Fairbanks in Chaplin, while the next year he gave a winning portrayal of two men -- one, the U.S. President, the other, his reluctant stand-in -- in Dave, earning another Golden Globe nomination. Kline then appeared in one of his most high-profile roles to date, starring as a sexually conflicted schoolteacher in Frank Oz's 1997 comedy In & Out. His portrayal earned him another Golden Globe nomination, as well as a number of other accolades (including an MTV Award nomination for Best Kiss with Tom Selleck). Further praise followed for Kline the next year, when he turned in a stellar dramatic performance as an adulterous family man in 1973 Connecticut in Ang Lee's The Ice Storm. He then turned back to Shakespeare, portraying Bottom in the star-studded 1999 adaptation of A Midsummer Night's Dream. His work in that film was so well received that it helped to overshadow his involvement in Wild Wild West, one of the most critically lambasted and financially disappointing films of the year.2001 found Kline returning to straight drama in the introspective Life as a House. The actor continued in this niche the following year, starring as an unorthodox prep school teacher in The Emperor's Club. After playing songwriter Cole Porter in the 2004 biopic De-Lovely, Kline began work on his return to comedy, a remake of the classic The Pink Panther, with him cast opposite Steve Martin.Kline played Guy Noir in Robert Altman's film adaptation of the radio program Prairie Home Companion, and fulfilled the hopes of Shakespeare enthusiasts around the world when he appeared in the Kenneth Branagh directed adaptation of As You Like It, marking the first time the two respected Shakespearean performers collaborated on a work by the Bard. Over the next several years, Kline woudl continue to remain a charismatic force on screen, appearing in films like De-Lovely, Definitely, Maybe, The Conspirator, No Strings Attached, Darling Companion, and TV shows like Bob's Burgers.
Rick Springfield (Actor) .. Greg
Born: August 23, 1949
Birthplace: Merrylands, New South Wales, Australia
Trivia: Handsome, dark-haired Australian Rick Springfield is best known for his upbeat pop songs like "Jesse's Girl," but he is also an occasional actor. Fans of the long-running television soap opera General Hospital will best remember him for playing the dashing Dr. Noah Drake. He was born Richard Lewis Springthrope in Sydney, Australia. The son of a high-ranking British Army officer, Springfield spent his youth shuttling between Australian and British military bases. Though he had been in several rock bands throughout his teens, Springfield had his greatest success with the metal band Zoot and went to the U.S. in hopes of getting a major record contract. When that proved a long time coming, Springfield signed a contract with Universal and guest starred in television series such as The Six Million Dollar Man. He was also a semi-regular on The Young and the Restless before he signed to RCA in the early '80s, the same time he was cast in General Hospital. Since his inauspicious movie debut in Hard to Hold (1984), Springfield has only appeared in a handful of made-for-television movies such as A Change of Place (1994). He also appeared briefly in Aaron Spelling's short-lived series Robin's Hoods (1994). In the years to come, Springfield would continue to act, appearing on shows like Californication.
Audra McDonald (Actor) .. Maureen
Born: July 03, 1970
Birthplace: Berlin, Germany
Trivia: A multi-talented performer who segued to acting out of an operatic vocal background, Audra McDonald began life in Berlin, the daughter of a U.S. Army employee father and an Affirmative Action officer mother. McDonald's dad subsequently transported the family to Virginia and then to Fresno, CA, where he taught school; meanwhile, McDonald set her eyes on show business at age nine. She sang and danced in cabaret and acted in dinner theater, and attended a junior high and high school designed expressly for youngsters interested in the performing arts. Soon, Juilliard beckoned, but even though McDonald gained acceptance at age 17, she reportedly felt less than enthusiastic during her time there -- complaining vocally about the instructors' insistence on leading her down an "operatic" path though she felt disinclined to go that way. This rectified itself when McDonald "found her way" into opera via dramatic readings of French literature. Many a stage musical followed for the blossoming diva, among them The Secret Garden, Carousel, and Master Class; throughout, she quickly attained a superior reputation for the dynamic range of her voice and the almost incomparable breadth of her vocal modulation. McDonald transitioned to non-musical film acting in the late '90s, with such productions as the made-for-television Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters' First One Hundred Years (1999) and Mike Nichols' cable movie Wit (2001); in the years to follow, she also joined the casts of the prime-time dramas Bedford Diaries (2006) and Private Practice (2007). The following year, McDonald carried her involvement in the 2004 Broadway revival of Lorraine Hansberry's seminal play A Raisin in the Sun to the next level by appearing opposite Sean "P. Diddy" Combs and Phylicia Rashad in the 2008 TV movie of that production. In 2011 she appeared Oren Moverman's bad-cop drama Rampart. She played the Mother Abbess in NBC's Sound of Music Live in 2013.
Sebastian Stan (Actor) .. Joshua
Born: August 13, 1983
Birthplace: Constanta, Romania
Trivia: Actor Sebastian Stan studied drama at Rutgers University before beginning his professional acting career, making minor appearances on TV shows like Law & Order. Eventually, Stan was cast in the 2006 film The Architect, as well as 2007's The Education of Charlie Banks. Then, in 2009, the actor scored a major role in a TV series, playing Jack Benjamin on the NBC series Kings. He went on to appear in the award-winning Black Swan, the comedy Hot Tub Time Machine, the superhero flick Captain America: The First Avenger, Gone, and The Apparition.
Rick Rosas (Actor) .. Buster
Joe Vitale (Actor) .. Joe
Bernie Worrell (Actor) .. Billy
Ben Platt (Actor) .. Daniel
Born: September 24, 1993
Trivia: Joined the national tour of Caroline, or Change at age 11. Played the role of Elder Cunningham in the Chicago production of The Book of Mormon from 2012-13. In 2014, made his Broadway debut in the musical The Book of Mormon, reprising his role as Elder Cunningham.
Peter C. Demme (Actor) .. Walt
Jim Roche (Actor) .. Provovative Dancer
Alexa Klienbard (Actor) .. Provocative Dancer
Keala Settle (Actor) .. Sharon
Joe Toutebon (Actor) .. Whitey
Jim Wheeler (Actor) .. Elvis Guy
Brooklyn Demme (Actor) .. Salt Well Drinker
Eamon O'Rourke (Actor) .. Salt Well Dancer
Aaron Moten (Actor) .. Troy
Adam Shulman (Actor) .. Total Foods Customer
Born: April 02, 1981
Chinasa Ogbuagu (Actor) .. TSA Employee
Majora Carter (Actor) .. TSA Employee
Gus Halper (Actor) .. Impatient Traveler
Sister Carol (Actor) .. Waiting Woman
Cherise Boothe (Actor) .. Community Security Guard
Bill Irwin (Actor) .. Single Dad
Born: April 11, 1950
Birthplace: Santa Monica, California, United States
Trivia: Bill Irwin certainly qualifies as one of the most unique figures in show business; attempts to compare him to other talent invariably conclude with the observation that there is no one else like Irwin, a testament to his overarching individuality. A native of Santa Monica, Irwin spent periods of his youth in Southern California and Oklahoma, then attended Oberlin College (as a theater arts major) and Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey's Clown College in Florida, where lessons learned in slapstick, pantomime, comedic improvisation, and graceful balletic would continue to inform his art and style throughout his life. Following said education, he spent various periods of time in dramatic ensembles (such as the prestigious Kraken ensemble) and circuses (such as the Frisco-based Pickle Family Circus) and racked up a litany of theatrical accomplishments that included Broadway performances in Waiting for Godot (opposite Steve Martin and Robin Williams) and Accidental Death of an Anarchist (opposite Jonathan Pryce), a critically acclaimed turn in Fool Moon (with the Red City Ramblers), and many other highlights. Meanwhile, on television, Irwin built up a substantial audience of young people with his wordless portrayal of Mr. Noodle (opposite the late Michael Jeter) on the "Elmo's World" segments of Sesame Street. Irwin's feature appearances include A Midsummer Night's Dream (1999), Igby Goes Down (2002), Lady in the Water (2007), and Rachel Getting Married (2008), and Higher Ground (2011).
Ripley Sobo (Actor) .. Journey
Lucy Owen (Actor) .. Restaurant Hostess
Born: November 28, 1970
Nick Westrate (Actor) .. Adam
Hailey Gates (Actor) .. Emily
Josh Tobin (Actor) .. Waiter
Carmen Carrera (Actor) .. Hair Stylist
Li Jun Li (Actor) .. Nail Clerk
Birthplace: Shanghai, China
Trivia: Moved from Shaghai, China to Bogota, Columbia at age 6. Spanish is her second language after Shanghainese and Mandarin. Appeared in a North American tour of Miss Saigon. Made Broadway debut at Lincoln Center in a revival of South Pacific which co starred Matthew Morrison. Co-owns pet accessories store in New York City that benefits animal charities.
Gabriel Ebert (Actor) .. Max
Lisa Joyce (Actor) .. Nicole
Birthplace: Chicago, Illinois, United States
Trivia: In 2005, her performance in Adam Rapp's Red Light Winter earned her a Joseph Jefferson Award nomination.Worked at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago, Illinois, after graduating college.In 2009, won a Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Lead Actress, Resident Play, for her performance in Blackbird.Her work in André Gregory's stage production of Ibsen's The Master Builder led to her working in Wallace Shawn's film adaptation A Master Builder (2013).The movie A Master Builder (2013), which she stars in, was filmed in just one week.
Jimmy Kieffer (Actor) .. Bartender
Scott Ripley (Actor) .. Max's Friends
Kelsey Didion (Actor) .. Max's Friend
John Dreher (Actor) .. Max's Friend
Suzanne Lenz (Actor) .. Max's Friend
Scott Vicari (Actor) .. Max's Friend
Desi Domo (Actor) .. Max's Friend
Eliza Simpson (Actor) .. Selfie Girl
Emily Cass McDonnell (Actor) .. Goodwill Sales Lady
Cynthia Hopkins (Actor) .. Bodhi
Em Grosland (Actor) .. Wedding Waitress
Charlotte Rae (Actor) .. Oma
Born: April 22, 1926
Died: August 05, 2018
Birthplace: Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
Trivia: Even as a teenaged performer with the Shorewood Players, a Milwaukee community-theatre group, Charlotte Rae thrived in playing characters much older than herself. Example: at 16, Charlotte starred as Dolly Gallegher Levi in a Shorewood production of Thornton Wilder's The Merchant of Yonkers (her 28-year-old "Horace Vandergelder" was future Broadway director Morton DaCosta). Following graduation from Northwestern University, Rae made her Broadway bow in 1952's Three Wishes for Jamie. The following year, she scored a hit as Mrs. Peachum in the long-running off-Broadway revival of Brecht and Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera, and within three years she was portraying the ancient, wizened Mammy Yokum in Li'l Abner. She was a favorite of TV producer Nat Hiken, who hired her for several guest spots on The Phil Silvers Show. In 1961, Hiken cast the 35-year-old Charlotte as middle-aged hausfrau Sylvia Schnauzer, virago wife of officer Leo Schnauzer (played by fiftyish Al Lewis) on Car 54, Where are You? Rae's other TV series credits include the 1950s daytime drama From These Roots, the 1975 Norman Lear sitcom Hot L Baltimore and the 1976 Summer replacement The Rich Little Show. In 1978, Rae was cast as flibbertigibbet housekeeper Mrs. Garrett on the Gary Coleman series Diff'rent Strokes; the character struck such a responsive chord with audiences that she was spun off into her own starring sitcom The Facts of Life, in 1986. Rae remained with Facts as Mrs. Garrett until 1986, by which time she had been nominated for two Emmies (she has also received Obie and Tony nominations; an actual win is long overdue). More recently, Charlotte has provided voices for such animated offerings as Tom and Jerry: The Movie (1993) and TV's Itsy Bitsy Spider. An off-and-on nightclub and revue performer, Charlotte Rae took her one-woman "Broadway highlights" show on the road in 1994. Rae would continue to act in the decades to come, providing the voice of Nanny on the 101 Dalmations animated series, and appearing in films like You Don't Mess with the Zohan.
Beau Sia (Actor) .. Desmond
Born: February 06, 1976
Jeff Biehl (Actor) .. Pete's Cousin Jeff
Victoria Haynes (Actor) .. Snobby Guest
Joshua Elrod (Actor) .. Wedding Officiant
Tubten Rabten (Actor) .. Harpist
Anna Robertson (Actor) .. Mother of the Bride
Tony Costa (Actor) .. Father of the Bride
Christopher Tierney (Actor) .. Julie's Escort
Isabella Way (Actor) .. Bridesmaid
Leah O'Donnell (Actor) .. Bridesmaid
Erin Mullin (Actor) .. Bridesmaid
Trevor Salter (Actor) .. Groomsmen
Mason Ames (Actor) .. Groomsmen
Katherine Crockett (Actor) .. Inquiring Woman
Jos Demme (Actor) .. Microphone Handler
Renee Albulario (Actor) .. Wedding Dancer
Leasen Almquist (Actor) .. Wedding Dancer
Barbara Christie (Actor) .. Wedding Dancer
Semhar Ghebremichael (Actor) .. Wedding Dancer
Leasen Beth Almquist (Actor)

Before / After
-