The Falcon and the Snowman


06:10 am - 08:25 am, Today on MGM+ Marquee HDTV (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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Fact-based story of Americans (Timothy Hutton, Sean Penn) dealing secrets to the Soviets in the 1970s. Mr. Boyce: Pat Hingle. Mrs. Boyce: Joyce Van Patten. Lana: Lori Singer. Alex: David Suchet. Dr. Lee: Richard Dysart. Directed by John Schlesinger.

1985 English Stereo
Drama Espionage Crime Drama Crime

Cast & Crew
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Timothy Hutton (Actor) .. Christopher Boyce
Sean Penn (Actor) .. Daulton Lee
Pat Hingle (Actor) .. Mr. Charlie Boyce
Joyce Van Patten (Actor) .. Mrs. Boyce
Richard Dysart (Actor) .. Dr. Lee
Lori Singer (Actor) .. Lana
David Suchet (Actor) .. Alex
Dorian Harewood (Actor) .. Gene
Priscilla Pointer (Actor) .. Mrs. Lee
Nicholas Pryor (Actor) .. Eddie
Sam Ingraffia (Actor) .. Kenny Kahn
Mady Kaplan (Actor) .. Laurie
Rob Reed (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Karen West (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Arturo Comacho (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Rob Newell (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Philip Carey (Actor) .. Pan Am Clerk
Annie Kozuch (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Daniel Mcdonald (Actor) .. Clay
Jerry Hardin (Actor) .. Tony Owens
Stephen E. Miller (Actor) .. Newscaster
Betty Lou Henson (Actor) .. Debra
Boris Leskin (Actor) .. Mikhael
Stanley Grover (Actor) .. NSA Inspector
Bob Arbogast (Actor) .. Guard
Anatoly Davidov (Actor) .. Guard
George C. Grant (Actor) .. Karpov
Tom Nolan (Actor) .. Undercover Cop
James Hardie (Actor) .. Police Interrogator
Burke Byrnes (Actor) .. US Customs
Vic Polizos (Actor) .. FBI Interrogator
Michael Ironside (Actor) .. FBI Agent
Bob Nelson (Actor) .. FBI Agent
Arthur Taxier (Actor) .. FBI Agent
Philip Corey (Actor) .. Pan Am Clerk
Martha Campos (Actor) .. Carmen
Herbie Wallace (Actor) .. Pet Shop Owner
Steven Miller (Actor) .. Newscaster
Jeff Seyfried (Actor) .. Pool Man
Steve Duffy (Actor) .. Barman
Carlos Romano (Actor) .. Inspector Estevez
Valerie Wildman (Actor) .. US Embassy Official
George Belanger (Actor) .. US Consul
Leopoldo Frances (Actor) .. Nigerian Diplomat
Abel Franco (Actor) .. Interrogator
Raul Martinez (Actor) .. Police Sergeant
Guillermo Rios (Actor) .. Drug Dealer
Jaime Garza (Actor) .. Raul
Jennifer Runyon (Actor) .. Carole
Dan McDonald (Actor) .. Clay
Marvin J. McIntyre (Actor) .. Ike
Drew Snyder (Actor) .. FBI Interrogator
Macon Mccalman (Actor) .. Larry Rogers
Art Camacho (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Chris Makepeace (Actor) .. David Lee

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Timothy Hutton (Actor) .. Christopher Boyce
Born: August 16, 1960
Birthplace: Malibu, California, United States
Trivia: While still in high school, American actor Timothy Hutton, son of actor Jim Hutton, toured with his father in a stage production of Harvey. After high school he moved to southern California and managed to land roles in several TV films, notably Friendly Fire and Young Love, First Love (both 1979). He debuted onscreen as a troubled teenager in Robert Redford's first directorial effort, Ordinary People (1980). For his work in that film he won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor, at the time the youngest actor to earn such an honor. Hutton soon became typecast as sensitive, somewhat wimpy youths in a string of major films, a mold he didn't break out of until the late '80s. Despite his auspicious beginning, most of Hutton's films have been financially unsuccessful. In 1984 he made his New York stage debut in Orpheus Descending, and in 1990 starred on Broadway in the hit romance Prelude to a Kiss. He has also done some directing, including an episode of the TV show Amazing Stories and a rock video made by the band The Cars. He married and divorced actress Debra Winger.
Sean Penn (Actor) .. Daulton Lee
Born: August 17, 1960
Birthplace: Burbank, California, United States
Trivia: Long the bad boy of Hollywood, Sean Penn is also among the most fiercely talented actors of his generation. He was born August 17, 1960, in Burbank, CA, the second son of actress Eileen Ryan and director Leo Penn. He grew up in Santa Monica, in a neighborhood populated by future celebrities Charlie Sheen and Emilio Estevez, the sons of actor Martin Sheen. Penn's older brother, Michael, is a singer/songwriter-turned- director, while younger sibling Chris is a noted character actor. The children spent much of their free time together, making a number of amateur films shot with Super-8 cameras. Still, Penn's original intention was to attend law school, although he ultimately skipped college to join the Los Angeles Repertory Theater. After making his professional debut on an episode of television's Barnaby Jones, he relocated to New York, where he soon appeared in the play Heartland. A TV-movie, The Killing of Randy Webster, followed in 1981 before he made his feature debut later that same year in Taps.Penn shot to stardom with 1982's Fast Times at Ridgemont High; as the stoned surfer dude Jeff Spicoli, he stole every scene in which he appeared, helping to elevate the picture into a classic of the teen comedy genre; however, the quirkiness which would define his career quickly surfaced as he turned down any number of Spicoli-like roles to star in the 1983 drama Bad Boys, followed a year later by the Louis Malle caper comedy Crackers and the period romance Racing With the Moon. While none of the pictures performed well at the box office, critics consistently praised Penn's depth as an actor. A turn as a drug addict turned government spy in John Schlesinger's 1985 political thriller The Falcon and the Snowman earned some of his best notices to date, but Penn's performance was quickly lost in the glare of the media attention surrounding his very public romance with pop singer Madonna, which culminated in the couple's 1985 media-circus wedding.While Madonna actively courted press attention, the private Penn made his loathing for the media quite clear; his run-ins with the paparazzi quickly became the stuff of legend, and the notoriety of his temper began to eclipse even his immense acting ability. His penchant for fisticuffs, combined with other civil infractions, ultimately resulted in a 30-day jail sentence; more seriously, his marriage to Madonna began to buckle under the weight of media scrutiny, and, as the couple's star collaboration in the 1987 movie Shanghai Surprise met with box-office disaster, their private relationship was also over. Soured by the Hollywood experience, Penn did not resurface prior to 1988's Colors, which proved to be his biggest hit in some time. He next appeared in Brian DePalma's Vietnam tale Casualties of War, followed by a turn opposite his idol, Robert De Niro, in the 1989 comedy We're No Angels.After starring in the gangster melodrama State of Grace, Penn wrote and directed 1991's The Indian Runner, a film inspired by a Bruce Springsteen song and shaped in the image of the films of John Cassavetes. After an almost unrecognizable turn as a troubled attorney in the 1993 DePalma thriller Carlito's Way, Penn announced his intention to retire from acting in order to focus his full attentions on directing; however, after helming 1995's The Crossing Guard with Jack Nicholson and Anjelica Huston, he was back onscreen, winning an Academy Award nomination for his gut-wrenching portrayal of a death-row inmate in Tim Robbins' Dead Man Walking. By 1997, Penn's wishes for retirement were but a memory as he enjoyed his busiest year yet: In addition to starring opposite second wife Robin Wright in Nick Cassavetes' She's So Lovely -- roles which won both spouses acting honors at the Cannes Film Festival -- he also appeared in the David Fincher thriller The Game and in Oliver Stone's U-Turn. He found further acclaim the following year for his roles in the adaptation of David Rabe's Hurlyburly and Terrence Malick's The Thin Red Line. In 1999, he had a cameo appearance in Spike Jonze's Being John Malkovich and earned his second Oscar nomination as a callous '30s jazz guitarist in Woody Allen's Sweet and Lowdown, while 2000s adaptation of Anita Shreve's novel, The Weight of Water, starred Penn as a poet embroiled in a small town murder mystery. In 2001, Penn would play a fame-craving impressionist in The Beaver Trilogy, serve as narrator in director Stacy Peralta's skateboarding documentary Dogtown and Z-Boys, and direct the psychological drama The Pledge, which marked Penn's second collaboration with Jack Nicholson. In 2002, Penn would once again win critical praise with his Oscar-nominated portrayal of a developmentally disabled man struggling to retain custody of his daughter in I Am Sam.After the 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, the left-leaning actor's outspoken political views garnered a great deal of attention from right-wing pundits, including the much aggrieved Bill O'Reilly, who found himself on the receiving end of Penn's animosity in a controversial interview with Talk magazine. Though O'Reilly demanded his viewers boycott any of Penn's future films, it appears his career has remained relatively unscathed. In 2002, Penn directed a segment for the French-produced 9'11"01, which was met with mixed reviews, while his participation in Burkowski: Born Into This (2002) helped the film win a nomination for the Grand Jury Prize at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival. The year 2003 was, in fact, an eventful year for Penn; he participated in two small but nonetheless critically acclaimed films -- Michael Almereyda's documentary This So-Called Disaster and Alejandro González Iñárritu's low-key urban drama 21 Grams -- while managing to claim yet another Hollywood success in actor/director Clint Eastwood's highly lauded Mystic River. In 2004, it was this third film that garnered Penn his fourth Academy Award nomination and, ultimately, his first win. The Oscar, coupled with a standing ovation by the audience, showed once and for all that Penn's unorthodox approach to his acting career hadn't had an adverse effect on his popularity.The following year Penn would return to the screen to document one man's chilling descent into madness in the fact-based psychological drama The Assassination of Richard Nixon, but despite generally favorable reaction from critics the grim feature failed to make much of an impression at the box office. Subsequently sticking to politics with Sydney Pollock's 2005 thriller The Interpreter, Penn would this time find his character attempting to prevent the assassination of a high profile political leader rather than personally carry one out. By the time Penn essayed the role of a populist Southern politician modeled loosely on Depression-era Louisiana governor Huey Long, it seemed as if the serious-minded actor's career had finally become as political as the boat-rocking rhetoric that often found him sailing into the headlines. The third screen adaptation of Robert Penn Warren's influential novel, All the King's Men featured an impressive list of top-name Hollywood talent including Jude Law, Kate Winslet, Anthony Hopkins, Patricia Clarkson, James Gandolfini, and Mark Ruffalo. In 2008, Penn received the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance in Milk, a biopic starring Penn in the role of politician and civil rights activist Harvey Milk. Shortly afterwards, Penn starred in Fair Game, an adaptation of author Valerie Plame's novel of the same name, and co-starred with Brad Pitt and Jessica Chastain in director Terrence Malick's critically acclaimed drama The Tree of Life in 2011. In 2013, he had a small role as gangster Mickey Cohen in Gangster Squad and a supporting role in The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.
Pat Hingle (Actor) .. Mr. Charlie Boyce
Born: January 03, 2009
Died: January 03, 2009
Birthplace: Miami, Florida, United States
Trivia: Burly character actor Pat Hingle held down a variety of bread-and-butter jobs--mostly in the construction field--while studying at the University of Texas, the Hagen-Bergdorf studio, the Theatre Wing and the Actors Studio. Earning his Equity card in 1950, Hingle made his Broadway debut in 1953 as Harold Koble in End as a Man (he would repeat this role in the 1957 film adaptation, retitled The Strange One). One year later, he was cast as Gooper-aka "Brother Man"-in Tennessee Williams' Pulitzer-winning play Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Also in 1954, he made his inaugural film appearance in On the Waterfront as a bartender. Though a familiar Broadway presence and a prolific TV actor, Hingle remained a relatively unknown film quantity, so much so that he was ballyhooed as one of the "eight new stars" in the 1957 release No Down Payment. As busy as he was before the cameras in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, Hingle's first love was the theatre, where he starred in such productions as William Inge's Dark at the Top of the Stairs and Archibald MacLeish's JB, and later appeared in the one-man show Thomas Edison: Reflections of a Genius. His made-for-TV assignments include such historical personages as Colonel Tom Parker in Elvis (1979), Sam Rayburn in LBJ: The Early Years (1988), J. Edgar Hoover in Citizen Cohn (1992) and Earl Warren in Simple Justice (1993). Among his more recent big-screen assignments has been Commissioner Gordon in the Batman films. Amidst his hundreds of TV guest shots, Pat Hingle has played the regular roles of Chief Paulton in Stone (1980) and Henry Cobb in Blue Skies (1988), was briefly a replacement for Doc (Milburn Stone) on the vintage western Gunsmoke, and has shown up sporadically as the globe-trotting father of Tim Daly and Steven Weber on the evergreen sitcom Wings.
Joyce Van Patten (Actor) .. Mrs. Boyce
Born: March 09, 1934
Birthplace: New York City
Trivia: Blonde, loquacious American actress Joyce Van Patten was being sent out for modelling assignments at the age of eight months. Her stagestruck mother advertised Van Patten and older brother Dick as "the Van Patten Kids," ready and willing to step into any juvenile roles available. At age 5, Joyce made her Broadway debut in Love's Old Sweet Song, which also featured Dick. Joyce was nine years old when she won the Donaldson award for her performance in the stage drama Tomorrow the World. She interrupted her stage career for a brief marriage at age 16 (her equally brief second marriage was to actor Martin Balsam), then at 20 played her first adult role in the Broadway comedy Desk Set. Her first film assignment was an unbilled bit in the Manhattan-lensed Fourteen Hours (1951), and her first regular TV stint was on the CBS soap opera As the World Turns in the late '50s. Joyce has since been seen on a weekly basis in such TV series as The Danny Kaye Show (1963-66), The Good Guys (1968) (as Herb Edelman's good-natured wife), The Don Rickles Show (1972) (as Don's goodnatured wife) and The Mary Tyler Moore Hour (1979) (as Mary's personal secretary, yet again good-natured). Joyce Van Patten's films have included The Goddess (1958), I Love You Alice B. Toklas (1968), St. Elmo's Fire (1984), and a rare "bitchy" appearance as the antagonistic athletic coach in The Bad News Bears (1976).
Richard Dysart (Actor) .. Dr. Lee
Born: March 30, 1929
Died: April 05, 2015
Birthplace: Boston, Massachusetts
Trivia: American actor Richard Dysart portrayed sandy-haired, distinguished corporate types for nigh onto thirty years. Several seasons of stage and TV work were followed by supporting authority-figure roles in such films as The Hospital (1971), The Crazy World of Julius Vrooder (1974) (as the title character's dad), Meteor (1978) (the Secretary of Defense) and Being There (1979) (the doctor of politico Melvyn Douglas). TV-movie credits for Dysart include The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1973), The People vs. Jean Harris (1980), Last Days of Patton (1985), the Hedda Hopper/Louella Parsons biopic Malice in Wonderland (1988), and the made-for-cable Marilyn and Bobby: Her Final Affair (1993). In 1986, Richard Dysart gained nationwide TV fame as senior law partner Leland McKenzie on the NBC weekly L.A. Law, for which he earned an Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series. He mostly retired from acting once L.A. Law ended in 1994, doing occasional voice-over work and reprising his role in an L.A. Law TV movie in 2002. Dysart died in 2015, at age 86.
Lori Singer (Actor) .. Lana
Born: November 06, 1957
Birthplace: Corpus Christi, Texas, United States
Trivia: Although many may recognize Lori Singer for her memorable turn as a rebellious preacher's daughter in Footloose and the talented cellist/dancer in the popular '80s television series Fame, many remain unaware that the woman once voted one of the "Most Beautiful People" by People Magazine is also a gifted musician and part of a remarkably talented family. Born in Corpus Christi, TX, in 1957, Singer's father Jacques was a noted symphony conductor and her mother Leslie a concert pianist. The talent in their family seemed to be hereditary: of Lori's siblings, brother Marc rose to fame in the title role of The Beastmaster (1982), Claude became a successful writer, and twin Gregory a concert violinist and a graduate of the Juilliard School of Music. (Cousin Bryan rose to fame as the director of such films as X-Men). A childhood musical prodigy, Lori Singer took up the cello at the age of 12 and became Juilliard's youngest undergraduate two years later. At 15, she made her solo debut with the Western Washington Symphony, and, in 1980, won the Bergen Philharmonic Competition. Singer later signed with the Elite Modeling Agency. Inspired by brother Marc's success in film and television, she decided, at 17, to study acting. Her casting in the television dance-school drama Fame found Singer in a role that was seemingly made for her. Cast as a student cellist/dancer with stars in her eyes (it's rumored that the actress beat out Madonna for the role), the series was the epitome of all things '80s. Her character's desire to dance suppressed by onscreen father John Lithgow in her first feature role, Footloose became a surprise box-office smash that spawned a Broadway musical more than a decade after its theatrical release. Following up with The Falcon and the Snowman and The Man With One Red Shoe (both 1985), audiences were enraptured by the rising star's powerful combination of beauty and talent. Although such subsequent efforts as Summer Heat (1987) and Warlock (1988) ended the decade with a whimper, Singer undauntedly rounded out the '90s with memorable roles in Robert Altman's Short Cuts (for which she also contributed to the soundtrack) and as the star of the short-lived 1995 TV series VR.5 (in a role originally conceived for a man). Two years later, Singer found herself performing alongside idol Yo Yo Ma in director Atom Egoyan's Yo-Yo Ma Inspired by Bach: Sarabande. In addition to continuing to refine her passion for the cello, Singer has dedicated much of her offscreen time to aiding such efforts as The Dishes Project for Pediatric AIDS. Married to New York civil liberties attorney Richard Emery in 1980, the couple had a son before divorcing in 1996.
David Suchet (Actor) .. Alex
Born: May 02, 1946
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: Known mostly for portraying Agatha Christie's Belgian detective Hercule Poirot for more than a decade, the short and stocky character actor David Suchet has also enjoyed a lengthy career on stage, screen, and television. Born in London, he studied at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts and eventually joined the Royal Shakespeare Company. Throughout the 1970s, Suchet appeared in numerous stage productions and crime dramas on British television. His did his first film in 1980 with A Tale of Two Cities, but didn't play his first detective until the crime comedy Trenchcoat in 1983. For the rest of the '80s, the British actor played a Middle Eastern terrorist in The Little Drummer Girl, a Russian operative in The Falcon and the Snowman, and a French hunter in Harry and the Hendersons. He also occasionally portrayed real-life figures, including Sigmund Freud in the miniseries Freud, news reporter William L. Shirer in the HBO docudrama Murrow, and movie legend Louis B. Mayer in RKO 281. While the Poirot mysteries would dominate his career in the '90s, Suchet also played some other leading roles: double agent Verloc in miniseries The Secret Agent, based on the novel by Joseph Conrad; Aaron in the TNT television special Moses; and downsized New Yorker Oliver in the American independent film Sunday. Some standard Hollywood action thrillers followed with Executive Decision, Deadly Voyage, and A Perfect Murder being just a few. After 2000, he turned to costume dramas to play Napoleon in Sabotage!, Baron von Stockmar in Victoria & Albert, and upper-crust Augustus Melmotte in The Way We Live Now. He resumed the role of Poirot (after a short break from 1998-1999) just as he started up another detective character, DI John Borne of NCS: Manhunt and NCS 2. In 2003, he played gangster Leo Gillette in the action thriller Foolproof.
Dorian Harewood (Actor) .. Gene
Born: August 06, 1950
Trivia: African American leading man Dorian Harewood attended the University of Cincinnati before establishing his theatrical reputation, first in the cast of the Broadway rock musical Two Gentlemen of Verona, then in the road company of Jesus Christ, Superstar. He won a Theatre Guild Award for his work in the 1974 production Don't Call Back. In films since 1976's Sparkle, Harewood is best known for his powerful supporting roles, most notably the unfortunate "grunt" Eightball in Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket (1987). His television resumé includes the part of Alex Haley's father in the 1979 miniseries Roots: The Next Generation and the title roles in the made-for-TV movies The Jessie Owens Story (1984) and Guilty of Innocence: The Lenell Geter Story (1987); he has also played recurring roles on such series as Glitter, The Trials of Rosie O'Neill, and Viper. Harewood has always attributed much of his success to actress Bette Davis, who while lecturing at the U. of Cincinnati encouraged the young actor to aggressively pursue his dreams of stardom. Dorian Harewood is the husband of actress Ann McCurry.
Priscilla Pointer (Actor) .. Mrs. Lee
Born: May 18, 1924
Trivia: American character actress Priscilla Pointer was the wife of famed theatrical director Jules Irving, and the mother of actress Amy Irving and writer/director David Irving. After extensive theatrical experience, Pointer attained her first major TV job in the daytime drama Where the Heart Is (1969-73). She went on to play Mrs. Austin in From Here to Eternity (1980). Rebecca Barnes Wentworth in Dallas (1981-83) and Lillie in Call to Glory (1984-85). One of her more memorable film assignments was the 1976 chiller Carrie, in which she played the mother of the character played by her daughter Amy. Perhaps as a by-product of Carrie, Priscilla Pointer was engaged to play important roles in Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983) and the made-for-TVTwilight Zone: The Lost Classics (1994).
Nicholas Pryor (Actor) .. Eddie
Born: January 28, 1935
Birthplace: Baltimore, Maryland
Trivia: American character actor Nicholas Pryor has played his share of weak or ineffectual characters, but can exert authority and strength if the need arises. One of the busiest actors on the daytime-drama scene, Pryor has been a regular on such soapers as All My Children (he was the third of four actors to play Link Tyler) Young Dr. Malone, The Nurses, Another World, The Edge of Night, Love is a Many Splendored Thing and The Nurses. His prime-time TV roles include John Quincy Adams II in The Adams Chronicles (1976), vice principal Jack Felspar in Bronx Zoo (1987), and chancellor Arnold in Beverly Hills 90210 (1990- ). Among Nicholas Pryor's best film assignments were the roles of beauty-contest organizer Barbara Feldon's long-suffering husband in Smile (1975) and Tom Cruise's clueless dad in Risky Business (1983).
Sam Ingraffia (Actor) .. Kenny Kahn
Mady Kaplan (Actor) .. Laurie
Born: August 06, 1956
Rob Reed (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Karen West (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Arturo Comacho (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Rob Newell (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Philip Carey (Actor) .. Pan Am Clerk
Born: July 15, 1925
Died: February 06, 2009
Trivia: Beefy, muscular leading man Philip Carey entered films in 1951, shortly after his hitch in the Marines was up. Cutting quite a dashing figure in a 19th-century military uniform, Carey was most often cast as an American cavalry officer. In a similar vein, he appeared as Canadian-born Lt. Michael Rhodes on the 1956 TV series Tales of the 77th Bengal Lancers. Curiously, he never appeared in any of director John Ford's cavalry films, though he did co-star in Ford's Mister Roberts (1955) and The Long Gray Line (1955). In 1959, Carey starred in a TV series based on Raymond Chandler's hard-boiled private eye Philip Marlowe. While no one could fault his performance in the role, the Philip Marlowe series survived but a single season. He is best known for his four subsequent TV assignments: as spokesperson for the regionally aired Granny Goose potato chips commercials, as forever-flustered Lt. Parmalee on the comedy Western Laredo (1966-1968), as narrator of the documentary series Untamed World (1968-1975), and, from 1980-2007, as eternally scheming patriarch Asa Buchanan on the daytime soap opera One Life to Live. One of Philip Carey's least typical TV appearances was on a 1971 All in the Family episode, in which he played Archie Bunker's macho-man bar buddy -- who turns out to be a homosexual.
Annie Kozuch (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Daniel Mcdonald (Actor) .. Clay
Born: July 30, 1960
Died: February 15, 2007
Birthplace: Scranton, Pennsylvania
Jerry Hardin (Actor) .. Tony Owens
Born: November 20, 1929
Trivia: Supporting actor, onscreen from the '70s. He is the father of actress Melora Hardin.
Stephen E. Miller (Actor) .. Newscaster
Betty Lou Henson (Actor) .. Debra
Born: January 01, 1952
Died: January 26, 2003
Boris Leskin (Actor) .. Mikhael
Born: January 05, 2014
Stanley Grover (Actor) .. NSA Inspector
Born: March 28, 1926
Died: August 24, 1997
Bob Arbogast (Actor) .. Guard
Born: April 01, 1927
Anatoly Davidov (Actor) .. Guard
George C. Grant (Actor) .. Karpov
Tom Nolan (Actor) .. Undercover Cop
Born: January 15, 1948
James Hardie (Actor) .. Police Interrogator
Burke Byrnes (Actor) .. US Customs
Born: December 09, 1937
Vic Polizos (Actor) .. FBI Interrogator
Born: August 12, 1947
Michael Ironside (Actor) .. FBI Agent
Born: February 12, 1950
Birthplace: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: Canadian actor Michael Ironside has specialized in tough, steel-fisted villainous film roles. Ironside played the ruthless brain-splitting cult leader in Scanners (1981), the unethical cop in Cross Country (1983), and the megalomaniacal cyborg in Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone (1984), among other wicked characterizations. He was also seen as Dick Wetherly in Top Gun, 1986's biggest hit, and as General Katana in Highlander II: The Quickening (1991). He'd go on to appear in films like The Machinist and Terminator Salvation, as well as TV series like ER, SeaQuest DSV: 2032, and Desperate Housewives.
Bob Nelson (Actor) .. FBI Agent
Born: March 03, 1958
Arthur Taxier (Actor) .. FBI Agent
Born: January 19, 1951
Philip Corey (Actor) .. Pan Am Clerk
Martha Campos (Actor) .. Carmen
Herbie Wallace (Actor) .. Pet Shop Owner
Steven Miller (Actor) .. Newscaster
Jeff Seyfried (Actor) .. Pool Man
Steve Duffy (Actor) .. Barman
Carlos Romano (Actor) .. Inspector Estevez
Valerie Wildman (Actor) .. US Embassy Official
Born: August 06, 1953
George Belanger (Actor) .. US Consul
Leopoldo Frances (Actor) .. Nigerian Diplomat
Abel Franco (Actor) .. Interrogator
Born: October 22, 1922
Raul Martinez (Actor) .. Police Sergeant
Guillermo Rios (Actor) .. Drug Dealer
Jaime Garza (Actor) .. Raul
Born: January 28, 1954
Jennifer Runyon (Actor) .. Carole
Born: April 01, 1960
Trivia: American actress Jennifer Runyon familiarized herself to soap opera addicts as Sally Spencer on the long-running daytimer Another World. Prime-time viewers will recognize Runyon as coed Gwendolen Pierce in the 1984-85 episodes of the weekly sitcom Charles in Charge. She went on to play such roles as the grown-up Cindy Brady (briefly replacing Susan Olsen) in the 1988 retro TV special A Very Brady Christmas. Jennifer Runyon's movie manifest includes The Falcon and the Snowman (1985), Ghostwriter (1987) and the 1993 Carnosaur.
Dan McDonald (Actor) .. Clay
Born: July 30, 1960
Marvin J. McIntyre (Actor) .. Ike
Drew Snyder (Actor) .. FBI Interrogator
Born: September 25, 1946
Lara Harris (Actor)
Born: August 22, 1962
Trivia: Supporting actress, onscreen from the '80s.
Macon Mccalman (Actor) .. Larry Rogers
Born: December 30, 1932
Died: November 29, 2005
Birthplace: Memphis, Tennessee
Art Camacho (Actor) .. Boyce Child
Chris Makepeace (Actor) .. David Lee
Born: April 22, 1964
Trivia: Canadian leading man Chris Makepeace was 15 when he made his first film appearance in the raunchcom Meatballs (1979). He was top billed in his next film, My Bodyguard (1980), playing a bethumped high schooler who hires hulking Adam Baldwin to protect him from bullying Matt Dillon. He has since alternated between leads and supporting parts in both American and Canadian films. Chris Makepeace has also been featured in such made-for-TV fare as Mazes and Monsters (1982) and The Terry Fox Story (1983).

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