Ice Castles


3:25 pm - 5:45 pm, Wednesday, January 7 on WNYW Movies! (5.2)

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About this Broadcast
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A champion skater's medal hopes are dashed when she is stricken blind, but a relationship with a caring young man helps her realize her dreams.

1978 English Stereo
Drama Romance Figure Skating

Cast & Crew
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Robby Benson (Actor) .. Nick Peterson
Lynn-Holly Johnson (Actor) .. Alexis Winston
Colleen Dewhurst (Actor) .. Beulah Smith
Tom Skerritt (Actor) .. Marcus Winston
Jennifer Warren (Actor) .. Deborah Mackland
Diane Reilly (Actor) .. Sandy
Craig T. McCullen (Actor) .. Doctor
Kelsey Ufford (Actor) .. Ceciel Monchet
Leonard Lilyholm (Actor) .. Hockey Coach
Brian Foley (Actor) .. Choreographer
Jean-Claude Bleuze (Actor) .. French Coach
Teresa Willmus (Actor) .. Annette Brashlout
Diana Holden (Actor) .. X-Ray Technician
Michelle McLean (Actor) .. Skater
Carol Williams (Actor) .. TV Producer
Tony Potter (Actor) .. Waiter
Joel Thingvall (Actor) .. Arena Spectator

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Robby Benson (Actor) .. Nick Peterson
Born: January 21, 1956
Trivia: When 13-year-old Robby Benson appeared with "Josephine the Plumber" (Jane Withers) in a well-circulated TV commercial of the late 1960s, he was already a ten-year veteran of show business. The son of a writer and a stage actress, Benson went from the straw-hat theater circuit to the leading role of Oliver in a 1964 Japanese touring production. At fourteen he made his Broadway debut, and at that same time became the first of five actors to play the role of Bruce Carson on the TV daytime drama Search for Tomorrow. In films from 1972, Benson specialized in playing sensitive teenagers with severe emotional and/or physical problems. He also was frequently co-starred in romantic roles with young actress Glynnis O'Connor, notably in the 1973 film Jeremy and the 1977 TV production of Our Town. While his early theatrical films were generally okay, Benson was better served in made-for-TV movies: he was excellent as the dying son of author John Gunther in Death Be Not Proud (1975) and as George Burns' mentally retarded grandson in Two of a Kind (83). Benson endured an awkward period in the 1980s when, except for such career highlights as The Chosen (1981), he seemed to be pulling out the same bag of acting tricks in role after role. An effort to establish himself as a producer resulted in the unsuccessful Die Laughing (1979). He backed away from show business in 1984 when he underwent delicate open-heart surgery; the ordeal seemed to strengthen his resolve to broaden his performing skills. He starred as a tough Chicago cop in a brief TV series Tough Cookies (1986), and in 1988 directed his first film, Crack in the Mirror. Benson's most successful film project of recent years was one in which his face was never seen: as the growling, deep-voiced Beast in the Disney cartoon feature Beauty and the Beast (though touted in some articles as his voiceover debut, Benson had actually been dubbing TV cartoons for several years, notably the 1991 series Pirates of Dark Water).
Lynn-Holly Johnson (Actor) .. Alexis Winston
Born: January 01, 1959
Trivia: Lead actress, onscreen from Ice Castles (1978). Former ice-skating champion.
Colleen Dewhurst (Actor) .. Beulah Smith
Born: June 03, 1924
Died: August 22, 1991
Birthplace: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Trivia: With the same drive that had distinguished her father's hockey career, Colleen Dewhurst took any number of odd jobs to pay for her tuition at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. On Broadway from 1955, Dewhurst became one of America's foremost interpreters of such pantheon playwrights as Eugene O'Neill and Edward Albee; she won a 1981 Tony Award for her performance in the revival of O'Neill's A Moon for the Misbegotten. The forceful, deep-throated Dewhurst was not always easy to cast in films, but she chalked up several memorable movie portrayals, not least of which was as Diane Keaton's WASP-ish mom in Annie Hall (1977). Her TV work included the delightful "middle aged pregnancy" comedy And Baby Makes Six (1979) and numerous appearances as Candice Bergen's mom on Murphy Brown. From 1985 through 1991, Colleen was president of Actors' Equity. Twice married to actor George C. Scott, Colleen Dewhurst is the mother of another performer, Campbell Scott.
Tom Skerritt (Actor) .. Marcus Winston
Born: August 25, 1933
Birthplace: Detroit, Michigan, United States
Trivia: Tom Skerritt is probably the best-known actor whose name is never remembered. A rugged "outdoors" type, Skerritt briefly attended Wayne State University and UCLA before making his film bow in War Hunt (1962). His subsequent film and TV roles were sizeable, but so adept was Skerritt at immersing himself in his character that he seemed to have no tangible, recurrent personality of his own. Billed second as "Duke" in the original M*A*S*H* (1970), Skerritt did his usual finely-honed job, but audiences of the time preferred the demonstrative, mannered acting technique of Elliott Gould, Donald Sutherland and Robert Duvall; significantly, Skerritt's character was not carried over into the even more unsubtle M*A*S*H TV series. Finally, in 1980, Skerritt began to attain a following with his authoritative performance in Alien. Since that time, there's been no stopping him. He posed in a popular series of "Guess?" Jeans ads, appeared as a 1987-88 regular on "Cheers," starred in 1992's A River Runs Through It (directed by his long-ago War Hunt costar Robert Redford), and won a 1994 Emmy for his work on the TV series "Picket Fences."Skerritt would continue to work at a remarkable pace, usually appearing in several projects a year. From 1999's family drama The Other Sister to 2003's war thriller Tears of the Sun, the actor could be spotted by fans of seemingly every area of film throughout the 90's and 2000's. In 2006, he took a recurring role in the hit primetime drama Brothers and Sisters, and in 2008 he signed on for the redneck comedy Beer for my Horses. He went on to appear in Whiteout, Multiple Sarcasms, and he made a cameo as himself in the R rated talking teddy bear movie Ted.
Jennifer Warren (Actor) .. Deborah Mackland
Born: August 12, 1941
Trivia: In films from 1969, Jennifer Warren's best-known movie role was Francine Dunlop, the fed-up wife of hockey coach Paul Newman in Slap Shot (1977). She played subsequent gutsy, keep-your-distance parts in such TV series as Paper Dolls (1984) and Double Dare (1985).Moving into directing in the 1990s, Jennifer Warren called the shots on the 1994 cinema adaptation of Carolyn Chute's novel Beans of Egypt, Maine. Her second directorial feature, Partners in Crime (2000), found Rutger Hauer and Paulina Porizkova cast as a divorced couple who must team-up in order to solve a complex series of vicious murders.
Diane Reilly (Actor) .. Sandy
Craig T. McCullen (Actor) .. Doctor
Kelsey Ufford (Actor) .. Ceciel Monchet
Leonard Lilyholm (Actor) .. Hockey Coach
Brian Foley (Actor) .. Choreographer
Jean-Claude Bleuze (Actor) .. French Coach
Teresa Willmus (Actor) .. Annette Brashlout
Diana Holden (Actor) .. X-Ray Technician
Michelle McLean (Actor) .. Skater
Carol Williams (Actor) .. TV Producer
Tony Potter (Actor) .. Waiter
Joel Thingvall (Actor) .. Arena Spectator

Before / After
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Lucas
1:15 pm