The Silent Call


04:55 am - 06:00 am, Today on FX Movie Channel ()

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About this Broadcast
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Pleasant tale about a dog out to follow his master after the lad moves away. Roger Mobley. Joe: David McLean. Flore: Gail Russell. John Bushelman directed.

1961 English
Drama Action/adventure

Cast & Crew
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Roger Mobley (Actor) .. Guy Brancato
David McLean (Actor) .. Joe Brancato
Gail Russell (Actor) .. Flore Brancato
Roscoe Ates (Actor) .. Sid
Milton Parsons (Actor) .. Mohammed
Dal McKennon (Actor) .. Old Man
Sherwood Keith (Actor) .. Johnny
Jack Younger (Actor) .. Muscles
Rusty Wescoatt (Actor) .. Moose
Joe Besser (Actor) .. Art

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Roger Mobley (Actor) .. Guy Brancato
Born: January 01, 1951
David McLean (Actor) .. Joe Brancato
Born: May 19, 1922
Died: October 12, 1995
Trivia: A former "Marlboro Man," tall, ruggedly handsome actor David McLean spent most of his career on television. During the summer of 1960, McLean starred in the short-lived western Tate, the saga of a one-armed gunfighter. McLean has guest-starred in series ranging from Bonanza to The Streets of San Francisco to That Girl. Born and raised in Akron, Ohio, McLean began acting on stage, first in Ohio, then in Los Angeles. While in Southern California, McLean supported himself by working as a cartoonist and a sketch artist. In 1961, he was cast in his first feature film, Irwin Allen's Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. His other film credits include The Andromeda Strain (1971), X-15 (1961), Kingdom of the Spiders (1977) and Death Sport (1978), his final film. In addition to acting, McLean was also the commercial spokesperson for Great Western Savings.
Gail Russell (Actor) .. Flore Brancato
Born: September 23, 1924
Died: August 26, 1961
Trivia: Directly out of high school she was signed to a film contract with Paramount, having had no previous acting experience. After coaching and grooming she went on to play leads in numerous films of the '40s. Insecure and introverted, she was said to suffer from anxiety attacks during acting, and she eventually slipped into alcoholism. In the early '50s she was arrested several times for drunk driving, and also was involved in a romantic scandal with John Wayne; after 1951 she went five years without a screen role. From 1956-61 she appeared in four films. In 1961 she was found dead in her apartment amidst many empty alcohol bottles; she was 36. From 1949-54 she was married to actor Guy Madison.
Roscoe Ates (Actor) .. Sid
Born: January 20, 1895
Died: March 01, 1962
Trivia: Mississippi-born Roscoe Ates spent a good portion of his childhood overcoming a severe stammer. Entering show business as a concert violinist, the shriveled, pop-eyed Ates found the money was better as a vaudeville comedian, reviving his long-gone stutter for humorous effect. In films from 1929, Ates appeared in sizeable roles in such films as The Champ (1931), Freaks (1932) and Alice in Wonderland (1933), and also starred in his own short subject series with RKO and Vitaphone. Though his trademarked stammer is something of an endurance test when seen today, it paid off in big laughs in the 1930s, when speech impediments were considered the ne plus ultra of hilarity. By the late 1930s Ates's popularity waned, and he was reduced to unbilled bits in such films as Gone with the Wind (1939) and Dixie (1942). His best showing during the 1940s was as comic sidekick to singing cowboy Eddie Dean in a series of 15 low-budget westerns. Remaining busy in films and on TV into the 1960s, Roscoe Ates made his last appearance in the 1961 Jerry Lewis comedy The Errand Boy.
Milton Parsons (Actor) .. Mohammed
Born: May 19, 1907
Died: May 15, 1980
Trivia: Bald, cadaverous, hollow-eyed, doom-voiced actor Milton Parsons began appearing in films in the late 1930s. In an era wherein being typecast in Hollywood assured an actor a steady paycheck, Parsons fattened his bank account by playing dozens of undertakers and morticians. He was also an effective psychotic type, most notably as the lead in 1942's The Hidden Hand. Parsons entered the "film noir" hall of fame in the tiny role of the jury foreman in 1947's They Won't Believe Me; the film's unforgettable final image was a screen-filling close-up of Parsons, gloomily intoning an all-too-late "Not Guilty." Active into the 1970s, Parsons showed up in TV series ranging from Twilight Zone to The Dick Van Dyke Show, his morbid appearance enhanced by the addition of a satanic goatee. Even in his last roles, Milton Parsons adhered strictly to type; in the 1976 TV movie Griffin and Phoenix, for example, he portrayed a guest lecturer at a support group for terminally ill cancer victims.
Dal McKennon (Actor) .. Old Man
Born: July 09, 1919
Died: July 14, 2009
Sherwood Keith (Actor) .. Johnny
Jack Younger (Actor) .. Muscles
Rusty Wescoatt (Actor) .. Moose
Born: August 02, 1911
Died: September 03, 1987
Joe Besser (Actor) .. Art
Born: August 12, 1907
Died: March 01, 1988
Trivia: After a stint as a delivery boy, roly-poly Joe Besser worked his way up the show business ladder as a song plugger and magician's assistant. A vaudeville headliner in his mid-twenties, the bilious, balding Besser usually appeared as a member of a team. On his own, he contributed to the general merriment of Olsen and Johnson's Sons O' Fun, playing his patented stage character as a whining, overweight sissy. Besser's trademarked "I'll HAAAARM you" and "Oh, you NAAAASTY, you!" could be heard throughout the 1940s in such radio shows as The Jack Benny Program and such Columbia feature films as Hey, Rookie! A close friend of comedian Lou Costello, Besser was amusingly cast as an effete gunman in Abbott & Costello's Africa Screams (1949) and as the bratty little boy (!) Stinky in TV's The Abbott and Costello Show (1951-1952). He also starred in his own series of Columbia two-reelers, usually playing a misfit G.I., and from 1956 to 1958 he was a member of the Three Stooges. Flourishing into the 1960s and 1970s, Besser was a regular on The Joey Bishop Show (1962-1965), played supporting roles (sometimes surprisingly dramatic in nature) in films and on TV, and provided voice-overs for such cartoon series as Jeannie (1972) and Yogi's Space Race (1977). One of Joe Besser's last public appearances came about when the Three Stooges at long last received their star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
H. Tom Hart (Actor)

Before / After
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