Nash Bridges: Power Play


04:00 am - 05:00 am, Saturday, March 28 on WWOR Heroes & Icons (9.4)

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About this Broadcast
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Power Play

Season 4, Episode 20

A career crook involved in the abduction of a star hockey player is suffering from amnesia.

repeat 1999 English Stereo
Crime Drama Police

Cast & Crew
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Stephen Lee (Actor) .. Tony B
Aaron Olson (Actor) .. Tom Corbett
Tina Castaldi (Actor) .. Lt. Wendy Palmerantz
Athena Massey (Actor) .. Dori Ditlow
Michael Wyle (Actor) .. Gary Stokes
William Smith (Actor) .. Boris
Ravil Isyanov (Actor) .. Vladamir Yodka
Natalie Geld (Actor) .. Dr. Christie Barnes
Terrence McGovern (Actor) .. Dan O'Malley
Lyn Mahler (Actor) .. Mama Stokes
Colman Domingo (Actor) .. Hassam
Tim Wiggins (Actor) .. Porkchop Langdon
Chuck Porter (Actor) .. Ivan
Comika Griffin (Actor) .. Nurse Becky
Don Johnson (Actor) .. Nash Bridges
Cheech Marin (Actor) .. Joe Dominguez
Jeff Perry (Actor) .. Insp. Harvey Leek
Jaime P. Gomez (Actor) .. Evan Cortez

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Stephen Lee (Actor) .. Tony B
Born: November 11, 1955
Died: August 14, 2014
Aaron Olson (Actor) .. Tom Corbett
Tina Castaldi (Actor) .. Lt. Wendy Palmerantz
Athena Massey (Actor) .. Dori Ditlow
Born: November 10, 1971
Birthplace: Orange, California
Michael Wyle (Actor) .. Gary Stokes
William Smith (Actor) .. Boris
Born: March 24, 1933
Birthplace: Columbia, Missouri
Ravil Isyanov (Actor) .. Vladamir Yodka
Born: August 20, 1962
Natalie Geld (Actor) .. Dr. Christie Barnes
Terrence McGovern (Actor) .. Dan O'Malley
Lyn Mahler (Actor) .. Mama Stokes
Colman Domingo (Actor) .. Hassam
Born: November 28, 1969
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: In 2005, wrote and starred in an autobiographical one-man show based on his family and life in Philadelphia entitled A Boy and His Soul, for which he won a GLAAD Media Award and Lucille Lortel Award. Performed in the world premiere of the stage production Passing Strange in 2008 at Berkeley Repertory Theatre and later reprised his role in Spike Lee's film adaptation of the play. Played the role of Billy Flynn in the long-running Broadway revival of Chicago. Gave a performance lecture at University of Texas at Austin called The Intersection of Soul Music, Black Cultural Expression and Surrealism and has also spoken to students at several other academic institutions, including University of North Carolina, University of Minnesota, Temple University and University of Wisconsin. Directed the off-Broadway productions Exit Cuckoo and Single Black Female. Is an accomplished playwright, having written Up Jumped Springtime, Mission of a Saint and Redemption of a Sinner. Is on the Board of Directors of the Vineyard Theatre in New York. Is a faculty member of the National Theater Institute at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center.
Tim Wiggins (Actor) .. Porkchop Langdon
Chuck Porter (Actor) .. Ivan
Comika Griffin (Actor) .. Nurse Becky
Don Johnson (Actor) .. Nash Bridges
Born: December 15, 1949
Birthplace: Flat Creek, Missouri, United States
Trivia: Born December 15th, 1949, film and television actor Don Johnson first studied his trade at the University of Kansas and the American Conservatory Theatre. A professional actor by his late teens, Johnson's earliest stage and screen assignments frequently found him cast as a fallen innocent. Johnson first gained national press coverage as the 20-year-old star of the counterculture comedy The Magic Garden of Stanley Sweetheart (1970). His next significant credit was the 1975 cult favorite A Boy and His Dog, based on a trenchant Harlan Ellison yarn. Personal and professional entanglements kept him alternately on and offscreen until 1984, when he staged a comeback as Sonny Crockett, a rough-shod yet impossibly hip, sailboat-dwelling Miami-area vice squad detective assigned to work opposite Detective Ricardo Tubbs (Philip Michael Thomas), in Michael Mann's seminal small-screen cop drama Miami Vice (1984-89). To call the program (and Johnson's role in it) "trend-setting" would be a massive understatement; the character of Crockett, with his pastel sports jackets worn atop scoop-neck t-shirts, dark sunglasses, pants without socks, and a two or three-day growth of unshaven beard, rewrote the rules of men's haute-couture for almost a decade and posited Johnson as one of American culture's top male sex symbols for a lengthy duration as well (for a time, it became seemingly impossible to look at the cover of GQ or Esquire without spotting the actor). As the series rolled on, it witnessed Crockett's character undergoing many life changes, including the violent deaths of numerous colleagues on the force and a strange, strange plot point in which he accidentally began to confuse his own identity with that of his drug-pushing alter ego in the Miami crime world. During this second flush of fame, Johnson also distinguished himself as a dependable TV-movie leading man (notably as Ben Quick in the 1985 remake of The Long Hot Summer) and a champion powerboat racer. He also played a series of interesting leading roles in films of extremely variable quality, including Dennis Hopper's post-noir thriller The Hot Spot (1990), Mary Agnes Donoghue's romantic drama Paradise (1991) (opposite longtime partner Melanie Griffith) and Kevin Costner's hard-living buddy in Ron Shelton's gentle sports-themed romantic comedy Tin Cup (1996). During the 1995-96 season, Johnson enjoyed another career renaissance that distinctly mirrored his Vice success, as star of the TV weekly Nash Bridges. On that program, Johnson played the title character, a tough-as-nails San Francisco cop working the beat as an inspector with the municipal police department's Special Investigators Unit. Episodes found him artnered up, from assignment to assignment, with the wiseacre Hispanic detective Joe Dominguez (Cheech Marin). With relentless devotion to the demands of the force and an ere-present jocularity, Bridges worked his way through a series of seemingly impossible criminal investigations over the course of five seasons. He also attempted to balance life on the squad with a difficult personal life that included a strained relationship with his ex (Annette O'Toole) and the provision of much-needed paternal guidance for his teenage daughter (Jodi O'Keefe). No matter where he has stood careerwise, Johnson has always proven good copy for the gossip columns and tabloids thanks to his on-again off-again marriage to actress Melanie Griffith, whom he wed and divorced twice over the course of twenty years; the two ended their union for the second time in 1996. Though he found little in the way of success, Johnson worked steadily through out the late nineties and early 2000s on films including Goodbye Lover (1999), Word of Honor (2003), and Moondance Alexander (2007). The actor also played a small role in the action thriller Machete in 2010.
Cheech Marin (Actor) .. Joe Dominguez
Born: July 13, 1946
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: The son of a Los Angeles police officer, American actor/director Richard "Cheech" Marin earned his nickname through his fondness for the Chicano food, specialty cheecharone. An excellent student (if something of a class cutup), Marin entered California State University, only to drop out and hightail it to Canada to avoid the draft. While working as an improvisational comedian with Vancouver's City Work troupe, Marin teamed with Tommy Chong; the Hispanic/Asian duo created the characters of Cheech and Chong, a pair of zoned-out dopers ever in search of the "perfect joint." On the strength of their bestselling record albums, Cheech and Chong were signed for the inexpensive comedy film Up in Smoke (1978), which wound up as one of Warner Bros.' highest-grossing films (not to mention one of its highest, period). As the drug culture lost its momentum, so did the film career of Cheech and Chong, with each of the team's subsequent films making less money than its predecessor. By the time C & C headlined the atrocious The Corsican Brothers (1984), the jig was up. Cheech and Chong split up in 1984 (though they remained friends) and went off to their own projects. While it was Chong who directed many of the team's features, Marin sat in the director's chair for the best of his post-team projects, the 1987 film Born in East L.A, inspired by Cheech's own parody music video. Marin's starring film is Shrimp on the Barbie (1990) contained no drug jokes and fewer laughs (an indication of its quality is the fact that the director had his name removed from the credits in favor of the pseudonymous "Alan Smithee"). Lately regarded as an elder statesman of the counterculture, Marin has kept busy with cameo roles, cartoon voice-overs (Oliver and Company, Ferngully, The Lion King), and a brief stint as a costar of the 1992 TV sitcom "Golden Palace." In 1996, he began co-starring opposite Don Johnson in the television drama Nash Bridges. Around this time he began a fruitful collaboration with independent filmmaker Robert Rodriguez. Marin had a part in Desperado, and played multiple characters in the vampire film From Dusk 'til Dawn for the Austin based maverick. Marin was cast as Kevin Costner's best friend in the golf comedy Tin Cup in 1996. The beginning of the next decade brought Marin an unexpected new audience as he began a series of humorous appearances in family films and lent his vocal talents to a number of animated films. He appeared in all three segments of Rodriguez's Spy Kids series, did vocal work in Good Boy, and voiced one of the Cars in Pixar's film. He also played small parts in John Sayles Silver City, and Bob Dylan's Masked & Anonymous.
Jeff Perry (Actor) .. Insp. Harvey Leek
Born: August 16, 1955
Birthplace: Highland Park, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Founded what would become Chicago's Steppenwolf Theatre Company in 1974 with his high-school friends Gary Sinise and Terry Kinney, and served as its artistic director in the 1980s. Met first wife, Laurie Metcalf, when both were theater students at Illinois State University. Made movie debut in Remember My Name, a 1978 drama produced by Robert Altman; appeared in The Wedding (directed by Altman) later that year. Has appeared on some 40 TV series, including Columbo, Family Ties, thirtysomething, L.A. Law, Frasier, NYPD Blue, ER, The West Wing, Lost, Prison Break, Cold Case, C.S.I: Crime Scene Investigation and CSI: New York. Was a regular on CBS's Nash Bridges (1996-2001) A semiregular on Grey's Anatomy (he plays Meredith Grey's father, Thatcher), he's married to series casting director Linda Lowy.
Jaime P. Gomez (Actor) .. Evan Cortez
Born: August 31, 1965

Before / After
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The Fall Guy
03:00 am