Champion


06:30 am - 08:30 am, Saturday, January 24 on WXNY Daystar (32.1)

Average User Rating: 5.83 (6 votes)
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About this Broadcast
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In this inspiring faith-based drama, a dirt-track racer must get his life together and prove himself to his young daughter after his rivalry with a fellow driver leads to tragedy. His life intersects with another man fighting demons of his own and an unexpected bond forms between the two.

2017 English Stereo
Drama Auto Racing Religion

Cast & Crew
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Andrew Cheney (Actor) .. Sean Weathers
Faith Renee Kennedy (Actor) .. Gracie Weathers
Gary Graham (Actor) .. Jack Reed
Robert Amaya (Actor) .. Rex
Isaiah Stratton (Actor) .. Ray Reed
Kera O'Bryon (Actor) .. Real Estate Agent
Rebekah Cook (Actor) .. HR Clerk
Cameron Arnett (Actor) .. Logan Evans
Liam Peeples (Actor) .. Jeffrey Sutton
Ty Hunter (Actor) .. Sean's Pit Crew
Stephen Hullfish (Actor) .. TV News Reporter
Kristi Walker (Actor) .. Christine Sutton
Collin Alexander Brown (Actor) .. Wesley Sutton
Richard Holden (Actor) .. Owen Roberts
Portia Cue (Actor) .. Annabelle Evans
Kathy Dillon (Actor) .. Michelle Gardner
Maddox Robinson (Actor) .. Aaron Sutton
Lindsay Sparks (Actor) .. Sam
Taryn Chidebelu-Eze (Actor) .. Sheila
Philip Cunningham (Actor) .. Minister
Diane Tuttle (Actor) .. Concerned Woman
Rachel Grubb (Actor) .. Miss Jenny
John Waller (Actor) .. Ray's Crew Chief
Cliff Brannon (Actor) .. Businessman
Merce Cunningham (Actor) .. Minister
Steve Hullfish (Actor) .. TV Race Reporter
Ruth Roman (Actor)

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Andrew Cheney (Actor) .. Sean Weathers
Trivia: Participated in some plays when he was a kid.Was part of short films in high school and college.Started taking acting classes after college.Began his romance to his now wife actress Kara Killmer while filming Beyond the Mask in 2015.Known for Seasons of Gray (2013), 77 Chances (2015) and Beyond the Mask (2015).
Faith Renee Kennedy (Actor) .. Gracie Weathers
Gary Graham (Actor) .. Jack Reed
Born: June 07, 1950
Trivia: Lead actor Gary Graham first appeared onscreen in the late '80s.
Robert Amaya (Actor) .. Rex
Isaiah Stratton (Actor) .. Ray Reed
Kera O'Bryon (Actor) .. Real Estate Agent
Rebekah Cook (Actor) .. HR Clerk
Katherine Shepler (Actor)
Cameron Arnett (Actor) .. Logan Evans
Liam Peeples (Actor) .. Jeffrey Sutton
Ty Hunter (Actor) .. Sean's Pit Crew
Stephen Hullfish (Actor) .. TV News Reporter
Kristi Walker (Actor) .. Christine Sutton
Collin Alexander Brown (Actor) .. Wesley Sutton
Richard Holden (Actor) .. Owen Roberts
Portia Cue (Actor) .. Annabelle Evans
Kathy Dillon (Actor) .. Michelle Gardner
Maddox Robinson (Actor) .. Aaron Sutton
Lindsay Sparks (Actor) .. Sam
Taryn Chidebelu-Eze (Actor) .. Sheila
Philip Cunningham (Actor) .. Minister
Diane Tuttle (Actor) .. Concerned Woman
Rachel Grubb (Actor) .. Miss Jenny
John Waller (Actor) .. Ray's Crew Chief
Cliff Brannon (Actor) .. Businessman
Merce Cunningham (Actor) .. Minister
Born: April 16, 1919
Died: June 26, 2009
Trivia: An unparalleled innovator in the realm of avant-garde dance, Merce Cunningham began his training at the Cornish School in the 1930s, where he was discovered by Martha Graham. He danced as a soloist in her company for six years, where he met personal and professional partner, composer John Cage. He would go on to found the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, which would pioneer new and sometimes controversial areas in the interpretation of music through the body, including new takes on cadence, rhythm, technology, narrative, and more. He continued to dance and engage in active dialogue with the media and dance community at large about the philosophy of performance art until his death in 2009, at the age of 90.
Steve Hullfish (Actor) .. TV Race Reporter
Arthur Kennedy (Actor)
Born: February 17, 1914
Died: January 05, 1990
Trivia: American actor Arthur Kennedy was usually cast in western or contemporary roles in his films; on stage, it was another matter. A graduate of the Carnegie-Mellon drama department, Kennedy's first professional work was with the Globe Theatre Company touring the midwest in abbreviated versions of Shakespearian plays. From here he moved into the American company of British stage star Maurice Evans, who cast Kennedy in his Broadway production of Richard III. Kennedy continued doing Shakespeare for Evans and agit-prop social dramas for the Federal Theatre, but when time came for his first film, City for Conquest (1940), he found himself in the very ordinary role of James Cagney's musician brother. Throughout his first Warner Bros. contract, Kennedy showed promise as a young character lead, but films like Bad Men of Missouri (1941), They Died with Their Boots On (1942) and Air Force (1943) did little to tap the actor's classical training. After World War II service, Kennedy returned to Broadway, creating the role of Chris Keller in Arthur Miller's All My Sons (1947). This led to an even more prestigious Miller play, the Pulitzer Prize winning Death of a Salesman (1948), in which Kennedy played Biff. Sadly, Kennedy was not permitted to repeat these plum roles in the film versions of these plays, but the close association with Miller continued on stage; Kennedy would play John Proctor in The Crucible (1957) and the doctor brother in The Price (1965). While his film work during this era resulted in several Academy Award nominations, Kennedy never won; he was honored, however, with the New York Film Critics award for his on-target portrayal of a newly blinded war veteran battling not only his handicap but also his inbred racism in Bright Victory (1951). The biggest box office success with which Kennedy was associated was Lawrence of Arabia (1962), wherein he replaced the ailing Edmund O'Brien in the role of the Lowell Thomas character. Working continually in film and TV projects of wildly varying quality, Kennedy quit the business cold in the mid-1980s, retiring to live with family members in a small eastern town. Kennedy was so far out of the Hollywood mainstream in the years before his death that, when plans were made to restore the fading Lawrence of Arabia prints and Kennedy was needed to re-record his dialogue, the restorers were unable to locate the actor through Screen Actor's Guild channels -- and finally had to trace him through his hometown telephone directory.
Marilyn Maxwell (Actor)
Born: August 03, 1921
Died: March 20, 1972
Trivia: Her mother was a piano accompanist for dancer Ruth St. Denis; Maxwell traveled with her as a child, and at age three made her first stage appearance in a dance number. After taking singing lessons, as a teenager she became a band vocalist and sang on radio. She trained for the stage at the Pasadena Playhouse. In 1942 MGM signed her as a contract player, and she played leads and second leads in numerous movies, both light and dramatic. During World War Two and the Korean War she entertained American servicemen all over the world. Her film work tapered off after the mid '50s, and she entertained in top nightclubs and appeared in several stage productions in stock. She starred briefly in the TV series Bus Stop. In 1967 she headlined a burlesque-type stage show in Brooklyn; her act included a striptease. From 1944-46 she was married to actor John Conte, and from 1954-60 she was married to screenwriter Jerry Davis. She died at 50 of high blood pressure and a pulmonary disorder.
Ruth Roman (Actor)
Born: December 22, 1922
Died: September 06, 1999
Birthplace: Lynn, Massachusetts
Trivia: Roman studied acting at the Bishop Lee Dramatic School and worked on stage before becoming a leading lady of Hollywood films in the mid '40s. (She later moved into character roles.) The film for which she first received good reviews and critical attention was Champion (1949). She tended to play determined, strong-willed characters who are cold externally but inwardly passionate. She is best remembered for her starring role in Hitchcock's Strangers on a Train (1951) opposite Farley Granger. During the rest of the '50s she primarily appeared in routine films. She has also done much TV work, including the series The Long Hot Summer.
Lola Albright (Actor)
Born: July 20, 1925
Died: March 23, 2017
Trivia: Lola Albright's meat-and-potatoes job as switchboard operator of an Ohio radio station led to on-the-air work in minor roles. She then worked as a model before travelling to Hollywood in 1948. Impressed by Lola's hands-on-hips self-assuredness, producer Stanley Kramer cast her opposite Kirk Douglas in 1949's Champion. The film should have secured Lola's stardom, but didn't; for nearly a year after its release she couldn't get an acting job, and for a long period she subsisted on peanut-butter sandwiches. After marrying her Good Humor Man (1950) co-star Jack Carson, Lola found that her husband preferred her at home rather than in the studio. She acceded to his wishes, taking film and TV work only sporadically; still, by 1958 the marriage dissolved due to the very career conflicts that both Lola and Jack had tried to avoid. From 1958 through 1961, Lola played sultry nightclub songstress Edie Hart on the TV private eye series Peter Gunn. Lola's post-Gunn film roles alternated between fascinating (especially her over-the-hill stripper in Cold Wind in August [1964]) and merely rent-paying (David Niven's antiseptic spouse in The Impossible Years [1968]). In 1966, Albright briefly replaced a seriously ill Dorothy Malone in the role of Constance McKenzie on the prime time TV serial Peyton Place. Albright died in 2017, at age 92.
Luis Van Rooten (Actor)
Born: November 29, 1906
Died: June 17, 1973
Trivia: Luis Van Rooten, he of the velvet voice and Mephistopholean countenance, was born in Mexico City and educated at the University of Pennsylvania. Van Rooten was a moderately successful architect before he decided upon an acting career. He was busiest in radio, playing the title role in The Adventures of Nero Wolfe, and appearing regularly on such series as Box 13, Bulldog Drummond, Chandu the Magician, The Damon Runyon Theater, Escape, John's Other Wife, and X Minus One. On television, Van Rooten was prominently featured on One Man's Family, Major Dell Conway of the Flying Tigers, and Wonderful John Acton, and was the frequent narrator of the 1960s documentary series Perspectives on Greatness. Off camera, Van Rooten enjoyed a reputation as an expert horticulturalist. Luis Van Rooten's film career began with 1944's The Hitler Gang and ended with 1961's Operation Eichmann; he played the same character, Nazi chieftan Heinrich Himmler, in both.

Before / After
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Reflections
06:00 am
Superbook
08:30 am