Fallen Angel


02:00 am - 04:00 am, Today on Hallmark Mystery ()

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About this Broadcast
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Gary Sinise gives a touching performance as Terry McQuinn, a big-shot attorney in Los Angeles who has lost sight of what's truly important in life until a trip home to Maine upon his father's death reunites him with a close friend from his past. Joely Richardson. Warren Wentworth: Gordon Pinsent. Olivia: Jordy Benattar. Mac McQuinn: Michael Rhoades. Michael Switzer directed the film, based on the book by Don J. Snyder.

2003 English Stereo
Drama Romance Adaptation Christmas

Cast & Crew
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Gary Sinise (Actor) .. Terry McQuinn
Joely Richardson (Actor) .. Katherine Wentworth
Gordon Pinsent (Actor) .. Warren Wentworth
Jordy Benattar (Actor) .. Olivia
Michael Rhoades (Actor) .. Mac McQuinn
Rick Roberts (Actor) .. Charles Wentworth (age 30)
Dave Nichols (Actor) .. Charles Wentworth (age 60)
Philip Craig (Actor) .. Lawrence
Kate Trotter (Actor) .. Callie
Art Hindle (Actor) .. Saunders
Bruce Gooch (Actor) .. Chief Kane
Jake Brockman (Actor) .. Young Terry
Ryan Simpkins (Actor) .. Young Katherine
James McGowan (Actor) .. Jack
Alisa Wiegers (Actor) .. Mrs. Wentworth
Shawn Roberts (Actor) .. Terry (age 18)
Boyd Banks (Actor) .. Birdie
James McCowan (Actor) .. Billings
Grace Armas (Actor) .. Nurse
Murray Oliver (Actor) .. Worker
Lorne Cardinal (Actor) .. Clerk
Joanne Reece (Actor) .. Nurse No. 2
Kevin Hare (Actor) .. Robbins
Quancita Hamilton (Actor) .. Roadside Crewperson
Alice Faye (Actor)

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Gary Sinise (Actor) .. Terry McQuinn
Born: March 17, 1955
Birthplace: Blue Island, IL
Trivia: A founding member of the Chicago's influential Steppenwolf Theatre Company (along with Terry Kinney and Jeff Perry) when he was barely 19, Gary Sinise made his professional acting debut at the age of 17 in a 1973 production of The Physicist. Sinise himself would sum up his career best by noting that the secret to a successful career is not to focus on taking off like a rocket, but to "always keep the engine running." With a prolific and well-defined career on each side of the camera in addition to his stage work, keeping the engine running is precisely what Sinise has done, and that engine has been well maintained.Born March 17th, 1955 in Blue Island, IL, Sinise's attraction to the stage was supported early on through the encouragement of Barbara Patterson, his high school drama teacher. After a role in West Side Story, Sinise's love for the stage was set in stone, leading him to found the Steppenwolf Theatre Company, where he would meet his future wife, actress Moira Harris. Initially based in a church basement, the Steppenwolf quickly grew in stature and respectability, serving as the breeding ground for such talents as John Malkovich and Laurie Metcalf, and earning critical praise with productions like Sam Shepard's True West, which would eventually become the company's Broadway debut. Sinise's film and television career began as a director on such television series' as Crime Story and thirtysomething, eventually leading to his feature directorial debut with the rural drama Miles From Home (starring fellow Steppenwolfers Metcalf and Malkovich) and his feature acting debut in the haunting war drama A Midnight Clear (1991). Sinise's love for the stage resurfaced with his ambitious 1992 remake of Of Mice and Men (in which he also starred, again with fellow Steppenwolf alum Malkovich, in the roles they had both portrayed on stage).But it was his performance as the physically crippled and emotionally shattered Lt. Dan in Robert Zemeckis' blockbuster Forrest Gump (1994) that brought Sinise to light as an actor of considerable talent. His sensitive portrait of a once invincible soldier reduced to a pathetic self-pitying ghost of his own former glory was the perfect vessel for the actor's quiet intensity and florid emotional capabilities, and brought him the Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. That same year Sinise had a starring role in the long-anticipated television adaptation of Stephen King's apocalyptic thriller The Stand.Sinise continued to display his dramatic abilities through the '90s, rejoining Gump co-star Tom Hanks in Ron Howard's Apollo 13 and starring as both Harry S. Truman and George Wallace in the biopics Truman (1995) (for which he won a Cable Ace Award and a Golden Globe) and George Wallace (1997) (for which he won an Emmy). With minor appearances in The Green Mile and Being John Malkovich (both 1999), Sinise brought in the year 2000 in a sci-fi mode, with Brian De Palma's existential thriller Mission to Mars and as a weapons engineer with questionable motives in Imposter. Throughout the next decade Sinise worked in a variety of films including The Big Bounce, The Human Stain, and The Forgotten. However he had is most visible role on the small screen when he was cast as the male lead in the third of the popular CSI series, CSI: NY. In 2006 he brought his theater trained voice to the animated Open Season.
Joely Richardson (Actor) .. Katherine Wentworth
Born: January 09, 1965
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: British actress Joely Richardson is the daughter of actress Vanessa Redgrave and director Tony Richardson, the granddaughter of actors Michael Redgrave and Rachel Kempson, niece of actors Corin and Lynn Redgrave, and sister of actress Natasha Richardson. Thus, it would be fair to say that Richardson has acting in her genes. Her film credits range from Peter Greenaway's arthouse favorite Drowning By Numbers (1988) -- in which she is one of three murderesses, all named Cissy Colpitts -- to the abortive musical I'll Do Anything (1993) to the winning 1996 remake of 101 Dalmatians. She has repeatedly demonstrated a capacity for tackling difficult subjects, as was the case with Sister My Sister (1994), which cast her as a maid caught up in an incestuous lesbian love affair with her sister, and Hollow Reed (1996), in which she played the divorced mother of a young boy who is abused by her live-in boyfriend. In 2000, she was seen in a number of projects, including the romantic comedy Return to Me and the revolutionary war drama The Patriot. In 2003, Richardson landed a starring role as Dr. Sean McNamera's (Dylan Walsh) frustrated wife on F/X's popular nighttime drama, Nip/Tuck. A quick transition to The Tudors followed when Nip/Tuck went off the air in 2010, and following a turn as Young Queen Elizabeth I in Roland Emmerich's Shakespearian conspiracy drama Anonymous (2011), Richardson could been seen as the mysterious Anita Vanger in David Fincher's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.
Gordon Pinsent (Actor) .. Warren Wentworth
Born: July 12, 1930
Died: February 26, 2023
Birthplace: Grand Falls, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
Trivia: Gordon Pinsent is one of Canada's busiest and most recognizable character actors. Many viewers remember Pinsent as the President of the United States in Colossus: The Forbin Project (1969). Kids have heard him as the voice of the title character in the animated HBO series Babar (1989-93). Pinsent's other weekly TV roles have included Sergeant Scott in The Forest Rangers (1964), the title character in Quentin Dergens MP (1966), Hap Shaughnessy in Red Green (1990- ) and Sergeant Frazer in Due South (1994-95). Gordon Pinsent has also occasionally written and directed, performing both functions in the 1968 Canadian feature film John and the Missus.
Jordy Benattar (Actor) .. Olivia
Born: November 26, 1993
Michael Rhoades (Actor) .. Mac McQuinn
Rick Roberts (Actor) .. Charles Wentworth (age 30)
Born: November 13, 1965
Birthplace: Hamilton, Ontario
Dave Nichols (Actor) .. Charles Wentworth (age 60)
Philip Craig (Actor) .. Lawrence
Born: September 03, 1950
Kate Trotter (Actor) .. Callie
Born: February 05, 1953
Art Hindle (Actor) .. Saunders
Born: July 21, 1948
Birthplace: City of Halifax
Trivia: Veteran actor Art Hindle had already established a successful career in finance when he decided to try his hand at acting. He'd always had an interest in the arts and had been involved in local theater since his teens, but it wasn't until he was 21 and working as a stockbroker that he decided to pursue acting full time and relocate with his family to L.A. He began appearing in movies and on TV in the early '70s, showing up in episodes of shows like Starsky & Hutch and Baretta. In addition to starring roles on the short-lived crime drama Kingston Confidential in 1977 and the popular nighttime soap Dallas in 1981, Hindle would largely spend the following decades amassing a long résumé of single-episode appearances, from JAG to Mutant X to Puppets Who Kill. He would also appear in a number of TV movies and feature films and starred in the series Paradise Falls from 2001 to 2008.
Bruce Gooch (Actor) .. Chief Kane
Jake Brockman (Actor) .. Young Terry
Ryan Simpkins (Actor) .. Young Katherine
Born: March 25, 1998
James McGowan (Actor) .. Jack
Born: May 30, 1960
Birthplace: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Trivia: The youngest of three brothers.Worked as a copy writer at an advertising agency after graduating college.Worked in the audio-visual department of McGill University.Started acting as a hobby, performing in student plays at the William Shatner Building.Decided to become a professional actor at the age of 36.His work in The Border earned him nominations at the Golden Nymph Awards and the Gemini Awards.
Alisa Wiegers (Actor) .. Mrs. Wentworth
Shawn Roberts (Actor) .. Terry (age 18)
Born: April 02, 1984
Birthplace: Stratford, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: The hunky and slightly burly actor Shawn Roberts debuted onscreen in his native Canada in the early '90s, but made his first significant impression among American audiences, in Hollywood, over a decade later. After receiving prominent billing as Tyler in the direct-to-video frat-boy comedy National Lampoon's Going the Distance, Roberts played Calvin Murtaugh, the straight-faced son of Eugene Levy, in the family-oriented Steve Martin vehicle Cheaper by the Dozen 2 (2005). In 2007, the actor essayed two horror roles, in the pictures Skinwalkers and George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead.
Boyd Banks (Actor) .. Birdie
Born: April 16, 1964
James McCowan (Actor) .. Billings
Grace Armas (Actor) .. Nurse
Murray Oliver (Actor) .. Worker
Lorne Cardinal (Actor) .. Clerk
Born: January 06, 1964
Birthplace: Sucker Creek, Alberta, Canada
Trivia: Is of Cree descent and has played First Nations characters in a number of productions such as Tecumseh in documentary series Canada: A People's History.Was the first Aboriginal student to earn a BFA in Acting from the University of Alberta.Is a former rugby player and is a rugby union enthusiast.Played rugby for the Edmonton Druids RFC and later for the Strathcona Druids.Co-directed the documentary Chasing Lear which is about the all-Aboriginal cast National Arts Centre theatre production of King Lear in which Lorne played the Duke of Albany.
Joanne Reece (Actor) .. Nurse No. 2
Kevin Hare (Actor) .. Robbins
Quancita Hamilton (Actor) .. Roadside Crewperson
Alice Faye (Actor)
Born: May 05, 1915
Died: May 09, 1998
Trivia: The daughter of a New York City cop, 14-year-old Alice Faye lied about her age to secure her first chorus girl job in 1929. While appearing in the 1933-1934 edition of George White's Scandals, Faye became the protégée of the show's star, Rudy Vallee, touring with Vallee's orchestra as vocalist. At Vallee's insistence, she was cast in the 1934 Fox Studios film version of George White's Scandals, elevated to the leading role when Lillian Harvey walked off the set. Despite unpleasant tabloid coverage when Vallee's wife sued her for alienation of her husband's affections, Faye was kept on by Fox, which lightened her already blonde hair and attempted to groom her as the "new Jean Harlow." After a few negligible leading roles in such Fox productions as She Learned About Sailors (1934) and 365 Nights in Hollywood (1935), she established her screen image as a tough, contralto-voiced cookie with a heart of gold, her popularity ascending with each successive film. During this period, she wed her frequent co-star Tony Martin, a union which lasted until 1940. Though a favorite with fans and coworkers alike, Faye regularly put her film career in jeopardy by clashing with 20th Century Fox head man Darryl F. Zanuck, who, realizing that he couldn't very well throw her off the payroll (not with such box-office hits as In Old Chicago and Rose of Washington Square to her credit), decided to "punish" her by hiring Betty Grable as Faye's potential successor. The press had a field day fabricating a deadly rivalry between Faye and Grable, though in fact the actresses got along reasonably well and were felicitously teamed in Tin Pan Alley (1940). Faye's feud with Zanuck came to a head in 1945 when her leading role in Fallen Angel was cut down to practically nothing. She quit movies cold, electing to devote her time to her second husband, bandleader Phil Harris, and her two daughters. Though banned from films by Zanuck, Faye flourished on radio, co-starring with Harris on a popular comedy series which ran for several successful seasons. In 1962, she returned to the screen in the ill-advised remake of State Fair, in which the 47-year-old actress played the mother of Pat Boone. She made several TV guest appearances in the 1960s and 1970s, toured the nightclub and straw hat circuit, and co-starred with John Payne in a Broadway revival of Good News. Since the death of Phil Harris in 1994, Alice Faye participated in several TV specials about Hollywood's "Golden Age," and remained in contact with her numerous, still-faithful fans until her death from cancer in early May 1998.
Linda Darnell (Actor)
Born: October 16, 1923
Died: April 10, 1965
Trivia: Daughter of a Texas postal clerk, actress Linda Darnell trained to be a dancer, and came to Hollywood's attention as a photographer's model. Though only 15, Darnell looked quite mature and seductive in her first motion picture, Hotel For Women (1937), and before she was twenty she found herself the leading lady of such 20th Century-Fox male heartthrobs as Tyrone Power and Henry Fonda. Weary of thankless good-girl roles, Darnell scored a personal triumph when loaned out to United Artists for September Storm (1944), in which she played a "Scarlett O'Hara" type Russian vixen. Thereafter, 20th Century-Fox assigned the actress meatier, more substantial parts, culminating in the much-sought-after leading role in 1947's Forever Amber. Director Joseph L. Mankiewicz followed up this triumph by giving Darnell two of her best parts--Paul Douglas' "wrong side of the tracks" wife in A Letter to Three Wives (1949) and Richard Widmark's racist girlfriend in No Way Out (1950) (though befitting her star status, Darnell "reformed" at the end of both films). When her Fox contract ended in 1952, Darnell found herself cast adrift in Hollywood, the good roles fewer and farther between; by the mid-1960s, she was appearing as a nightclub singer, touring in summer theatre, and accepting supporting roles on television. Tragically, Darnell died in 1965 of severe burns suffered in a house fire. Ironically, Darnell had a lifelong fear of dying in flames, speaking publicly of her phobia after appearing in a "burned at the stake" sequence in the 1946 film Anna and the King of Siam.

Before / After
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