Soul Food


5:00 pm - 7:00 pm, Today on WHPX Bounce (26.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Saga of three sisters who must sort out their differences when their beloved mother becomes ill. The story is seen through the eyes of Ahmad, the young son of one of the sisters.

1997 English Stereo
Drama Comedy Comedy-drama

Cast & Crew
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Vanessa L. Williams (Actor) .. Teri
Vivica A. Fox (Actor) .. Maxine
Nia Long (Actor) .. Bird
Irma P. Hall (Actor) .. Mother
Michael Beach (Actor) .. Miles
Mekhi Phifer (Actor) .. Lem
Brandon Hammond (Actor) .. Ahmad
Jeffrey D. Sams (Actor) .. Kenny
Gina Ravera (Actor) .. Faith
Carl Wright (Actor) .. Rev. Williams
Mel Jackson (Actor) .. Simuel
John M. Watson, Sr. (Actor) .. Uncle Pete
M.T. Alexander (Actor) .. Jada
Lawrence Petty (Actor) .. Harome
Marcia Wright (Actor) .. Nicole
Bernard Mixon (Actor) .. Dr. Benson
Hamp Clemons (Actor) .. Hamp
Theron Touche Lykes (Actor) .. Blimp
Martell Hill Edmond (Actor) .. Ahmad (age 4)
Ras Majah Couzan (Actor) .. Dread Man
James W. Boinski (Actor) .. Foreman
Mike Bacarella (Actor) .. Printing Company Owner
Joan Collaso (Actor) .. Choir Member No. 1
Donn C. Harper (Actor) .. Funeral Minister
George Brashear (Actor) .. Blimp's Henchman No. 1
Larry C. Tankson (Actor) .. Blimp's Henchman No. 2
Austin Curtis (Actor) .. Family Member
Sylvester Phifer (Actor) .. Bartender
Malik Yoba (Actor) .. Studio Engineer
Kenneth "babyface" Edmonds (Actor) .. Band Member
Kevon Edmonds (Actor) .. Band Member
Melvin Edmonds (Actor) .. Band Member
Jo Jo Hailey (Actor) .. Band Member
K-Ci Hailey (Actor) .. Band Member
Simon Horrocks (Actor) .. Band Member
Randy Walker (Actor) .. Band Member
Tamara Braun (Actor) .. Teri's Secretary

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Did You Know..
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Vanessa L. Williams (Actor) .. Teri
Born: March 18, 1963
Birthplace: Millwood, New York, United States
Trivia: The roller coaster career of actress and singer Vanessa L. Williams provides an excellent example of fortitude, resilience, and real talent winning out over adversity. In 1983, Williams made history when she was the first black woman to be chosen Miss America. For a time she was the country's darling as she toured about, attending to her royal duties, but when Penthouse magazine published nude photographs that she had posed for years before, Williams lost her crown, two million dollars in product endorsements, and the lead in a Broadway show; suddenly, America's sweetheart found herself the subject of moral outrage, criticisms, and cruel jokes. But though her career and reputation were in shambles, Williams kept her dignity and faith, and continued on, first making her name as a successful R&B singer (one of her songs went gold, "Save the Best for Last") and then receiving considerable critical acclaim on Broadway for starring in Kiss of the Spider Woman. Williams made her feature film debut in The Pick-Up Artist (1987) and went on to forge a steady career as an actress. Notable subsequent film roles include one co-starring with Arnold Schwarzenegger in Eraser (1996) and the part of a career-obsessed wife in Soul Food (1997). After spending the early 2000s working on theatrical productions, including the Broadway Musical Revue Sondheim on Sondheim, Williams returned to the big screen for the award winning drama My Brother in 2007, and won rave reviews in 2006 for her portrayal of Wilhelmina Slater, the ruthless editor-and-chief of a fashion magazine on ABC's hit series Ugly Betty, and was praised for her portrayal of Renee Perry in the seventh season of Desperate Housewives. After Housewives ended, she starred in the short-lived series 666 Park Avenue. She then returned to the stage, appearing opposite Cicely Tyson in The Trip to Bountiful.
Vivica A. Fox (Actor) .. Maxine
Born: July 30, 1964
Birthplace: Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Trivia: Vivacious actress Vivica A. Fox has been attracting attention for performances that mix equal parts sass and class since making her 1989 screen debut in Born on the Fourth of July. A native of Indianapolis, where she was born July 30, 1964, Fox got her start on television with a stint on the daytime soap Days of Our Lives. After making her debut as a hooker in Oliver Stone's aforementioned Born on the Fourth of July, the actress continued to do much of her work on television while appearing in the occasional film. She first attracted notice as Will Smith's girlfriend in the blockbuster Independence Day (1996); her dynamic turn earned her -- together with Smith -- the MTV Award for Best Kiss that year. Fox subsequently appeared in a diverse array of films, ranging from the acclaimed black ensemble romantic drama Soul Food (1997), which cast her as one of three sisters (the other two were played by Vanessa L. Williams and Nia Long), to Batman & Robin (1997), in which she played femme fatale Ms. B. Haven, to Why Do Fools Fall in Love (1998), which featured her in a critically lauded portrayal of one of the three wives of singer Frankie Lymon.Fox's profile declined somewhat in the new millenium, although an appearance in the battle-of-the-sexes comedy Two Can Play That Game caught the attention of Quentin Tarantino, who was casting his long-gestating fourth feature, Kill Bill. As the first victim of hired killer Uma Thurman, Fox brought a little blaxploitation-era sass to the role, making for a memorable, suburban-kitchen battle scene.In addition to her flourishing film work, Fox continued to work on the small screen, most notably as Dr. Lillian Price on Steven Bochco's predominately African American hospital drama City of Angels. 2005's one-season-only reality show The Starlet offered Fox the opportunity to pass on her actorly wisdom -- alongside head judge Faye Dunaway -- to a group of young hopefuls. The following year, she could be seen hoofing it up as a contestant on the astronomically popular ABC competition Dancing With the Stars. Though she worked steadily throughout the 2000s and continues to be active in the film industry, Fox has yet so far been unable to achieve the success she enjoyed in earlier years.
Nia Long (Actor) .. Bird
Born: October 30, 1970
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: A charismatic actress who possesses equal parts beauty and talent, Nia Long became a fixture of many African-American ensemble films of the late 1990s. Born in Brooklyn, New York, on October 30, 1970, Long developed an interest in acting at an early age. She received training from Betty Bridges, mother of former child star Todd Bridges (best known for his role on the TV series Diff'rent Strokes. Long got her start on TV, playing a character on the soap opera Guiding Light from 1991 to 1993. She earned her first helping of fame with her role on the popular sitcom Fresh Prince of Bel Air, which cast her as Will Smith's love interest. The actress made her film debut in John Singleton's acclaimed Boyz 'N the Hood (1991), sharing the screen with the likes of Cuba Gooding, Jr., Ice Cube, Angela Basset, and Lawrence Fishburne. She followed the film with Made in America (1993), a comedy that cast her as the daughter of Whoopi Goldberg and Ted Danson. Long subsequently established herself as a strong presence in romantic dramas and comedies, carving out a niche in such films as Soul Food (1997), Love Jones (1997), and The Best Man (1999). The actress also ventured into a number of other genres, as demonstrated by her roles in films ranging from supernatural horror (Stigmata) (1999) to big business crime drama (The Boiler Room) (1999) to inner-city police thriller (In Too Deep) (1999).As the new century got under way she had major roles in Big Momma's House and Boiler Room, as well as BAADASSSSS! On the small screen she joined the cast of the NBC drama Third Watch. In 2005 she was in the hit Are We There Yet?, and she followed that up with the sequel Are We Done Yet. Long also made time for the sequel Big Momma's House 2. In 2010 she appeared in the drama Mooz-lum. She reprised her role from The Best Man in the 2013 sequel The Best Man Holiday and later starred in The Single Moms Club.
Irma P. Hall (Actor) .. Mother
Born: June 03, 1935
Trivia: A matriarchal supporting actress of film and television whose quick wit and instantly likable persona has served her well on stage and screen, Irma P. Hall has found frequent work in such African-American-oriented dramas as A Family Thing, Soul Food, and Beloved. Equally effective with comedic roles in such features as Nothing to Lose and The Ladykillers, the multi-talented educator, poet, and actress actually stumbled into a career before the cameras by accident -- impressing director Raymond St. Jacques at a poetry reading so much that the filmmaker requested she essay a role in his 1973 crime film Book of Numbers. Her acting career subsequently snowballed, and it didn't take long for the increasingly busy actress to make quite a name for herself on both the stage and screen. The Texas native's early career consisted of teaching foreign languages at public schools in her home state. An interest in acting eventually led the then educator and poet to co-found a small repertory theater in Dallas. In 1973, Hall's performance in Book of Numbers resulted in frequent small-screen work. Her career continued to blossom throughout the 1980s, and with feature-film work increasing in the 1990s, she became more recognizable than ever thanks to work in such features as Backdraft and Straight Talk. Despite the fact that the roles she essayed were frequently relegated to the supporting variety, her onscreen presence was undeniable, and Hall continued throughout the decade with roles in Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil and Beloved. In A Family Thing, her role as a kindly blind African-American woman who helps her family warm to their newly discovered white relative earned Hall a Chicago Film Critics Association Award. An Image award for her role in the feature Soul Food followed in 1997 -- the same year she was voted "Chicagoan of the Year." The early 2000s found Hall flourishing on the small screen with roles in such series as Soul Food (a spin-off of the popular feature), A Girl Thing, and All Souls in addition to meatier parts in such made-for-television features as Miss Lettie and Me and An Unexpected Love. For her role as the perceptive landlady who catches wind of a criminal scheme in The Ladykillers, Irma P. Hall received the Jury Prize at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. Unfortunately, Hall suffered a massive heart attack while driving shortly before the film was released into theaters -- resulting in an automobile accident. Hall was eventually able to overcome her injuries thanks to intense physical rehabilitation, and later that same year, she could be seen in both the family short Gift for the Living (based on O. Henry's tale The Gift of the Magi) as well as the Michael Mann thriller Collateral.
Michael Beach (Actor) .. Miles
Born: October 30, 1963
Birthplace: Roxbury, Massachusetts
Trivia: Trained at Juilliard, actor Michael Beach worked in regional theater and off-Broadway productions before moving to Los Angeles to work on television and film. His stage credits include Much Ado About Nothing and Ascension Day. Though he appeared on television a lot in the late '80s, his film breakthrough came in Carl Franklin's 1991 crime thriller One False Move. He played the ex-con Pluto opposite Billy Bob Thornton, who also co-wrote the script. Thornton later wrote the role of Virgil for Beach in the 1996 drama A Family Thing, starring James Earl Jones. In 1993, he was a part of the ensemble cast in Robert Altman's award-winning feature Short Cuts. After playing opposite Laurence Fishburne in the crime thriller Bad Company (1995), Beach went on to play several unfaithful husbands. He cheated on Angela Bassett in Waiting to Exhale (1995), Vanessa Williams in Soul Food (1997), and Gloria Reuben on ER. Fellow ER cast member Eriq La Salle cast Beach in his sports drama Rebound: The Legend of Earl 'The Goat' Manigault (1996) for HBO. Back on television, Beach earned an Image Award for his role of Monte 'Doc' Parker on the NBC dramatic series Third Watch. In 2002, he re-teamed with actor/director La Salle for the lead role of Dr. Ty Adams in the thriller Crazy as Hell.
Mekhi Phifer (Actor) .. Lem
Born: December 29, 1974
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Although he had almost no prior acting experience, Mekhi Phifer made a highly auspicious screen debut as Strike, a 19-year-old petty drug dealer in Spike Lee's gritty urban drama Clockers (1995). A veteran of the Harlem streets, Phifer got his break when he attended an open casting call with only photo booth pictures of himself to give to interviewers. Displaying a rare charisma and intensity that was perfect for the role of Lee's ambitious protagonist, the novice actor beat the considerable odds against him and out-acted nearly 1,000 other applicants for the part. Following the success surrounding his Clockers debut, Phifer appeared in The Tuskegee Airmen, a powerful drama starring Laurence Fishburne that first aired on the HBO cable network. In 1997, Phifer made another strong impression playing the volatile but good-hearted Lem in George Tillman Jr.'s comedy drama Soul Food. The following year, he took part in the rage of teen horror films as one of the stars of I Still Know What You Did Last Summer and further established himself as one of Hollywood's more photogenic up-and-comers by starring alongside Julia Stiles and Josh Hartnett in O (2000), a loose adaptation of Shakespeare's Othello that saw Phifer as a high-school basketball star betrayed by his jealous best friend.Though a well-known performer, Phifer didn't have a bona fide hit until 2002 when he played Future alongside hip-hop star Eminem in the urban drama 8 Mile. That same year, Phifer found success on the small screen as well, joining the cast of NBC's long-running hit medical series ER. Phifer played the role of Dr. Greg Pratt for six seasons before exiting the show at the beginning of season 15 in 2008. Phifer continued to stick with television work after leaving the series, first joining the cast of Fox's crime-drama Lie to Me as an FBI agent, and then playing a CIA agent on the fourth season of the BBC's Torchwood.
Brandon Hammond (Actor) .. Ahmad
Born: February 06, 1984
Jeffrey D. Sams (Actor) .. Kenny
Born: September 01, 1966
Gina Ravera (Actor) .. Faith
Born: May 20, 1968
Birthplace: San Fernando, California, United States
Trivia: Her mother is African-American and her father is Puerto Rican. Is a classically trained dancer. Was originally planning to be a lawyer. Was nominated for an ALMA Award in 1999 for Outstanding Individual Performance in a Made-for-Television Movie or Mini-Series in a Crossover Role, for The Temptations. In 2007, founded Project Reina, an organization that educates young women about HIV/AIDS prevention.
Carl Wright (Actor) .. Rev. Williams
Born: January 01, 1932
Died: May 19, 2007
Trivia: Born in Orlando, FL, in 1932, Carl Wright began his show-business career as a tap dancer, touring the globe with various troupes. Wright also had careers as a songwriter and musician before beginning a movie career at age 65 in 1997's Soul Food. Wright had tremendous acting ability and an undeniable charisma onscreen, and he followed Soul Food's success with roles in Barbershop and Big Momma's House. Wright passed away in 2007 at the age of 75.
Mel Jackson (Actor) .. Simuel
Born: October 13, 1970
Morgan Méchelle Smith (Actor) .. Kelly
John M. Watson, Sr. (Actor) .. Uncle Pete
Born: January 10, 1937
M.T. Alexander (Actor) .. Jada
Lawrence Petty (Actor) .. Harome
Marcia Wright (Actor) .. Nicole
Bernard Mixon (Actor) .. Dr. Benson
Hamp Clemons (Actor) .. Hamp
Theron Touche Lykes (Actor) .. Blimp
Martell Hill Edmond (Actor) .. Ahmad (age 4)
Ras Majah Couzan (Actor) .. Dread Man
James W. Boinski (Actor) .. Foreman
Mike Bacarella (Actor) .. Printing Company Owner
Joan Collaso (Actor) .. Choir Member No. 1
Donn C. Harper (Actor) .. Funeral Minister
George Brashear (Actor) .. Blimp's Henchman No. 1
Larry C. Tankson (Actor) .. Blimp's Henchman No. 2
Born: October 12, 1955
Austin Curtis (Actor) .. Family Member
Sylvester Phifer (Actor) .. Bartender
Malik Yoba (Actor) .. Studio Engineer
Born: September 17, 1967
Birthplace: Bronx, New York, United States
Trivia: Despite the phenomenon of many young actors struggling for years to break into Hollywood -- driving taxicabs and waiting tables until determination, persistence, and raw ability reel in a breakthrough -- a select few stumble into acting and celebrity by sheer happenstance. Malik Yoba epitomizes this idea. While working in a field with virtually no connection to the entertainment industry, Yoba decided, simply for fun, to attend a casting call session for a forthcoming Disney comedy called Cool Runnings. When his phone rang one month later, that single call changed Yoba's life forever.Born September 17, 1967, in New York City, Yoba came of age in the crime-ridden ghettoes of the Bronx and Harlem -- so crime-ridden and dangerous, in fact, that he found it impossible to escape the reach of violence. He fell into the path of a bullet at age 15, which hit him in the neck but (fortunately) did not inflict permanent injury or disability. A self-described "misunderstood child," Yoba empathized deeply, as a young man, with troubled inner-city youth, and regarded many as the victims of widely held racial and social misperceptions. Yoba thus opted to devote himself to volunteering, and later (in his early twenties) to full-time counseling, with endless exhaustive hours spent in NYC youth organizations. His specialties and passions in this role included teaching music and acting to school-age children and adolescents, and he would often organize teenagers around a specific cause, to pass on the flame of activism -- encouraging them to mount their own grass-roots social activism. These years found Yoba paying fervent and frequent visits to such institutions as secondary schools, homeless shelters, and penitentiaries.The open casting call for Cool Runnings arrived in late 1991, and Yoba reportedly only sought it out on a lighthearted note, at a friend's request. By all accounts, he auditioned and then promptly forgot about it, only to be astonished one month later by the studio's callback and invitation to co-star in the picture alongside John Candy, Leon, and Doug E. Doug. Released in October 1993, the comedy stars Candy as the out-of-shape Olympic gold medalist Irv Blitzer, recruited by a bunch of happy-go-lucky Jamaicans to coach their bobsledding team in the 1988 Olympic Games; Yoba played irascible and cantankerous team member Yul Brenner. Critics responded coolly to the film (many attacking it as yet another in a seemingly endless string of formula sports pictures), but audiences disagreed, and Cool Runnings shot up to break the 68-million-dollar mark at the domestic box office.Yoba then landed one of the two highly coveted lead roles in the first season of the Fox series drama New York Undercover. Something of an ethnic update of ABC's controversial smash hit NYPD Blue (which had premiered exactly one year earlier), the gritty program co-starred Yoba and Michael de Lorenzo as, respectively, J.C. Williams and his partner, the Puerto Rican detective Eddie Torres, assigned to the Harlem beat and juggling personal difficulties (including extramarital parenthood, the ups and downs of "playing the field," and family members with substance-abuse problems) with routine drug busts and criminal pursuits. Critics heavily lauded the series for its intense, take-no-prisoners realism, high-voltage street slang, and careful reliance on hip contemporary music (via a slew of pop and R&B guest stars who turned up, one per week, for a live musical performance at the end of each episode).New York Undercover lasted four seasons and wrapped in late June 1998; in the meantime, a brief supporting role as cigar-store patron named The Skunk in Wayne Wang and Paul Auster's beautifully wrought and understated slice-of-life drama Smoke (released stateside in the late summer of 1995) reunited Yoba with occasional Undercover co-star Giancarlo Esposito. A turn in Wang's improvisational follow-up (and semi-sequel), Blue in the Face, ensued that fall.At around the same time, Yoba returned to activism with full force, helming a series of interactive lectures for troubled urban youth called "Why Are You on This Planet?" The program combined exercises in reading, writing, art, music, and visualization to teach children self-empowerment and the wisdom of solid decision-making. "Why Are You on This Planet?" qualified as an instant, triumphant success and continued seemingly without end; in the meantime, Yoba perpetuated his dramatic efforts as well, with contributions to innumerable motion pictures. He essayed a pair of small, impressive performances in two very different 1997 indie dramas -- first as Detective Carson in James Mangold's all-star New Jersey policier CopLand (1997), then as a studio engineer in George Tillman Jr.'s ensemble comedy drama Soul Food, alongside Vivica A. Fox and Vanessa L. Williams.These options suggested that Yoba had an inherent strategy of signing for parts in small, finely wrought low-budget pictures outside of the Hollywood mainstream. Nevertheless, several of Yoba's project choices during the late '90s and early 2000s (though in keeping with this trend) brought the him decidedly mixed success and thus challenged the "foolproof wisdom" of this strategy. The films Oh Happy Day (2004), Kids in America (2005), and They're Just My Friends (2006), for instance, scarcely made a splash with critics or the public, and thus did little to advance Yoba's career. On the small screen, the stock-market series drama Bull (2000), co-starring Yoba and Donald Moffat, appeared and disappeared almost instantly. Yoba fared far better with his second billing in an acclaimed 2006 crime series, Thief; he plays Elmo, a member of master thief Andre Braugher's safecracking team. Thief premiered on the FX network in March 2006 to excellent ratings. In 2007 he appeared in the TV Series Raines, and also starred in Tyler Perry's Tyler Perry's Why Did I Get Married? He appeared in that film's sequel three years later and also tried his hand at small-screen success again in the show's Defying Gravity and Alphas.
Kenneth "babyface" Edmonds (Actor) .. Band Member
Born: April 10, 1959
Birthplace: Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Trivia: Wrote first song ("Here I Go Falling in Love") at age 11 for a girl he had a crush on but was too shy to play it for her. Nicknamed "Babyface" by funk musician Bootsie Collins because of his youthful appearance. Co-founded LaFace Records in 1989 with L.A. Reid. Has nurtured the careers of such artists as TLC, OutKast, Usher and Toni Braxton. Breakthrough album "Tender Lover" went triple platinum in 1989. Has written or co-written songs for dozens of artists, including Whitney Houston, Eric Clapton, Michael Jackson, Boyz II Men, Mariah Carey, Pink and Beyoncé. Has amassed more than 125 top R&B and pop hits, including 42 No. 1 R&B singles and 16 No. 1 pop songs that have generated cumulative single and album sales of over 500 million units. In 1999 a 25-mile stretch of I-65 that runs through Indianapolis was renamed "Kenneth 'Babyface' Edmonds Highway" in his honor. Received a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame in 2013. Is a devoted philanthropist involved with several charities, including the Children's Diabetes Foundation, the Mike Milken Prostate Cancer Foundation and Keep Memory Alive.
Kevon Edmonds (Actor) .. Band Member
Melvin Edmonds (Actor) .. Band Member
Jo Jo Hailey (Actor) .. Band Member
K-Ci Hailey (Actor) .. Band Member
Simon Horrocks (Actor) .. Band Member
Randy Walker (Actor) .. Band Member
Tamara Braun (Actor) .. Teri's Secretary
Born: April 18, 1971
Birthplace: Evanston, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Illinois native Tamara Braun is perhaps best known for the role of Carly Corinthos on the soap opera General Hospital, which she played from 2001 to 2005. A hit with viewers, Braun continued playing to the same audience, taking on the role of Ava Vitali on Days of Our Lives in 2008, and Reese Williams on All My Children from 2008 to 2009. Braun has also made guest appearances on shows like House and 7th Heaven.

Before / After
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