Quigley Down Under


10:30 pm - 12:30 am, Monday, October 27 on WPXN Grit (31.3)

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About this Broadcast
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Tom Selleck as an American sharpshooter hired by a wealthy cattle station owner in the 1860s.

1990 English
Western Action/adventure

Cast & Crew
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Tom Selleck (Actor) .. Matthew Quigley
Laura San Giacomo (Actor) .. Crazy Cora
Alan Rickman (Actor) .. Elliott Marston
Chris Haywood (Actor) .. Mayor Ashley Pitt
Ron Haddrick (Actor) .. Grimmelman
Tony Bonner (Actor) .. Dobkin
Jerome Ehlers (Actor) .. Coogan
Conor McDermottroe (Actor) .. Hobb
Roger Ward (Actor) .. Brophy
Ben Mendelsohn (Actor) .. O'Flynn
Guy Norris (Actor) .. Cliff
Mark Pennell (Actor) .. Bugler
Greg Stuart (Actor) .. Deserter
Eamon Kelly (Actor) .. Klaus Grimmelman
Don Bridges (Actor) .. Ticket Seller
Steve Dodd (Actor)
Jon Ewing (Actor) .. Tout
David Slingsby (Actor) .. Mullion
Danny Adcock (Actor) .. Mitchell
Maeliosa Stafford (Actor) .. Cavanagh
Ollie Hall (Actor) .. Carver
Danny Baldwin (Actor) .. Smythe
Jim Willoughby (Actor) .. Scotty
Spike Cherrie (Actor) .. Hayden
Gerald Egan (Actor) .. Whitey

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Tom Selleck (Actor) .. Matthew Quigley
Born: January 29, 1945
Birthplace: Detroit, Michigan, United States
Trivia: Leading man and sex symbol, Selleck has a gentle, humorous manner. He attended college on an athletic scholarship, majoring in business. A drama coach suggested he become an actor; soon he began making the rounds of auditions. He won a part in the disastrous film Myra Breckinridge (1970), his screen debut, then appeared in small roles in a handful of films during the '70s. Meanwhile, Selleck was signed to a seven-year contract with Fox, leading to a great many TV roles, including appearances as a recurring character on the TV series "The Rockford Files." Eventually he was chosen as the lead for the TV series "Magnum P.I.;" the show became a hit, staying on the air from 1980-88, and he became a star and sex symbol, winning an Emmy, a Golden Globe award, and a star on Hollywood Boulevard. He suffered a serious career setback in 1981, when he was chosen to star in the Lucas-Spielberg blockbuster Raiders of the Lost Ark, but couldn't get released from his TV responsibilities. Beginning in 1983 he tried to break back into films, finally landing a major hit in a co-starring role in Three Men and a Baby (1987); although he appeared in a dozen films after 1983 he never firmly established himself as a screen star. He has also been active as a TV producer. He is married to English dancer Jillie Mack.
Laura San Giacomo (Actor) .. Crazy Cora
Born: November 14, 1962
Birthplace: West Orange, New Jersey, United States
Trivia: Born in New Jersey to Italian-American parents, deep-voiced actress Laura San Giacomo studied at Carnegie Mellon School of Drama. After performing in regional theater, off-Broadway, and TV guest-star roles, she made her auspicious debut in Steven Soderbergh's sex, lies, and videotape. As the down-to-earth yet adulterous Cynthia, her presence brought a sense of inhibition to the cast of otherwise sexually repressed characters. This was followed by a series of other good roles: the prostitute Kit in Pretty Woman, the hardworking waitress in Vital Signs, Holly Hunter's sister in Once Around, and the American expatriate Crazy Cora in Quigley Down Under. In addition to providing her husky voice to the star-studded animated series Gargoyles, she moved over to TV movies, most notably the Stephen King adaptation The Stand. On the big screen, she starred in Nina Takes a Lover, Stuart Saves His Family, and The Apocalypse (co-starring her then-husband Cameron Dye). After having her son Mason, she started playing the memorable role of magazine journalist Maya Gallo on Just Shoot Me, which ran from 1997-2003 on NBC. She worked steadily in the years following Just Shoot Me, but she was away from screens for four years after 2001, returning in the 2005 drama Havoc. Two years later she starred opposite Holly Hunter in the supernatural series Saving Grace.
Alan Rickman (Actor) .. Elliott Marston
Born: February 21, 1946
Died: January 14, 2016
Birthplace: Hammersmith, London, England
Trivia: Although he made his name playing ruthless, genteel villains like Die Hard's Hans Gruber and Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves' Sheriff of Nottingham, Alan Rickman proved himself equally remarkable in romantic, comic, and good-guy dramatic roles. An actor of brooding charisma who intones his lines in a deep, milky baritone, Rickman began his career on-stage, building up a sizable résumé before embarking on a film career.Of Irish and Welsh parentage, Rickman was born in London's Hammersmith district on February 21, 1946. His father, who was a painter and decorator, died of cancer when the actor was eight, leaving behind Rickman, his mother, and three siblings. After winning a scholarship to West London's Latymer Upper School, Rickman began acting at the encouragement of his teachers. He also developed an interest in art, and he went on to study graphic design at the Royal College of Art. He founded a Soho-based design company, but after deciding that his heart was in acting, he abandoned the company when he was 26 to study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. He spent three years there, serving as a dresser to such actors as Ralph Richardson and Nigel Hawthorne. After leaving RADA, Rickman began to make his name on the stage, first appearing in repertory and then landing lead roles in London productions. He gained particular acclaim for his portrayal of Valmont in a West End production of Les Liaisons Dangereuses, eventually reprising his role for the Broadway production and winning a Tony nomination.In 1988, Rickman got his first dose of big-screen recognition with Die Hard. After the film's huge success, and praise for his delightfully nasty portrayal of the film's villain, he went on to make a couple of poorly received features, including 1989's The January Man and 1990s Quigley Down Under. Success greeted him again in 1991: playing Kevin Costner's nemesis, the vile and loathsome Sheriff of Nottingham, in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, Rickman proved to audiences why being bad could be so much fun. The same year, he endeared himself as a markedly more sympathetic character in Truly, Madly, Deeply. As a deceased cellist who reappears to comfort his lover (Juliet Stevenson), Rickman proved himself adept at romantic comedy, and began to accrue a reputation as a thinking woman's sex symbol (something he vocally resented).The actor spent the remainder of the decade turning in solid performances in a number of diverse films: he could be seen as an actor with a troubled past in An Awfully Big Adventure (1994), a very sympathetic Colonel Brandon in Sense and Sensibility (1995), Eamon de Valera in Michael Collins (1996), a has-been sci-fi television star in Galaxy Quest (1999), and a grumpy angel in Dogma (1999). In 1997, Rickman branched out into directing, making his debut with The Winter Guest. Starring real-life mother and daughter Phyllida Law and Emma Thompson as an estranged mother and daughter, the film won a number of positive notices, further establishing Rickman as a man of impressive versatility, both in front of and behind the camera. Though Rickman's voice would be featured on the animated television series King of the Hill in 2003, he wasn't truly absorbed into mainstream pop-culture among the kid circuit until after starring in the movie adaptations of author J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series. Rickman played the sinister Professor Snape in the films, one of the few post-pubescent constants in the franchise.In 2005, just months before the fourth installment in the Potter series, Rickman showed up in the first big-screen adaptation of another literary series with a rabid fan base, lending his voice to the character of Marvin the neurotic robot in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.He went on to appear in Perfume: The Story of a Murderer, and in 2007 he played Judge Turpin in Tim Burton's adaptation of Sweeney Todd. E reteamed with the director for Alice in Wonderland in 2010, and the next year saw the final installment of the Harry Potter franchise hitting screens. In 2013, he played President Ronald Reagan in Lee Daniels' The Butler and club owner Hilly Kristal in CBGB. The following year, Rickman directed his second feature film, A Little Chaos, and also appeared in the film as King Louis XIV. Rickman died in 2016, at age 69.
Chris Haywood (Actor) .. Mayor Ashley Pitt
Born: July 24, 1948
Birthplace: Billericay, Essex, England, United Kingdom
Ron Haddrick (Actor) .. Grimmelman
Born: April 09, 1929
Tony Bonner (Actor) .. Dobkin
Born: November 23, 1943
Birthplace: Manly, New South Wales, Australia
Trivia: A supporting actor, Bonner has appeared onscreen from the late '60s.
Jerome Ehlers (Actor) .. Coogan
Born: December 20, 1958
Birthplace: Perth, Western
Conor McDermottroe (Actor) .. Hobb
Roger Ward (Actor) .. Brophy
Ben Mendelsohn (Actor) .. O'Flynn
Born: April 03, 1969
Birthplace: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Trivia: Lead actor, onscreen from the '80s.
Guy Norris (Actor) .. Cliff
Mark Pennell (Actor) .. Bugler
Greg Stuart (Actor) .. Deserter
Eamon Kelly (Actor) .. Klaus Grimmelman
Don Bridges (Actor) .. Ticket Seller
Born: November 04, 1950
Steve Dodd (Actor)
Born: June 01, 1928
Kylie Foster (Actor)
William Zappa (Actor)
Born: October 13, 1948
Jonathan Sweet (Actor)
Jon Ewing (Actor) .. Tout
David Slingsby (Actor) .. Mullion
Danny Adcock (Actor) .. Mitchell
Maeliosa Stafford (Actor) .. Cavanagh
Ollie Hall (Actor) .. Carver
Danny Baldwin (Actor) .. Smythe
Jim Willoughby (Actor) .. Scotty
Spike Cherrie (Actor) .. Hayden
Gerald Egan (Actor) .. Whitey
Simon Wincer (Actor)
Trivia: An esteemed director/producer in film and television in his native Australia, Simon Wincer has earned his highest accolades in the U.S. for directing the acclaimed television miniseries Lonesome Dove (1989); he also had great success directing Free Willy (1993).Born and raised in Sydney, Australia, Wincer helmed scores of series' episodes Down Under. In 1979, Wincer made his directorial bow with the romantic comedy Snapshot. Wincer's first turn as a producer was for the internationally successful The Man From Snowy River (1982). It was after this that his own career flipped into high gear. Wincer's next venture, Phar Lap, the fact-based story of Australia's greatest race horse and his mysterious death, earned considerable critical acclaim and ranks as one Australia's most popular films. Wincer's next film, One Night Stand, was a chilling black comedy about four young people who find themselves stranded in the Sydney Opera House after the start of WWIII. Wincer made a rather inauspicious Hollywood debut with the bland kidpic D.A.R.Y.L. (1985), but did much better with the Disney made-for-television drama The Girl Who Spelled Freedom for which he earned a Christopher Award. For his work on Lonesome Dove, Wincer won an Emmy for Best Director. The show went on to win six more and was nominated for 18 Emmys. Following his success with Free Willy, Wincer's films have been of decidedly uneven quality.

Before / After
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