Appaloosa


8:00 pm - 10:30 pm, Sunday, November 9 on WCCT Grit (20.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Two gunmen become the marshal and deputy of a lawless Old West mining town and take on a corrupt rancher.

2008 English Stereo
Western Drama Romance Crime Comedy-drama

Cast & Crew
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Ed Harris (Actor) .. Virgil Cole
Viggo Mortensen (Actor) .. Everett Hitch
Renée Zellweger (Actor) .. Allie
Jeremy Irons (Actor) .. Randall Bragg
Luce Rains (Actor) .. Dean
Boyd Kestner (Actor) .. Bronc
Gabriel Marantz (Actor) .. Joe Whitfield
Cerris Morgan-Moyer (Actor) .. Tilda
James Gammon (Actor) .. Earl May
Timothy Spall (Actor) .. Phil Olson
Lance Henriksen (Actor) .. Ring Shelton
Tom Bower (Actor) .. Abner Raines
Timothy V. Murphy (Actor) .. Vince
Benjamin Rosenshein (Actor) .. Town Boy
Erik J. Bockemeier (Actor) .. Fat Wallis
Fred Hice (Actor) .. Bragg's Third Man
Neil Summers (Actor) .. Bragg's Fourth Man
Tim Carroll (Actor) .. Wagon Driver
Bounthanh Xaynhachack (Actor) .. Chin
Art Usher (Actor) .. Clerk
Cliff Gravel (Actor) .. Barber
Mike Watson (Actor) .. Night Rider
Rex Linn (Actor) .. Clyde Stringer
Corby Griesenbeck (Actor) .. Charlie Tewksbury
Adam Nelson (Actor) .. Mackie Shelton
Ed Pennybacker (Actor) .. Conductor
Alvin Lunak (Actor) .. Sharps
Martin Connelly (Actor) .. Apache Elder
Danny Edmo (Actor) .. Young Brave
Argos MacCallum (Actor) .. Beauville Sheriff Russell
Cynthia Huerta (Actor) .. Mexican Woman
David Bard (Actor)
Scott Brooks (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Stephen Chomko (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Charles Culberson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Robert Down (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Jackie Fleming (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Jim Granger (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Nancy Ann Hibbs (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Nick Johnson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Glen Kappy (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Kevin Kinsner (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Norm Lee (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Loretta Lewis (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Skip Long (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Dani McNutt (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Sylvie Mortenson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Sandy Nickal (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Kyle Osborne (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Hunter Lee Pimparapana (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Marvin Rath (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Randall Sauls (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Claire Schwebke (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Nathan Simmons (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Chloe Slator (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Bailey Walter (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Ernest Andreas (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Ian Bell (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Todd Bethke (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Martin Callahan (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Cynthia Clark (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Lowell Crawford (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Timothy David (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Flynn-Bella Ericson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Dennis Foulkrod (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Ruben Haddix (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Jerrall Hinds (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Taryn Johnson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Jeff Kimerling (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Daniel Krieger (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Kerry Lee (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Isabelle Leustig (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Denise Lynch (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Diana McGuerty (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Diana Minfa (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Ernest Moya (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Michael Max Norris (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Trevor Osborn (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Michael Neal Powell (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
L.C. Read (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Daphne D. Ross (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Darrell Schmidt (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Cecily Kuehl Shank (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Frankey Singzilay (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Isabel Slator (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Elizabeth Ann Tuttle (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Kristin Walter (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Tom Larson (Actor)
Alex Edmo (Actor)
Heather Antonio (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Dale Kappy (Actor)
Lynn Macri (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Kevin New (Actor)
Frank Nunn (Actor)
Steve Rick (Actor)
Fionn Thelen (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Madeline Walter (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
J.C. Augare (Actor) .. Apache
Kiela Bird (Actor)
Robert Jauregui (Actor) .. Marshall Jack Bell
Freddie Hice (Actor) .. Bragg's Third Man
Clark Sanchez (Actor) .. Teamster
Robert Harris (Actor) .. Judge Elias Callison

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Ed Harris (Actor) .. Virgil Cole
Born: November 28, 1950
Birthplace: Tenafly, New Jersey
Trivia: Bearing sharp, blue-eyed features and the outward demeanor of an everyday Joe, Ed Harris possesses a quiet, charismatic strength and intensity capable of electrifying the screen. During the course of his lengthy career, he has proven his talent repeatedly in roles both big and small, portraying characters both villainous and sympathetic.Born Edward Allen Harris in Tenafly, NJ, on November 28, 1950, Harris was an athlete in high school and went on to spend two years playing football at Columbia University. His interest in acting developed after he transferred to the University of Oklahoma, where he studied acting and gained experience in summer stock. Harris next attended the California Institute of the Arts, graduating with a Fine Arts degree. He went on to find steady work in the West Coast theatrical world before moving to New York. In 1983, he debuted off-Broadway in Sam Shepard's Fool for Love in a part especially written for him. His performance won him an Obie for Best Actor. Three years later, he made his Broadway debut in George Firth's Precious Sons and was nominated for a Tony. During the course of his career, Harris has gone on to garner numerous stage awards from associations on both coasts. Harris made his screen debut in 1977's made-for-television movie The Amazing Howard Hughes. The following year, he made his feature-film debut with a small role in Coma (1978), but his career didn't take off until director George Romero starred Harris in Knightriders (1981). The director also cast him in his next film, Creepshow (1982). Harris' big break as a movie star came in 1983 when he was cast as straight-arrow astronaut John Glenn in the film version of Tom Wolfe's The Right Stuff. Twelve years later, Harris would again enter the world of NASA, this time playing unsung hero Gene Krantz (and earning an Oscar nomination) in Ron Howard's Apollo 13.The same year he starred in The Right Stuff, Harris further exhibited his range in his role as a psychopathic mercenary in Under Fire. The following year, he appeared in three major features, including the highly touted Places in the Heart. In addition to earning him positive notices, the film introduced him to his future wife, Amy Madigan, who also co-starred with him in Alamo Bay (1985). In 1989, Harris played one of his best-known roles in The Abyss (1989), bringing great humanity to the heroic protagonist, a rig foreman working on a submarine. He did further notable work in David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross, and turned in a suitably creepy performance as Christof, the manipulative creator of Truman Burbank's world in Peter Weir's The Truman Show (1998). Harris earned a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for his work. The following year, he could be seen in The Third Miracle, starring as a Catholic priest who finds his faith sorely tested.The new millennium found Harris' labor of love, the artist biopic Pollock, seeing the light of day after nearly a decade of development. Spending years painting and researching the modernist painter, Harris carefully and lovingly oversaw all aspects of the film, including directing, producing, and starring in the title role. The project served as a turning point in Harris' remarkable career, showing audiences and critics alike that there was more to the man of tranquil intensity than many may have anticipated; Harris was nominated for a Best Actor Academy Award for his work. 2001 saw Harris as a German sniper with his targets set on Jude Law in the wartime suspense-drama Enemy at the Gates, and later as a bumbling Army captain in the irreverent Joaquin Phoenix vehicle Buffalo Soldiers. With his portrayal of a well known author succumbing to the ravages of AIDS in 2002's The Hours, Harris would recieve his fourth Oscar nominattion. 2004 found the actor working with Zooey Deschanel for Winter Passing, a psychological drama in which he played a one-time popular novelist who claims he is working on one last book. Harris was praised for his work in Empire Falls (2005), a two-part miniseries from HBO chronicling a middle-aged man who is concerned he has wasted his life, though his work as a scarred stranger with a score to settle in David Cronenberg's award-winning psychological thriller A History of Violence was his biggest success in 2005. In 2007, Harris played a Boston police detective in Ben Affleck's adaptation of author Dennis Lehane's Gone, Baby, Gone. A year later, Harris wrote, starred, directed, and produced Appaloosa, a western following a small town held under the thumb of a ruthless rancher and his crew, and continued to work throughout 2009 and 2010 in films including Once Fallen, Virginia, and The Way Back. Praise came his way once more in 2011's What I Am, a gentle coming-of-age comedy in which Harris plays a teacher who is a catalyst for the friendship of two young boys. In 2012, he earned Emmy and SAG nominations and a Golden Globe award for playing John McCain in the HBO movie Game Change. The next year had him appearing in six films, including playing a detective in Pain & Gain and voicing mission control in Gravity, a throwback to his earlier work in Apollo 13.
Viggo Mortensen (Actor) .. Everett Hitch
Born: October 20, 1958
Birthplace: New York City, New York, United States
Trivia: Critically acclaimed actor Viggo Mortensen made his feature-film debut playing Alexander Godunov's Amish brother in Witness (1985). The suave, handsome actor has subsequently portrayed a wide variety of characters, often unapologetic bad boys, opposite some of Hollywood's most popular actors, including Sylvester Stallone, Demi Moore, and Nicole Kidman.Born in New York City, on October 20, 1958, to an American mother and a Danish father, Mortensen spent his first years in Manhattan and the rest of his youth living in Argentina, Venezuela, and Denmark. Returning to Manhattan in the early '80s, he studied acting at Warren Robertson's Theatre Workshop and then embarked upon a stage career before moving to Los Angeles. There, he earned a Dramalogue Critics Award for his performance in a Coast Playhouse production of Bent and became a familiar figure on the L.A. punk scene (something that was aided by his brief marriage to Exene Cervenka, lead singer of the punk band X). Following his debut in Witness, Mortensen began working steadily in a number of diverse films, becoming a familiar but not instantly recognizable face to filmgoers. He did some of his more memorable work as a series of louts and villains, in such films as The Indian Runner (1991, written and directed by Sean Penn), which cast him as David Morse's morally questionable brother; Carlito's Way (1993), in which he played a paraplegic ex-con who tries to snitch on Al Pacino; and The Prophecy (aka God's Army) (1995), which required the actor, in the role of Lucifer, to rip out Christopher Walken's heart and then eat it. Mortensen finally attained a greater measure of recognition with his smoldering portrayal of one of Isabel Archer's (Nicole Kidman) suitors in Jane Campion's 1996 adaptation of The Portrait of a Lady. He then made another strong impression as Demi Moore's rough, tough, and buff training instructor in G.I. Jane (1997) and, the following year, he was one of the few redeeming features of A Perfect Murder, in which he supplied sexy menace (as well as his own art work) as Gwyneth Paltrow's murderous artist lover. He allowed his softer side to come through in Tony Goldwyn's acclaimed A Walk on the Moon (1999), which cast him as the hippie lover of a dissatisfied housewife (Diane Lane) in Woodstock-era upstate New York. His more romantic side was again in evidence in the romantic drama 28 Days (2000), in which he played recovering party girl Sandra Bullock's rehab honey. Replacing Irish actor Stuart Townsend in the role of Aragorn shortly after production had begun on director Peter Jackson's eagerly anticipated film adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, Mortensen secured a strong screen presence through 2003, with the release of the trilogy's final installment, The Return of the King. In 2004, he proved that he could carry a film on his own when he starred as Wild West adventurer Frank T. Hopkins in the horse-racing period film Hidalgo. In 2005, the actor won critical raves when he headlined the visceral David Cronenberg crime thriller A History of Violence, vis-a-vis Ed Harris and William Hurt; as Tom Stall, a seemingly open-faced small-town Hoosier whose dark and brutal past comes to light during a diner robbery, Mortensen lent the film a great deal of momentum and held audiences rapt. History received two Academy Award nominations, though Mortensen failed to net one for Best Actor.Mortensen returned to period adventures in 2006 when he played the titular solider-turned-mercenary in Agustín Díaz Yanes' Spanish-language film Alatriste, set during Spain's 16th century imperial wars. In 2007 Mortensen teamed up for a second time with David Cornenberg, playing a Russian mob enforcer in Eastern Promises. His impressive work in the film garnered him strong reviews as well as an Oscar nomination for Best Actor. Unfortunately for Mortensen, that year brought some stiff competition in the form of Daniel Day Lewis, who ultimately took home the award for his powerful performance in Paul Thomas Anderson's There Will Be Blood. A grim trek through a post-apocalyptic wasteland followed when Mortensen took the lead in John Hillcoat's adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's The Road (2009), and in 2011 the actor continued his collaboration with Canadian auteur Cronenberg by playing none other than legendary psychologist Sigmund Freud (opposite Michael Fassbender's Carl Jung) in A Dangerous Method.
Renée Zellweger (Actor) .. Allie
Born: April 25, 1969
Birthplace: Houston, Texas, United States
Trivia: Until she headlined Jerry Maguire opposite Tom Cruise in late 1996, Renée Zellweger claimed extremely limited public recognition. Though Zellweger essayed several key roles before Maguire, the vulnerability and versatility that the actress exhibited as Cruise's (long undeclared) love interest in Cameron Crowe's seriocomedy netted much-deserved praise from critics and audiences alike. Though the Academy passed her over when that year's Oscar nominations rolled around, she received several other laurels for her work in Maguire, including the title of Best Breakthrough Performer by the National Board of Review.Born April 25th, 1969, the willowy, strawberry blonde Zellweger began life in Katy, TX, a small town on the outskirts of Houston. The town was so small that it possessed neither cable television nor a movie theater. As a result, Zellweger reportedly did not see her first art film until she was a student at the University of Texas in Austin. Her career at U.T. was an exceptional one; a regular on the Dean's List, she graduated a year early with a B.A. in Radio, Film, and Television. While in college, Zellweger took an acting class and discovered a knack for performing; following graduation, she made her feature-film debut with a bit part in Richard Linklater's Dazed and Confused (1993). She then landed a role playing a whacked-out waitress in Love and a .45 (1994), for which she won her first Independent Spirit Award nomination; she won a second nomination for The Whole Wide World (1996), earning additional acclaim at various film festivals.Following the tremendous success of Jerry Maguire, Zellweger went on to prove herself as a versatile actress able to play roles ranging from an ambitious journalist (who temporarily shelves her career to care for her mother) in One True Thing (1998) to a rebellious Hassidic Jew in Boaz Yakin's A Price Above Rubies (1998). She then exhibited a capacity for romantic comedy in The Bachelor (1999), starring as the long-suffering girlfriend of a commitment-phobic Chris O'Donnell. Zellweger's second role as a deeply confused soap opera fanatic in Neil LaBute's offbeat crime comedy Nurse Betty won her the Best Actress in a Comedy Award at the 2000 Golden Globes. Nominated for yet another Golden Globe the following year for her memorable performance in Bridget Jones' Diary (2001), that same role also earned Zellweger her maiden Oscar nod. The following few years found Zellweger's leading lady status growing and numerous lucrative film offers flowing in, and the release of White Oleander (2002) the starlet received numerous positive reviews despite the film's lackluster performance. Later that same year, Zellweger was on top of the world when she received rave reviews for her role in Chicago. Based on the popular Broadway musical of the same name, director Rob Marshall's flashy cinematic extravaganza received nearly unanimous praise accompanied by multiple Academy Award nominations, including a second Best Actress in a Leading Role nod to Ms. Zellweger for her lively performance.Zellweger lost the award bid to Nicole Kidman, and then teamed up with that actress for Anthony Minghella's epic Cold Mountain. The performance netted Zellweger her third Oscar nomination, and on February 29, 2004, her losing streak ended as she took home the award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role. Attempting to keep up the momentum, Zellweger then returned to the character that earned her her first Oscar nod, starring in the sequel to Bridget Jones's Diary, Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (2004). Unfortunately, that outing (directed by To Wong Foo helmer Beeban Kidron) failed to draw the critical acclaim of its predecessor and was widely greeted with public apathy in the States, but in the final analysis, it grossed nearly as much as the premier outing (with a massive overseas take). After the second Bridget Jones installment, Zellweger's screen activity decrescendoed somewhat, but she placed a heightened emphasis on more offbeat and unusual roles, including a portrayal of children's author Beatrix Potter in the Weinstein Company outing Miss Potter (2006), and a throwback role to the days of classic Hollywood screwball comedy, as the romantic lead of George Clooney and John Krasinski in the period sports outing Leatherheads (2008). The actress lent her voice to the animated children's fantasy Monsters vs. Aliens, and will reprise her role as Bridget Jones for Bridget Jones' Baby. Off-camera, Zellweger has been romantically linked to funnyman Jim Carrey and to rocker Jack White, of The White Stripes. She was married very briefly to Kenny Chesney; the two received an annulment in less than a year.
Jeremy Irons (Actor) .. Randall Bragg
Born: September 19, 1948
Birthplace: Cowes, Isle of Wight, England
Trivia: With a long-limbed elegance and the voice of a serpent crossed with an angel, Jeremy Irons has long been described as swoon fodder for the thinking woman. Tall, brooding, and impossibly well-spoken, Irons has often been cast as a haunted aristocrat, but has on occasion used his well-heeled attributes to more sinister effect, most notably in David Cronenberg's Dead Ringers.Born September 19, 1948, on the Isle of Wight, Irons was educated at Sherborne. While a student there, he formed a band with four of his friends called the Four Pillars of Wisdom. Irons played drums -- badly, by his own estimation -- and the band attained a limited fame playing at various parties. After failed attempts to enter veterinary school, Irons decided to become an actor and received classical training at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School. His training there led to a two-year stint with the Bristol Old Vic Theatre Company, where Irons performed in a large number of plays. On the side, he supported himself by doing odd jobs, including busking (singing on the streets), and it was thanks to his musical inclinations that he got his big break in the 1972 London production of Godspell. Singing for his supper alongside David Bowie, Irons won acclaim for his portrayal of John the Baptist and was soon a respected figure on the London theater scene. Irons made his screen debut in the 1980 film Nijinsky, but didn't find true fame until the following year, when he starred in the 11-part television adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited. As part of a glittering cast that included Sir Laurence Olivier, Sir John Gielgud, and Claire Bloom, Irons won raves on both sides of the Atlantic for his portrayal of the lovelorn, conflicted Charles Ryder. Following this success, the actor was in demand as a romantic lead and could soon be seen starring opposite Meryl Streep in The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981). After trying his hand at playing a Polish laborer in Moonlighting (1982) and an adulterous lover in Betrayal (1983), Irons again played a tortured aristocrat in Swann in Love (1984).Following work in a few minor films and a Tony Award for his 1984 Broadway debut in Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing, Irons once again struck gold with his role as a conscientious missionary in The Mission (1986), in which he starred opposite Robert De Niro and received a 1987 Golden Globe nomination for his work. He next went completely against type, playing insane twin gynecologists in David Cronenberg's 1988 thriller Dead Ringers, a dual performance that both shocked his longtime fans and won him some new ones. For his portrayals, he garnered a New York Film Critics Circle Award, acclaim that was to be heightened two years later with his Oscar-winning turn as millionaire murder suspect Claus Von Bulow in Reversal of Fortune. Irons also won a Golden Globe for his work and settled into a real-life role as one of the most respected actors on both sides of the Atlantic.Throughout the 1990s, Irons' career was one of great variety and sometimes varying quality. Less acclaimed work included 1992's Waterland, in which he starred with his wife, Sinéad Cusack; the star-studded 1993 adaptation of The House of the Spirits; and The Man in the Iron Mask, a big-budget 1998 historical action piece in which Irons appeared to be competing with Gabriel Byrne, John Malkovich, and Gérard Depardieu to see who could wear the worst wig. Irons' more acclaimed films included Louis Malle's psychological drama Damage (1992); Disney's animated The Lion King (1994), to which Irons lent his voice as the villainous Scar; the following year's Die Hard With a Vengeance, in which Irons once again explored his sinister side, as a terrorist; Stealing Beauty (1996), which cast the actor as a dying artist; Chinese Box (1997), in which he portrayed yet another dying man; and Adrian Lyne's controversial adaptation of Lolita (also 1997), in which Irons gave a subtle, heartbreaking performance as Humbert Humbert. In 2000, Irons' relatively small role in the ultimately mediocre adaptation Dungeons & Dragons was once again noted as one of the highlights of an otherwise so-so film. Shortly afterward, Irons played the leading role in The Fourth Angel, which featured the actor as a magazine editor-cum-freedom fighter after his wife and three children were killed when their airplane was hijacked by terrorists. Though his performance was generally viewed as good, few Americans would enjoy it -- the original (and uncanny) plan for a United States theatrical release in fall of 2001 was canceled after the 9/11 attacks. Luckily for Irons and his loyal fan base, the 2002 releases of The Time Machine and the musical drama Callas Forever were not similarly hindered. In the same year, Irons would play the role of F. Scott Fitzgerald in director Henry Bromell's biographical feature Last Call with great success. 2003 was a busy year for Irons' vocal chords, as he provided one of the starring voices in the lavish, multi-episode television documentary Kingdom of David: The Saga of the Israelites. Irons appeared in two small but well-received 2004 releases, taking a role alongside screen legend Al Pacino in Michael Radford's The Merchant of Venice, and showing up in the comedy drama Being Julia with Annette Bening and Sheila McCarthy. However, the following year, he could be seen in director Ridley Scott's big-budget box-office dud Kingdom of Heaven, an historical film about the Crusades that failed to find an audience in the wake of similar pictures such as Troy and Alexander. Irons once again snared great notices for his work in the period drama Elizabeth I opposite Helen Mirren, winning the Golden Globe for his supporting work in that television production. He next displayed his remarkable versatility by appearing in two very different motion pictures, the fantasy action film Eragon and David Lynch's Inland Empire.An Englishman to the last, Irons has resisted the temptation to settle in Hollywood and continues to reside in England. He starred with one of his two sons, Samuel, in the 1989 television adaptation of Roald Dahl's Danny, the Champion of the World.In 2008, Irons took on the role of a cold-hearted rancher in actor/director Ed Harris' western Appaloosa, and joined the supporting cast of The Pink Panther 2 in 2009. Irons was praised for his vocal skills once more in 2011, when he narrated The Last Lions, a sweeping nature documentary. The same year, Irons took on the role of Pope Alexander VI in Showtime's historical drama series The Borgias, and co-star in Margin Call, a paranoid thriller following an investment firm analyst who becomes privy to extremely sensitive information.
Luce Rains (Actor) .. Dean
James Tarwater (Actor)
Born: July 03, 1952
Boyd Kestner (Actor) .. Bronc
Born: November 23, 1964
Trivia: Boyishly handsome in a Rob Lowe sort of way, Boyd Kestner's career in front of the camera gained increasing momentum in the early to mid-'90s with roles in such television series as The Outsiders and Knot's Landing, eventually resulting in a feature career that pointed to great things ahead in the early years of the new millennium. A Manassas, VA, native who fell into acting after relocating to New York City, Kestner didn't find his true calling until laboring as a bartender among legions of aspiring actors. Prompted by his peers to take acting classes, and soon thereafter embarking on a seemingly endless series of auditions, Kestner finally got his break when he landed a role in the short-lived television series The Outsiders. Later toiling in made-for-television movies and minor film roles, fate once again smiled on Kestner when he landed his first major film role in director Ridley Scott's G.I. Jane (1997). The first in a series of minor roles in such major Hollywood films as The General's Daughter (1999) and Hannibal (2001, again with director Scott), Kestner's role as a houseguest who wears out his welcome in the psychosexual thriller Cleopatra's Second Husband (1998) earned him critical kudos and found him climbing the credit rungs. Taking his menacing act on the road for Snakeskin (2001) found Kestner establishing himself as an actor with the ability to maintain a curiously enigmatic screen presence, with roles in Scott's Black Hawk Down (also 2001) and the affectionate 2002 comedy-drama Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood coinciding with a relocation to the West Coast and pointing to a promising future.
Gabriel Marantz (Actor) .. Joe Whitfield
Cerris Morgan-Moyer (Actor) .. Tilda
Born: July 20, 1973
James Gammon (Actor) .. Earl May
Born: April 20, 1940
Died: July 16, 2010
Birthplace: Newman, Illinois
Trivia: Gravel-voiced, American character actor James Gammon was first seen on screen as Sleepy in Cool Hand Luke (1967). Looking like a Frederic Remington painting come to life, Gammon has been a welcome presence in many a western feature, notably Silverado (1985), Wyatt Earp (1994) and Wild Bill (1995). His earthy screen persona is flexible enough to accommodate both avuncularity (team manager Lou Brown in the two Major League films) and menace (Horsethief Shorty in 1988's Milagro Beanfield War). Gammon has been a regular on two TV series, playing roadside diner habitue Rudy in Bagdad Café (1990) and divorced, laid-off paterfamilias Dave Nelson in Middle Ages (1992). When not appearing before the cameras, James Gammon has kept busy as a California community-theatre director.
Timothy Spall (Actor) .. Phil Olson
Born: February 27, 1957
Birthplace: Battersea, London
Trivia: Perhaps the actor most closely associated with director Mike Leigh, Timothy Spall has acted in productions for the director on both the stage and screen. Spall made a particularly strong impression in Leigh's Life is Sweet (1991), which cast him as a socially awkward gourmet chef, and Secrets & Lies (1996), in which his starring performance as a portrait photographer struggling with marital problems earned him award nominations from the British Academy and the London Film Critics Circle. In addition to his work with Leigh, Spall has appeared in a number of disparate productions. He made his film debut with a supporting role in the Who's Quadrophenia in 1979 and spent the next decade splitting his time and energy between the stage and screen. He acted extensively for the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal National Theatre, and he also did acclaimed work on television, most notably as Mr. Venus in the BBC production of Charles Dicken's Our Mutual Friend, for which he received a BAFTA Best Actor nomination.Spall began to gain recognition and respect as a film actor in the 1990s, thanks in large part to his collaborations with Leigh. In addition to his work with the director, Spall was particularly memorable in Brian Gibson's Still Crazy (1998), a comedy that cast him as the drummer for a defunct 1970s rock band trying to make a come-back. In 1999, the actor enjoyed another collaboration with Leigh in Topsy-Turvy, an acclaimed drama about the partnership between Gilbert and Sullivan that featured Spall as an effeminate opera diva. The following year, he could be seen as Don Armado in Kenneth Branagh's musical adaptation of Love's Labour's Lost, and heard as a chicken farm denizen in Nick Park's animated Chicken Run. In recognition of his contributions to the arts, Spall was named an Officer of the Order of British Empire (OBE) by Queen Elizabeth on New Year's Eve, 1999.
Lance Henriksen (Actor) .. Ring Shelton
Born: May 05, 1940
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Upon graduation from the Actor's Studio, Manhattan-born Lance Henriksen spent nearly two decades playing villains. An agreeable-looking fellow offscreen, Henriksen portrayed the foulest of murderers, rapists, perverts, extraterrestrials, and other antisocial types on the stage (Richard III) and screen. He made his first film, It Ain't Easy, in 1972 (although his studio bios list his screen debut as Dog Day Afternoon in 1975), then concentrated his skills on the melodramatic requirements of The Jagged Edge (1985), Johnny Handsome (1989), Jennifer Eight (1992), Dead Man (1995), and many others. In interviews, Henriksen claimed to "live" his parts while portraying them, which, he admitted, was a self-defeating practice. A close friend of director James Cameron, Henriksen posed for Cameron's preliminary character sketches for the robotic antagonist of the 1984 thriller The Terminator. The producers liked the sketches but not Henriksen, and the role instead went to Arnold Schwarzenegger. In compensation, Cameron saw to it that Henriksen was cast as a heroic android in his 1986 film Aliens.In the years that followed Henriksen gained reputation as an actor who could bring compelling nuance to even the most mundane of roles. Moving into the 1990s Henriksen did indeed appear in a number of forgettable films, but the ones that did leave an impression on audience did so with remarkable zeal. From his menacing role as the head of a tribe of nomadic vampires in Near Dark to a tortured portrayal of a vengeful father in Pumpkinhead, Henriksen's colorful characters consistantly elevated what may have been dismissive, two-dimensional players in the hands of a lesser actor. After reprising his role as Bishop in the troubled Alien 3, Henriksen packed heat as an over the top hunter of human's in Hong Kong action film director John Woo's American debut Hard Target. By this point the dedicated actor had earned a reputation for doing whatever it takes to make his characters truly memorable, and a scene in the climactic showdown of Hard Target found him continuing to chew scenery evern after he accidentally caught on fire (a scene that actually made it into the final cut of the film)! Henriksen's role as a cocky gunfighter in director Sam Raimi's The Quick and the Dead proved without question a highlight of his roles from the '90s. In 1996 Henriksen made quite an impression on television audiences as the lead character in producer Chris Carter's shortlived X-Files spin-off Millennium. As a former FBI profiler with a unique gift for peering into the minds of some of the nation's most feared criminals, Henriksen gained his most notable exposure to date and longtime fans ate it up. Unfortunately the series only ran for three seasons and Henriksen was back to his old bag of tricks in a seemingly undending series if B-movies. It certainly appeared as if Henriksen was becoming less choosy with his roles, and though the integrity he would bring to those roles generally helped him to stay afloat in a sea of forgettable efforts, it appeared as if the waters were finally threatening to overtake him. While it was indeed a relief to see Henriksen back on the big screen in Scream 3, there was little even he could do to make The Mangler 2 more watchable. Fortunately during this period, actors were becoming more prominant in video games, and Henriksen's distinct voice lent notable atmosphere to such efforts as Red Faction II and Four Horsemen of the Apocolypse. Henriksen's role in the suprisingly agreeable horror sequel Mimic: Sentinel helped to lend the movie some weight even if his actual screentime amounted to a little more than ten minutes, and if a wince of pain could be heard following the announcement of his involvement in Hellraiser: Hellworld fans could at least hold out hope for a return to the franchise that helped to launch his career in the long-anticipated Alien vs. Predator. Unfortunately, it didn't, though Henrickson continued to enjoy success in voice roles, among them including When a Stranger Calls (2006), a teen horror film in which he voiced the role of a serial killer who stalks his victims over the phone before hunting them down, and Superman: Braniac Attacks, in which he voiced the character of Brainiac (2006). Henrickson took on a starring role in Abominable (2006), which followed the effort to save a group of girls from death by Yeti. 2007 was another busy year for the actor, who worked in a slew of horror films including Pumpkinhead: Blood Feud and The Seamstress, as well as the crime thriller Bone Dry. In 2008 he joined the cast of Pistol Whipped, an action thriller following a down-and-out man hired to kill a notorious gangster. In 2011 he worked alongside Lauren Holly in Scream of the Banshee, another supernatural horror, and played Henry Gale in The Witches of Oz (2011), a fantasy adventure following the tales of an adult Dorothy Gale battling to keep the Wicked Witch of the West from crossing into her reality.
Tom Bower (Actor) .. Abner Raines
Bobby Jauregui (Actor)
Ariadna Gil (Actor)
Jim Tarwater (Actor)
Born: July 03, 1952
Timothy V. Murphy (Actor) .. Vince
Born: April 05, 1960
Bob L. Harris (Actor)
Born: July 15, 1911
Benjamin Rosenshein (Actor) .. Town Boy
Erik J. Bockemeier (Actor) .. Fat Wallis
Fred Hice (Actor) .. Bragg's Third Man
Neil Summers (Actor) .. Bragg's Fourth Man
Born: April 28, 1944
Tim Carroll (Actor) .. Wagon Driver
Bounthanh Xaynhachack (Actor) .. Chin
Art Usher (Actor) .. Clerk
Cliff Gravel (Actor) .. Barber
Mike Watson (Actor) .. Night Rider
Rex Linn (Actor) .. Clyde Stringer
Born: November 13, 1956
Birthplace: Spearman, Texas, United States
Trivia: With his bald head and beefy exterior, Hollywood character player Rex Linn quickly built up an acting resumé replete with many portrayals of toughs, feds, cops, thugs, and -- occasionally -- unremarkable, beleaguered everymen. Born in the panhandle of the Lone Star State, Linn came of age in the small Texas town of Spearman. He discovered a lingering interest in drama during his teenage years, but buckled under the weight of discouragement from an acting coach, and put acting on the shelf to focus on career pursuits in banking and the oil industry. Dissatisfied with these fields, Linn convinced an Oklahoma talent agent to sign him, and made the leap from commercials to feature roles with his portrayal of serial murderer Fred Epps in the Peter Masterson-directed thriller Night Game (1989), opposite Roy Scheider. The pleasure of this experience prompted Linn to head to the West Coast, where he worked construction, landed intermittent acting assignments, and studied the craft under the tutelage of Silvana Gallardo in Studio City, CA. Linn was memorable as the rogue treasury agent who assists terrorist John Lithgow in the Sylvester Stallone vehicle Cliffhanger (1993), which brought the actor the recognition he so persistently sought and led to a series of supporting roles in dozens of feature films. Linn's portrayal of Frank McLaury in Wyatt Earp (1994) marked the first in a series of several onscreen collaborations with Kevin Costner that also included the romantic comedy Tin Cup (1996) and the laborious sci-fi epic The Postman (1997). Linn also landed guest appearances on such series as JAG and 3rd Rock From the Sun. He is best known, however, for his fine portrayal of Miami-Dade Police Department detective Frank Tripp on the hit crime series CSI: Miami.
Corby Griesenbeck (Actor) .. Charlie Tewksbury
Adam Nelson (Actor) .. Mackie Shelton
Daniel T. Parker (Actor)
Ed Pennybacker (Actor) .. Conductor
Alvin Lunak (Actor) .. Sharps
Martin Connelly (Actor) .. Apache Elder
Danny Edmo (Actor) .. Young Brave
Argos MacCallum (Actor) .. Beauville Sheriff Russell
Cynthia Huerta (Actor) .. Mexican Woman
Charlene Adams (Actor)
David Bard (Actor)
Maria J. Bethke (Actor)
Scott Brooks (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Stephen Chomko (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Robert Colby (Actor)
Trivia: Actor Robert Coleby has appeared on stage, screen, and television in his native Britain, in the U.S., and in Australia. Although he made his first film appearance in The Last Run (1971), Coleby did not regularly appear in films until the 1980s. Subsequent starring roles include that of a philandering husband falsely accused of rape in Now and Forever (1983) and an impoverished lawyer in Hectors Bunyip (1986).
Charles Culberson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Robert Down (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Jackie Fleming (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Jim Granger (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Nancy Ann Hibbs (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Nick Johnson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Glen Kappy (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Kevin Kinsner (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Norm Lee (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Loretta Lewis (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Skip Long (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Tom McFarlane (Actor)
Dani McNutt (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Sylvie Mortenson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Sandy Nickal (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Kyle Osborne (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Hunter Lee Pimparapana (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Marvin Rath (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Randall Sauls (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Claire Schwebke (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Nathan Simmons (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Chloe Slator (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
John Turner (Actor)
Bailey Walter (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Ernest Andreas (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Ian Bell (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Todd Bethke (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Martin Callahan (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Cynthia Clark (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Lowell Crawford (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Timothy David (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Flynn-Bella Ericson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Dennis Foulkrod (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Ruben Haddix (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Jerrall Hinds (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Taryn Johnson (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Jeff Kimerling (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Daniel Krieger (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Kerry Lee (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Isabelle Leustig (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Denise Lynch (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Diana McGuerty (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Diana Minfa (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Ernest Moya (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Michael Max Norris (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Trevor Osborn (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Michael Neal Powell (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
L.C. Read (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Daphne D. Ross (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Darrell Schmidt (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Cecily Kuehl Shank (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Frankey Singzilay (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Isabel Slator (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Elizabeth Ann Tuttle (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Kristin Walter (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
David Jensen (Actor)
Tom Larson (Actor)
Matthew Montoya (Actor)
Michael Clark (Actor)
Jerry Fuentes (Actor)
Tom Johnson (Actor)
Alex Edmo (Actor)
Girard Swan (Actor)
Herman Endito (Actor)
Alicia Williams (Actor)
Heather Antonio (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Daniel Jon Bergman (Actor)
Miles Blackman (Actor)
Mabel Jin Chin (Actor)
Leonaldan Codanti (Actor)
Jake Crellin (Actor)
Rachel De la Torre (Actor)
Chuck Ferran (Actor)
Christopher Frechette (Actor)
Bruce Harders (Actor)
Perry Jasper (Actor)
Dale Kappy (Actor)
Kim Kimerling (Actor)
Xander Laird (Actor)
Michael Lente (Actor)
Jennae Linnell (Actor)
Lynn Macri (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Henry McKeighen (Actor)
Kim Montoya (Actor)
Kevin New (Actor)
Frank Nunn (Actor)
Dara Osborne (Actor)
Kristine Rael (Actor)
Steve Rick (Actor)
Tom E. Rostkowski (Actor)
Yvonne Schmidt (Actor)
Carol Sieber (Actor)
Edward Sipler (Actor)
Fionn Thelen (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
Madeline Walter (Actor) .. Citizen of Appaloosa
J.C. Augare (Actor) .. Apache
Anderson Chee (Actor)
Wes Trudell (Actor)
Kiela Bird (Actor)
Bud Connley (Actor)
Jerry Hardy (Actor)
Les Schesser (Actor)
Larry Hinsley (Actor)
Frank Spencer (Actor)
Adam Honeyfield (Actor)
Greg Stevenson (Actor)
Robert Jauregui (Actor) .. Marshall Jack Bell
Freddie Hice (Actor) .. Bragg's Third Man
Clark Sanchez (Actor) .. Teamster
Robert Harris (Actor) .. Judge Elias Callison
Born: April 12, 1930

Before / After
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Tom Horn
5:30 pm