The Day Reagan Was Shot


10:50 pm - 12:50 am, Wednesday, February 4 on WZAW Movies! (33.3)

Average User Rating: 8.33 (3 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites

About this Broadcast
-

A look at the events after the attempted 1981 assassination of the President (Richard Crenna), when Gen. Alexander Haig (Richard Dreyfuss) assumed control of the Government. Nancy Reagan: Holland Taylor. Dr. Gregorio: Andrew Tarbet. Weinberger: Colm Feore. Deaver: Michael Murphy. Baker: Kenneth Welsh. Meese: Leon Pownall. Hinckley: Christian Lloyd. Allen: Robert Bockstael. Casey: Jack Jessop. Brady: John Connolly. Sarah: Angela Gei.

2001 English Stereo
Drama

Cast & Crew
-

Richard Crenna (Actor) .. Ronald Reagan
Richard Dreyfuss (Actor) .. Alexander Haig
Kenneth Welsh (Actor) .. James Baker
Holland Taylor (Actor) .. Nancy Reagan
Yannick Bisson (Actor) .. Buddy Stein
Colm Feore (Actor) .. Cap Weinberger
Leon Pownall (Actor) .. Ed Meese
Robert Bockstael (Actor) .. Dick Allen
Beau Starr (Actor) .. Special Agent Cage
Alex Carter (Actor) .. Dr. Allard
Andrew Tarbet (Actor) .. Dr. Gregorio
Christian Lloyd (Actor) .. John Hinckley
Sean McCann (Actor) .. Donald Regan
Jack Jessop (Actor) .. William Casey
John Connolly (Actor) .. James Brady
Angela Gei (Actor) .. Sarah Brady
Michael Greene (Actor) .. George Bush
Frank Moore (Actor) .. Lt. Col. Taylor
Ken James (Actor) .. General Yates
Oliver Dennis (Actor) .. David Gergen
Dean McKenzie (Actor) .. Agent Emery
Peter Haworth (Actor) .. Agent McCarthy
Wayne Best (Actor) .. FBI Agent Kirkus
Bernard Behrens (Actor) .. Attorney General Smith
Patrick Galligan (Actor) .. Larry Speakes
Neil Crone (Actor) .. Lyn Nofziger
Judah Katz (Actor) .. Trauma Doctor
Frank Pellegrino (Actor) .. Officer Delmonico
Bruce Hunter (Actor) .. Agent Vaughn
Dan Duran (Actor) .. News Anchor
John-Patrick Mavric (Actor) .. Stranger

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Richard Crenna (Actor) .. Ronald Reagan
Born: November 30, 1926
Died: January 17, 2003
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: American actor Richard Crenna started out as a radio performer at age 11, demonstrating an astonishing range for one so young. The momentum of his career was unaffected by an army hitch and time spent earning an English degree at the University of Southern California. But even though he was by then in his twenties, Crenna found himself still playing adolescents, notably squeaky-voiced high schooler Walter Denton on the radio comedy Our Miss Brooks. That he was able to play characters of virtually any age was overlooked by movie and TV casting directors, who could see Crenna only in callow-juvenile roles. After making an excellent impression as ballplayer Daffy Dean in the 1953 film Pride of St. Louis, for example, Crenna wasn't cast in another film until the 1955 movie version of Our Miss Brooks--in which, at 29, he was Walter Denton once more. The following year, Crenna decided "to sorta let Walter Denton die," and took a decidedly mature role in the sleazy exploitation film Over-Exposed (1956). It was a fully grown Crenna who took on the role of Luke McCoy on the Walter Brennan TV series The Real McCoys, which ran from 1957 through 1963 and which gave Crenna his first opportunities as a director. After McCoys, Crenna found himself facing potential career standstill again, since it seemed that now he was typed as the rubeish Luke McCoy. This time, however, the actor had impressed enough producers with his dogged work ethic and the range displayed in guest-star appearances. In 1964, Crenna was cast in a prestigious TV drama For the People as assistant DA David Koster, and though the program lasted only one season, Crenna was firmly established as a compelling dramatic actor. Still, and despite solid Richard Crenna film performances in The Sand Pebbles (1966), Body Heat (1981) and The Flamingo Kid (1985), the actor has never completely escaped the spectre of Walter Denton. Crenna was able to conjure up the old adenoidal Denton voice on talk shows of the 1980s and 1990s, and in the action-film spoof Hot Shots: Part Deux, the actor, with an absolute straight face, portrayed Colonel Denton Walters!
Richard Dreyfuss (Actor) .. Alexander Haig
Born: October 29, 1947
Birthplace: Brooklyn, NY
Trivia: Stocky, frequently bespectacled, eventually balding, and prematurely gray, Richard Dreyfuss is an unlikely candidate for a movie star. Even so, he has been one of Hollywood's most versatile, charismatic, and energetic leading men since the mid-'70s. Born in Brooklyn, NY, on October 29, 1947, Dreyfuss moved to Los Angeles with his family when he was nine. There he became friends with Rob Reiner and began acting in school productions and at the Beverly Hills Jewish Community Center. He attended San Fernando Valley State College, but was expelled after getting into a heated argument with a professor over Marlon Brando's performance in Julius Caesar (1953). Not wanting to be drafted for Vietnam, he registered as a conscientious objector and spent two years as a clerk at a Los Angeles hospital instead of enlisting. During this time, Dreyfuss started getting a few acting jobs on network television series such as Bewitched and Big Valley; he had his first film role in 1967's The Graduate, speaking the lines "Shall I call the cops? I'll call the cops" to Dustin Hoffman. He continued playing bit parts in a couple more films, but did not get his first big break until he played Baby Face Nelson in the bloody biopic Dillinger (1973). A memorable leading role as an intelligent, contemplative teen in George Lucas' American Graffiti (1973) earned Dreyfuss critical acclaim, as did his portrayal of an entrepreneurial Jewish youth in The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (1974). In 1975, the actor's career exploded when he starred as an arrogant shark expert in Steven Spielberg's Jaws. He worked for Spielberg again two years later, playing an average Midwestern working stiff who learns that we are not alone in the universe in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Further success followed that same year when Dreyfuss portrayed a failed actor in Neil Simon's romantic comedy The Goodbye Girl. His performance won him an Oscar, making him, at the age of 29, the youngest performer ever to receive the Best Actor honor. After that, Dreyfuss was in demand and, until 1981, he continued to find steady work in a number of films. However, none of these proved particularly popular, and the actor's career began to nosedive. Matters were worsened by his reported drug use and Hollywood party antics; in 1982, he was involved in a car accident and arrested for possession of cocaine. Fortunately, Dreyfuss managed to turn his life around, and after appearing in the rarely seen Buddy System (1984), made a big comeback in Paul Mazursky's hit comedy Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986), starring opposite Bette Midler and Nick Nolte. With his reputation restored, Dreyfuss went on to appear in lead and supporting roles in numerous films of varying quality. Highlights included Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1990), Postcards From the Edge (1990), What About Bob? (1991), and Quiz Show (1994). In 1996, Dreyfuss played one of his finest roles as a high school music teacher who sacrifices his dream of becoming a famous composer to help his students in Mr. Holland's Opus (1996). The role earned Dreyfuss an Oscar nomination. That same year, he won acclaim of a different sort, lending his voice to a sarcastic centipede in Tim Burton's animated adaptation of Roald Dahl's James and the Giant Peach. He went on to appear in Sidney Lumet's Night Falls on Manhattan (1997) and to star in Krippendorf's Tribe in 1998. The following year, he could be seen as titular Jewish gangster Lansky, a made-for-TV biopic scripted by David Mamet.In 2001, with his film career struggling a bit, Dreyfuss took his first stab at series television since 1964's short-lived sitcom Karen. The hour-long CBS drama The Education of Max Bickford starred the actor as a college history professor opposite Marcia Gay Harden and received largely positive reviews from critics. However, despite the accolades, the show failed to garner a substantial audience and was cancelled after one season.The following years would see Dreyfuss continuing to appear on screen, appearing most notably in movies like W., Leaves of Grass, and Red, and on TV shows like Weeds and Parenthood.
Kenneth Welsh (Actor) .. James Baker
Holland Taylor (Actor) .. Nancy Reagan
Born: January 14, 1943
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Philadelphia-born actress Holland Taylor majored in drama at Bennington College, and arrived in New York in 1966, hoping to take the theater world by storm. That didn't quite happen, despite Taylor making her Broadway debut in The Devils, starring Anne Bancroft, and working with Alan Bates in Butley (she was also in that notorious failure, Moose Murders). A protégée of legendary acting teacher Stella Adler, Taylor endured 14 years of disappointments interspersed with the occasional success, and played in one heavily hyped television series (CBS's Beacon Hill) that failed in less than a season, all of it broken up by work in the daytime drama The Edge of Night. Finally, in 1980, lightning struck when Taylor was cast in the series Bosom Buddies in the role of Ruth Dunbar, the acid-tongued advertising agency executive employing the two protagonists of the program, played by Tom Hanks and Peter Scolari. Taylor accepted the part despite some initial reluctance, mostly thanks to Adler's urging, but she proved almost as much of a breakout personality onscreen as Hanks and Scolari. Taylor took lines written with venom and added her own wry twists to their meanings and inflections, and made all of her scenes memorable. The series only lasted two full seasons, but when it folded, Taylor was being offered television and movie roles on a steady basis. Most of her subsequent series didn't last more than a season each, but Taylor's parts, usually as charmingly acerbic middle-aged women, stayed big and got larger, up through programs such as The Naked Truth, starring Téa Leoni. Taylor's big-screen appearances have included supporting roles in such diverse films as The Truman Show, Spy Kids 2, Legally Blonde, George of the Jungle, Romancing the Stone, The Jewel of the Nile, How to Make an American Quilt, Fame, She's Having a Baby, and To Die For. She's also had some choice parts in made-for-television movies, including playing Nancy Reagan in The Day Reagan Was Shot, but Taylor's most successful medium remains the television series. In recent years, she has proved a mainstay of producer David E. Kelley's stable of actors, taking on the recurring role of Judge Roberta Kittleson, a Boston jurist whose sex-drive is a match for her legal intellect, in the series The Practice (with a cross-over appearance in the same role on Ally McBeal), winning an Emmy for her work on the show's 1999 season. That series, which has included an episode featuring Taylor in a semi-nude scene, has not only given the middle-aged actress a chance to explore sides of her screen persona that other producers never even considered, but has transformed her into a sex symbol among the ranks of mature actresses, right up there with Kathleen Turner as Mrs. Robinson in the stage version of The Graduate.As the new century began she continued to work steadily in both movies and TV in projects such as Happy Accidents, playing the first-lady in The Day Reagan Was Shot, Legally Blonde, and Spy Kids 2. She returned to series television with a recurring role on Two and a Half Men, which was the most-watched sitcom on TV during part of its successful run. She also appeared in the big screen comedy Baby Mama.
Yannick Bisson (Actor) .. Buddy Stein
Born: May 16, 1969
Birthplace: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Trivia: Born in Montreal, but lived in Florida and Texas until he was 13 and moved to Toronto. Featured in a series of commercials for Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. Daughters Brianna and Dominique have each appeared in episodes of their father's Murdoch Mysteries series. Was involved in the design of the suits his Victorian-era detective character wears in Murdoch Mysteries. In 2013, his character, William Murdoch, from Murdoch Mysteries, made a crossover appearance on the Canadian TV-drama Republic of Doyle. Volunteers with Sheena's Place, a support center for people with eating disorders.
Colm Feore (Actor) .. Cap Weinberger
Born: August 22, 1958
Birthplace: Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Trivia: A classically trained stage star in his adopted home of Canada, Colm Feore became an increasingly familiar presence to movie and TV audiences as a prolific supporting actor in the 1990s.Though he was born in the U.S. and spent the first years of his life in Ireland, Feore and his family moved to Ottawa when he was three and Canada became his official home. After studying acting at Canada's National Theater School, Feore built a distinguished Canadian stage career, performing in over 40 productions during 13 seasons with the prestigious Stratford Festival.Feore began adding film and TV to his acting experience in the late '80s with such movies as Iron Eagle II (1988), Bethune: The Making of a Hero (1989), Beautiful Dreamers (1991) and Truman (1995). His non-stage career expanded further in the latter half of the 1990s and into the 2000s with numerous roles in a wide range of projects likeFace/Off, The Wrong Guy (1998), City of Angels, Titus (1999), and Michael Mann's Oscar-nominated docudrama, The Insider (1999). Though he spent part of 2000 acting in the New York Public Theater production of Shakespeare's Hamlet, Feore was soon back in front of the cameras in an eclectic mix of works, like off-center murder mystery The Caveman's Valentine (2001) and played Admiral Kimmel in Michael Bay's overblown blockbuster Pearl Harbor (2001). As the years rolled on, Feore would continue to remain an active force on screen, appearing in movies like Chicago, Paycheck, The Exorcism of Emily Rose, Changeling, and Thor. Feore would also find success on the small screen on shows like 24 and The Borgias.
Leon Pownall (Actor) .. Ed Meese
Born: April 26, 1943
Robert Bockstael (Actor) .. Dick Allen
Born: December 15, 1923
Beau Starr (Actor) .. Special Agent Cage
Born: September 01, 1944
Birthplace: Queens, New York
Alex Carter (Actor) .. Dr. Allard
Born: November 12, 1964
Birthplace: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Andrew Tarbet (Actor) .. Dr. Gregorio
Christian Lloyd (Actor) .. John Hinckley
Sean McCann (Actor) .. Donald Regan
Born: September 24, 1935
Jack Jessop (Actor) .. William Casey
John Connolly (Actor) .. James Brady
Angela Gei (Actor) .. Sarah Brady
Michael Greene (Actor) .. George Bush
Born: January 01, 1934
Trivia: All evidence indicates that actor Michael Greene's first film assignment was an unbilled bit in 1965's The Cincinnati Kid. He continued accepting small roles into the 1970s, notably the motorcycle punk who gives Woody Allen a going-over in Play It Again Sam (1972) (curiously, Greene shows up in a later scene as a restaurant extra sitting directly across from Allen!). After several years' of faithful anonymous screen service, Greene was given a leading role in something called The Clones (1973) wherein Michael Greene plays a scientist who learns to his horror that he has been cloned by mad doctor Stanley Adams--thus paving the way for a climactic showdown between Greene and his synthetic look-alike.
Frank Moore (Actor) .. Lt. Col. Taylor
Ken James (Actor) .. General Yates
Born: November 16, 1948
Oliver Dennis (Actor) .. David Gergen
Dean McKenzie (Actor) .. Agent Emery
Peter Haworth (Actor) .. Agent McCarthy
Wayne Best (Actor) .. FBI Agent Kirkus
Bernard Behrens (Actor) .. Attorney General Smith
Born: September 28, 1926
Patrick Galligan (Actor) .. Larry Speakes
Neil Crone (Actor) .. Lyn Nofziger
Born: May 29, 1960
Birthplace: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: Previously taught high school Drama and English.Performed in Theatresports and Big City Improv.Gained much popularity internationally for his role of redneck radio broadcaster Fred Tupper in the successful CBC series Little Mosque on the Prairie.Authored the children's books I Am Dead at Recess and Coby Builds a House.Is a Second City Alum.Regularly writes articles for Durham Region newspaper This Week.
Judah Katz (Actor) .. Trauma Doctor
Born: June 23, 1960
Frank Pellegrino (Actor) .. Officer Delmonico
Died: January 31, 2017
Bruce Hunter (Actor) .. Agent Vaughn
Dan Duran (Actor) .. News Anchor
John-Patrick Mavric (Actor) .. Stranger
James Dreyfus (Actor)
Born: October 09, 1968
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: Studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, Bloomsbury, London. Won the Best Supporting Performance in a Musical Olivier Award for his work in The Lady In The Dark at the National Theatre in 1998. Was nominated for the Ian Charleson Award for his performance as Cassius in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar at the Birmingham Rep in 1988. Usually plays comedy roles.
Michael Murphy (Actor)
Born: May 05, 1938

Before / After
-