Easy Money


11:50 am - 1:30 pm, Today on MGM+ (West) ()

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About this Broadcast
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A slovenly photographer stands to inherit a fortune if he can give up smoking, drinking, gambling and all his other unhealthy habits for a year.

1983 English Stereo
Comedy

Cast & Crew
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Rodney Dangerfield (Actor) .. Monty Capuletti
Joe Pesci (Actor) .. Nicky Cerone
Geraldine Fitzgerald (Actor) .. Mrs. Monahan
Candy Azzara (Actor) .. Rose
Tom Noonan (Actor) .. Paddy
Taylor Negron (Actor) .. Julio
Val Avery (Actor) .. Louie the Bartender
Lili Haydn (Actor) .. Belinda Capuletti
Jeffrey Jones (Actor) .. Clive Barlow
Tom Ewell (Actor) .. Scrappleton
Jennifer Jason Leigh (Actor) .. Allison Capuletti
Jeff Altman (Actor) .. Bill
Jeffrey Altman (Actor) .. Bill Jones
David Vasquez (Actor) .. Hector
Kimberly Mcarthur (Actor) .. Ginger Jones
Frank Simpson (Actor) .. Fr. McIntyre
Arch Johnson (Actor) .. Vendor at Armory
Dennis Blair (Actor) .. Fashion Critic/Old Dying Man
Steve Szucs (Actor) .. Barfly
Mary Pat Gleason (Actor) .. Party Mother
Angela Pietropinto (Actor) .. Party Mother
Carmen Bonifant (Actor) .. Julio's Mother
Pedro Ocampo (Actor) .. Julio's Father
Taylor Reed (Actor) .. Fat Guy
Peter Laurelli (Actor) .. Fat Anthony
Fiddle Viracola (Actor) .. Fat Anthony's Mother
John Scoletti (Actor) .. Fat Anthony's Father
Filomena Spagnuolo (Actor) .. Fat Anthony's Grandmother
Peter D'Arcy (Actor) .. Bartender at Wedding
Polli Magaro (Actor) .. Woman in Wedding
Rafael Cruz (Actor) .. Man in Wedding
Alfred De La Fuente (Actor) .. Old Man Singer at Armory
Harsh Nayyar (Actor) .. Dr. Vindaloo
Milton Seaman (Actor) .. Boardroom Lawyer
Sid Raymond (Actor) .. Bet Taker
Jeff Gillen (Actor) .. Bettor
Eric Van Valkenburg (Actor) .. Assistant to Clive Barlow
Richard Van Valkenburg (Actor) .. Assistant to Clive Barlow
John Delph (Actor) .. Monahan's Clerk
Walt Gorney (Actor) .. Monahan's Security Guard
Jessica James (Actor) .. Saleslady
B. Constance Barry (Actor) .. Browser
Lawrence Leritz (Actor) .. Assistant to Tailor
Mary Wilshire (Actor) .. Sketch Artist
Gregor Roy (Actor) .. Boardroom Security Guard
Milton Seamon (Actor) .. Boardroom Lawyer
Wade Barnes (Actor) .. Boardroom Lawyer
James Cahill (Actor) .. Buyer
Ian Sullivan (Actor) .. Buyer
Lisa McMillan (Actor) .. Buyer
Andrea Coles (Actor) .. Buyer
Jade Bari (Actor) .. Buyer
McKenzie Allen (Actor) .. Buyer
Richard Dow (Actor) .. Conrad Donaldson
Margot Avery (Actor) .. Critic
Wiliam J. Daprato (Actor) .. Tailor in Boardroom
Lawrence R. Leritz (Actor) .. Tailor's Assistant
Gwendolyn Shepherd (Actor) .. Nurse in Hospital
Joni Fritz (Actor) .. Nurse in Hospital
Bill Hindman (Actor) .. Butler on Yacht
Robin Paradise (Actor) .. Servant on Yacht
Sandra Beall (Actor) .. Maid of Honor
Paul Herman (Actor) .. Bar Owner
Eric H. Shonz (Actor) .. Critic
Alan Gordon (Actor) .. Critic
Stewart Stewart (Actor) .. Critic
Rodney (Actor)

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Rodney Dangerfield (Actor) .. Monty Capuletti
Born: November 22, 1921
Died: October 05, 2004
Birthplace: Babylon, New York, United States
Trivia: If ever there was a "late bloomer," it was American comedian Rodney Dangerfield. His father was a vaudeville pantomimist who was known professionally as Phil Roy, thus when Dangerfield struck out on his own stand-up comedy career at age 19 (he'd been writing jokes for other comics since 15), he called himself Jack Roy. For nine years he labored in some of the worst clubs on the East Coast, giving it all up at age 28 in order to support his new wife. Unfortunately, the marriage was an unhappy one, soon ending in divorce. In 1963 the comic returned to performing, using the name "Rodney Dangerfield" to distance himself from his miserable "Jack Roy" days. Four more years passed before Dangerfield finally got his big break on The Ed Sullivan Show, for which he'd auditioned by sneaking in during a dress rehearsal. By this time, Dangerfield had fully developed his belligerently neurotic stage persona, tugging at his tie and mopping his brow while he delineated the variety of ways in which he "don't get no respect." On top at last, Dangerfield opened his own nightclub in 1969, where many major comics of the 1970s and 1980s got their first opportunities; fiercely competitive onstage, Dangerfield is known to be more than generous to new talent offstage. In films since his turn as a nasty theatre manager in the 1970 low-budgeter The Projectionist, Dangerfield has exuded a movie image somewhat different than his paranoid nightclub character; he often plays a crude-and-rude "nouveau riche" type who delights in puncturing the pomposity of his "old money" opponents (Caddyshack). Rodney Dangerfield's best screen role was, significantly, his nicest--in Back to School (1985), he played a blunt but decent self-made millionaire who decides to join his son in getting an expensive college education.
Joe Pesci (Actor) .. Nicky Cerone
Born: February 09, 1943
Birthplace: Newark, NJ
Trivia: A consummate character actor, Joe Pesci rose to success on the strength of a series of Martin Scorsese films which took full advantage of his gift for outlandishly menacing supporting performances. Born February 9, 1943, in Newark, NJ, Pesci was a child actor who began his radio career at the age of four. Broadway beckoned just a year later, and by 1953 he was a regular on the television variety program Star Time Kids. His acting career stalled during his teen years, however, and by the mid-'60s, he mounted a musical career under the name Joe Ritchie, recording an LP titled Little Joe Sure Can Sing and later playing guitar in the pop band Joey Dee & the Starliters. He also formed a vaudeville-style nightclub comedy act with Frank Vincent. Outside of 1961's Hey, Let's Twist!, Pesci did not appear in films prior to the little-seen 1975 feature The Death Collector; the film earned virtually no notice upon its release and he dropped out of acting, dejectedly returning to New York to run an Italian restaurant.While few people saw The Death Collector, one of those who did was actor Robert De Niro, who was so impressed by Pesci's performance that he brought the film to the attention of Scorsese, who cast Pesci in his 1980 masterpiece Raging Bull. The performance earned Pesci an Academy Award nomination in the Best Supporting Actor category, and he became one of the busiest character actors in the business, steadily appearing in films ranging from the 1983 Rodney Dangerfield comedy Easy Money to the 1984 Sergio Leone epic Once Upon a Time in America. After starring in a failed 1985 sitcom, Half Nelson, Pesci's onscreen visibility diminished, and over the next four years he appeared in only one film, 1987's Man on Fire. In 1989, however, he co-starred opposite Mel Gibson and Danny Glover in the hit Lethal Weapon 2, a performance which put his talent for comic relief to such fine use that he later reappeared in the third chapter of the franchise, issued in 1992.By that point, Pesci had already become a star; 1990 was his breakthrough year, as he appeared in the family comedy blockbuster Home Alone and Scorsese's brilliant GoodFellas, winning the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his vivid portrayal of a psychotic mobster. While his first major starring role in 1991's The Super proved disastrous, he won good notices for his supporting turn in Oliver Stone's JFK and in 1992 starred in the hit courtroom comedy My Cousin Vinny. Later, following the disappointment of 1994's Jimmy Hollywood and With Honors, he reunited with Scorsese and De Niro for the 1995 epic Casino, essaying a variation on his GoodFellas character. However, a pair of poorly received 1997 comedies -- Eight Heads in a Duffel Bag and Gone Fishin' -- again called Pesci's capabilities as a lead actor into question. He found more success reprising his supporting role in Lethal Weapon 4, released in 1998. On the heels of his second outing with Mel Gibson and Danny Glover, however, the popular character actor disappeared from the big screen for nearly a decade. It took his old friend DeNiro to get him back in front of the camera for the CIA thriller The Good Shepherd (2006), with the four year gap between that film and Pesci's next film Love Ranch hinting that the aging screen veterean was in no hurry to jump back into the fray. But the window between films seemed to start shrinking when it was announced that Pesci would be returning to the world of crime cinema in director Geo Santini's 2012 gangster drama The Irishman.
Geraldine Fitzgerald (Actor) .. Mrs. Monahan
Born: November 24, 1913
Died: July 17, 2005
Birthplace: Greystones, County Wicklow, Ireland
Trivia: The daughter of a Dublin attorney, Geraldine Fitzgerald was still in her teens when she made her theatrical bow with the Gate Theatre. In films from 1934, she played a series of petulant ingénues in a string of forgettable quota quickies; in later years, she sarcastically summed up her early screen roles by repeating her most frequent snatch of dialogue, "But daddy, it's my birthday!" With her first husband, she moved to New York in 1938, where she was hired by her old Gate Theatre colleague Orson Welles to star in the Mercury Theater production Heartbreak House. This led to several choice Hollywood assignments in such films as Dark Victory (1939) and Wuthering Heights (1939). Forever battling with studio executives over her often inconsequential screen assignments (exceptions included such roles as Edith Galt in the 1945 biopic Wilson), Fitzgerald briefly gave up films in 1948 to return to the stage. Carefully picking and choosing her subsequent movie roles, she established herself as a reliable character actress in quality films like Ten North Frederick (1958) and The Pawnbroker (1965). She briefly pursued a folksinging career before returning to Broadway in the ultra-demanding role of Mary Tyrone in the 1971 revival of Long Day's Journey Into Night. Active into the late '80s, Fitzgerald has added a welcome dash of Hibernian feistiness to such projects as Arthur (1981) and Easy Money (1983). Geraldine Fitzgerald is the mother of prominent British film director Michael Lindsay-Hogg.
Candy Azzara (Actor) .. Rose
Born: May 18, 1947
Tom Noonan (Actor) .. Paddy
Born: April 12, 1951
Birthplace: Greenwich, Connecticut, United States
Trivia: A performer who succinctly defines the term "character actor," Tom Noonan has appeared in over 20 feature films and numerous TV series and movies, and has also enjoyed a career as a playwright, director, and acting professor. A 1973 graduate of the esteemed Yale acting program, Noonan began his career as a guitarist and composer, working with such downtown theater troupes as Mabou Mines and The Wooster Group (which has included fellow actor Willem Dafoe among its ranks) until he found his niche in film and TV in the early '80s.Noonan began to find work as a premier villain in such films as Manhunter ([1986] the first film to feature the infamous Hannibal Lecter), The Monster Squad (1987), Robocop 2 (1990), and Last Action Hero (1993), the latter few representing Hollywood action-adventure pictures that helped subsidize smaller projects that the actor wished to take on. One of these projects was the 1994 Sundance Film Festival sleeper What Happened Was..., a startling examination of a truly awkward first date based on Noonan's play produced the previous year. The film, which Noonan wrote, directed, and starred in opposite Karen Sillas, won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance that year, as well as the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award. That same year, the film was released on the arthouse circuit and garnered accolades for Noonan, including several Ten Best citations from critics. What Happened Was... was featured in Scenario Magazine in the July 1995 issue as one of its featured screenplays.Noonan continued to appear in such mainstream fare as Michael Mann's cops-and-robbers epic Heat (1995) and more television offerings, including a memorable stint on the popular sci-fi show The X-Files. He then made a film called The Wife, based on his play Wifey, co-starring Wallace Shawn, Julie Hagerty, and Karen Young, all holdovers from the stage version, which premiered at his Paradise Theater, a small off-off-Broadway space in New York's East Village. This film was also accepted into the Sundance Film Festival and was (barely) released theatrically, not enjoying the same success as his 1994 play to film.Noonan is the author of several collections of fiction, as well as an unpublished novel titled Must Have. A former National Endowment of the Arts scholar, he has long used New York City as his home and professional base, and has taught classes in acting technique at the Paradise Theater, which for years has been host to original, quirky downtown theatre.
Taylor Negron (Actor) .. Julio
Born: August 01, 1958
Died: January 10, 2015
Val Avery (Actor) .. Louie the Bartender
Born: July 14, 1924
Died: December 12, 2009
Trivia: Avery was a versatile American character actor onscreen from 1956, beginning with The Harder They Fall.
Lili Haydn (Actor) .. Belinda Capuletti
Jeffrey Jones (Actor) .. Clive Barlow
Tom Ewell (Actor) .. Scrappleton
Born: April 29, 1909
Died: September 12, 1994
Trivia: His parents wanted him to be lawyer, but S. Yewell Tompkins decided instead to major in liberal arts at the University of Wisconsin. A professional actor from 1928, he toured in stock companies then spent several lean years in New York, during which time he changed his name to Tom Ewell. He appeared in the first of a string of Broadway flops in 1934, occasionally enjoying longer runs in such productions as Brother Rat and Family Portrait. A trip to Hollywood in 1940 led to a handful of bit parts but little else. After four years in the Navy, Ewell finally landed a bona fide Broadway hit starring in John Loves Mary in 1947. This led to his "official" screen debut as Judy Holliday's philandering husband in Adam's Rib (1949). Hardly the romantic lead type, Ewell's crumpled "everyman" countenance served him well in such screen roles as Bill Mauldin's archetypal G.I. Willie in Up Front (1951) and Willie and Joe Back at the Front (1952). Back on Broadway in 1954, he won a Tony Award for his peerless performance as a "summer bachelor" in George Axelrod's The Seven Year Itch, repeating this characterization opposite Marilyn Monroe in the 1955 screen version. He went on to play wry variations of this role in Frank Tashlin's The Lieutenant Wore Skirts (1955) and The Girl Can't Help It (1956), in which his screen partners included such lovelies as Sheree North, Rita Moreno, and Jayne Mansfield. In 1960, he starred in The Tom Ewell Show, a one-season sitcom in which he played a standard harried suburbanite. Various illnesses and recurrent alcoholism made it increasingly difficult for Ewell to find work in the 1970s; his best showing during this period was as Robert Blake's disheveled pal Billy on the weekly TVer Baretta. Tom Ewell retired in 1983, after a brief stint as Doc Killian in TV's Best of the West and a character role in the Rodney Dangerfield film Easy Money.
Jennifer Jason Leigh (Actor) .. Allison Capuletti
Born: February 05, 1962
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: A professional actor since the age of nine, Jennifer Jason Leigh earned her Screen Actors Guild card at 16 and dropped out of high school to study at the Lee Strasberg Institute and star in seedy made-for-TV movies. Born to actor Vic Morrow and writer/actress Barbara Turner in Hollywood, CA, Jennifer picked up the middle name Jason from family friend Jason Robards Jr. Throughout her career, she has made a name for herself portraying helpless, damaged, or mentally unsound characters, often performing at a higher level than the material. Also known for extensively researching her roles, Leigh dropped down to less than 90 pounds for one of her first features as an anorexic teenager in the TV-movie The Best Little Girl in the World. Never one to shy away from touchy subject matter, her breakthrough role came in 1982 as the naïve high school girl who gets an abortion in Fast Times at Ridgemont High. After a decade of developing a repertoire of various troubled characters, she was nominated for two Critics Circle awards in 1990 for playing prostitutes in both Miami Blues and Last Exit to Brooklyn. She would continue to play vulnerable characters in dangerous situations as the rookie narcotics officer-turned-drug addict in Rush. This was followed by her notorious role as the psycho roommate Hedra who tries to steal the identity of her roommate (Bridget Fonda) in Single White Female. She played a phone sex worker in the ensemble film Short Cuts, her first of three projects involving director Robert Altman. Leigh occasionally stepped out of her down-and-out roles, and in 1994 she shined as Amy Archer in The Hudsucker Proxy. Her comic turn as a plucky undercover journalist was said to recall the work of legendary actresses like Katharine Hepburn and Barbara Stanwyck. She delivered critically acclaimed performances in her next two films, with a Golden Globe nomination for Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle and an Independent Spirit nomination for Georgia. After playing an angry daughter in Dolores Claiborne, a spitfire kidnapper in Kansas City, and a domestic violence survivor in Bastard out of Carolina, she took another dramatic turn toward a period film. In Agnieszka Holland's Washington Square, Leigh proved her range by portraying a shy, clumsy girl as she evolves into adulthood. She returned to more showy roles for two films dealing with Shakespeare's King Lear: A Thousand Acres with Jason Robards Jr. and the fourth Dogme 95 film, The King Is Alive. Not limiting herself to dramas, Leigh appeared as an isolated computer programmer in David Cronenberg's thriller eXistenZ and as an over-the-top mom in the comedy Skipped Parts. Around that time, she also appeared on-stage in Broadway and off-Broadway plays, most notably as dancer Sally Bowles in Cabaret. Testing out new ground in 2001, she and fellow Cabaret star Alan Cumming wrote, directed, and starred in the ensemble comedy The Anniversary Party, a digital video project inspired by Dogme 95. Continuing to evolve as a respected actress, she went on to work in the crime genre, first as a hitman's wife in Road to Perdition, and then in Jane Campion's thriller In the Cut. In the several years to come, Leigh would remain an active force on screen, appearing most memorably in films like Margot at the Wedding, Synecdoche, New York, and on the series Weeds. After several years of quiet films, she made a splash in 2015 with two very different movies - the stop-motion film Anomalisa (directed by Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson) and The Hateful Eight, a western homage by Quentin Tarantino. Leigh nabbed an Oscar nomination for her work The Hateful Eight, the first in her career.
Jeff Altman (Actor) .. Bill
Born: August 13, 1951
Trivia: Supporting actor onscreen from the '70s.
Jeffrey Altman (Actor) .. Bill Jones
David Vasquez (Actor) .. Hector
Kimberly Mcarthur (Actor) .. Ginger Jones
Walter Gorney (Actor)
Frank Simpson (Actor) .. Fr. McIntyre
Died: January 01, 1988
Arch Johnson (Actor) .. Vendor at Armory
Born: March 14, 1924
Trivia: Actor's Studio graduate Arch Johnson was first seen off-Broadway in 1952's Down in the Valley, and on-Broadway the following year in Mrs. McThing. Johnson's most famous Broadway role was bigoted NYPD detective Schrank in West Side Story (1956). In films from 1953, the burly Johnson was usually cast as western heavies, occasionally with a swarthy tongue in cheek and a roguish twinkle in the eye. Some of his non-western movie assignments include The Sting (1973), Walking Tall (1977) and The Buddy Holly Story (1978). In the spring of 1961, Arch Johnson was seen as Captain Gus Honochek on the weekly TV version of The Asphalt Jungle.
Dennis Blair (Actor) .. Fashion Critic/Old Dying Man
Steve Szucs (Actor) .. Barfly
Mary Pat Gleason (Actor) .. Party Mother
Born: February 23, 1950
Trivia: Actress Mary Pat Gleason debuted onscreen in the early '80s (with a bit part in the 1983 Rodney Dangerfield comedy Easy Money) and tackled a series of character portrayals in a variety of genres over the following decades. She specialized in playing dowdy, overweight, and slightly assertive matronly types, including waitresses, nurses, and librarians. Gleason's extensive resumé includes the films Soapdish (1991), Speechless (1994), Bruce Almighty (2003), and Moving McAllister (2007).
Angela Pietropinto (Actor) .. Party Mother
Carmen Bonifant (Actor) .. Julio's Mother
Pedro Ocampo (Actor) .. Julio's Father
Taylor Reed (Actor) .. Fat Guy
Peter Laurelli (Actor) .. Fat Anthony
Fiddle Viracola (Actor) .. Fat Anthony's Mother
John Scoletti (Actor) .. Fat Anthony's Father
Filomena Spagnuolo (Actor) .. Fat Anthony's Grandmother
Born: December 04, 1903
Peter D'Arcy (Actor) .. Bartender at Wedding
Polli Magaro (Actor) .. Woman in Wedding
Rafael Cruz (Actor) .. Man in Wedding
Alfred De La Fuente (Actor) .. Old Man Singer at Armory
Harsh Nayyar (Actor) .. Dr. Vindaloo
Milton Seaman (Actor) .. Boardroom Lawyer
Born: February 15, 1914
Sid Raymond (Actor) .. Bet Taker
Born: January 21, 1909
Died: December 01, 2006
Jeff Gillen (Actor) .. Bettor
Born: November 02, 1942
Eric Van Valkenburg (Actor) .. Assistant to Clive Barlow
Richard Van Valkenburg (Actor) .. Assistant to Clive Barlow
John Delph (Actor) .. Monahan's Clerk
Walt Gorney (Actor) .. Monahan's Security Guard
Born: April 12, 1912
Jessica James (Actor) .. Saleslady
Born: January 01, 1929
Died: January 01, 1990
B. Constance Barry (Actor) .. Browser
Born: April 29, 1913
Lawrence Leritz (Actor) .. Assistant to Tailor
Born: September 26, 1962
Mary Wilshire (Actor) .. Sketch Artist
Gregor Roy (Actor) .. Boardroom Security Guard
Milton Seamon (Actor) .. Boardroom Lawyer
Wade Barnes (Actor) .. Boardroom Lawyer
Born: May 15, 1917
James Cahill (Actor) .. Buyer
Ian Sullivan (Actor) .. Buyer
Lisa McMillan (Actor) .. Buyer
Andrea Coles (Actor) .. Buyer
Jade Bari (Actor) .. Buyer
McKenzie Allen (Actor) .. Buyer
Richard Dow (Actor) .. Conrad Donaldson
Margot Avery (Actor) .. Critic
Wiliam J. Daprato (Actor) .. Tailor in Boardroom
Lawrence R. Leritz (Actor) .. Tailor's Assistant
Gwendolyn Shepherd (Actor) .. Nurse in Hospital
Joni Fritz (Actor) .. Nurse in Hospital
Bill Hindman (Actor) .. Butler on Yacht
Born: July 15, 1922
Robin Paradise (Actor) .. Servant on Yacht
Sandra Beall (Actor) .. Maid of Honor
Paul Herman (Actor) .. Bar Owner
Born: March 29, 1946
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Has appeared in 3 films nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture (Goodfellas, Silver Linings Playbook, American Hustle) Has appeared in 6 films directed by Martin Scorsese and 5 by Woody Allen Has appeared in 16 films that star Robert DeNiro Had recurring roles on two popular HBO series, The Sopranos and Entourage Received a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture for American Hustle in 2014
Eric H. Shonz (Actor) .. Critic
Alan Gordon (Actor) .. Critic
Stewart Stewart (Actor) .. Critic
Rodney (Actor)

Before / After
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