The Thomas Crown Affair


12:00 pm - 1:55 pm, Saturday, November 1 on MGM+ (West) ()

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About this Broadcast
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A billionaire art fancier orchestrates the theft of a priceless masterpiece.

1999 English Stereo
Mystery & Suspense Drama Romance Crime Drama Crime Remake Comedy-drama Other Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Rene Russo (Actor) .. Catherine Banning
Pierce Brosnan (Actor) .. Thomas Crown
Denis Leary (Actor) .. Det. Michael McCann
Faye Dunaway (Actor) .. The Psychiatrist
Ben Gazzara (Actor) .. Andrew Wallace
Fritz Weaver (Actor) .. John Reynolds
Esther Cañadas (Actor) .. Anna
James Saito (Actor) .. Paul
Mark Margolis (Actor) .. Knutzhorn
Charles Keating (Actor) .. Friedrich Golchan
Michael Lombard (Actor) .. Bobby McKinley
Michael S. Bahr (Actor) .. Proctor
Bill Ambrozy (Actor) .. Proctor
Robert Novak (Actor) .. Proctor
Joe Lamb (Actor) .. Proctor
Mischa Hausserman (Actor) .. Crown's Driver
Daniel Oreskes (Actor) .. Petru
Dominic Chianese Jr. (Actor) .. Dimetri
Ritchie Coster (Actor) .. Janos
Gregg Bello (Actor) .. Iggy
John P. McCann (Actor) .. Senior Detective
Gino Lucci (Actor) .. Freight Truck Driver
George Christy (Actor) .. Senior Museum Guard
Mike Danner (Actor) .. Forklift Operator
James J. Archer (Actor) .. J.J. the Security Guard
John Elsen (Actor) .. New York City Cop
Robert Spillane (Actor) .. Crown Security Guard
Daniel Jamal Gibson (Actor) .. Sam
Cynthia Darlow (Actor) .. Crown's Secretary
Sherry Koftan (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Jane DeNoble (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Gene Bozzi (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Ryan Hecht (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Paul Simon (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Tom Tammi (Actor) .. Businessman
Mark Zeisler (Actor) .. Bulldog
Mark Zimmerman (Actor) .. Bulldog
Dan Southern (Actor) .. Crown Executive
James Yaegashi (Actor) .. Crown Executive
Ira Wheeler (Actor) .. Old Man
David Adkins (Actor) .. Son
John A. MacKay (Actor) .. Company Lawyer
Melissa Maxwell (Actor) .. Teacher
Colleen Hamm (Actor) .. Schoolgirl
Timothy Wheeler (Actor) .. Museum Security Tech
John Thrall Bush (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
Dominic Marcus (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
Robert Stephenon (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
David Toney (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
Phillip Douglas (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
Jeffrey Dreisbach (Actor) .. Junior Proctor
R.J. Remo (Actor) .. Smoking Kid
Caleb Archer (Actor) .. Smoking Kid
Dennis Creaghan (Actor) .. Lenox
Randy Phillips (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Gloria Barnes (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Mimi Weddell (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Pat Friedlander (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Gary L. Catus (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Jeremy Nagel (Actor) .. Crown's Caddie
John C. Havens (Actor) .. Museum Operating Tech
Annie Rose Murray (Actor) .. Woman Spectator
Bill Tatum (Actor) .. Gentleman Yachtsman
Teddy Coluca (Actor) .. Detective in Restaurant
Michael Charles (Actor) .. Detective in Restaurant
Orlando Carafa (Actor) .. Cipriani Waiter
Ben Epps (Actor) .. Male Associate
Kim D. Cannon (Actor) .. Cleaning Man
Douglas Kahelemauna Nam (Actor) .. Cleaning Man
Richard Russell Ramos (Actor) .. Art Inspector
John Seidman (Actor) .. Lab Technician
Robert Ian Mackenzie (Actor) .. Jeweler
Yusef Bulos (Actor) .. Second Jeweler
Ray Virta (Actor) .. Detective-Museum
Thomas Michael Sullivan (Actor) .. Museum Special Police
J. Paul Boehmer (Actor) .. Museum Detective
Tony Cucci (Actor) .. Watching Cop
Paul Geoffrey (Actor) .. Another Cop
R.E. Rodgers (Actor) .. Uniform Cop
Thomas Richard Bloom (Actor) .. Crown Imposter
Kim Craven (Actor) .. Ticket Agent
Marion Mccorry (Actor) .. Stewardess
Sean Haberle (Actor) .. Ramp Manager
Mikel Sarah Lambert (Actor) .. Wealthy Woman
Angelo Fraboni (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Melanie Lapatin (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Jodi Melnick (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Tony Meredith (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Michael Terrace (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Robert D. Novak (Actor) .. Proctor
Joe H. Lamb (Actor) .. Proctor
Frankie R. Faison (Actor) .. Det. Paretti

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Rene Russo (Actor) .. Catherine Banning
Born: February 17, 1954
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Born February 17th, 1954, former model Rene Russo's first dramatic role of note was on the 1987 TV series Sable, in which she played Eden Kendall, the literary agent to a children's author-turned-crimefighter. Her breakthrough theatrical feature was Major League (1989), wherein the statuesque blonde actress was saddled with portraying the "misguided" heroine who foolishly prefers marriage with a stable, secure lawyer over a relationship with boozing, philandering ballplayer Tom Berenger.Since then, happily, the message conveyed by Russo's characters has been "Don't mess with me: I can cope." In One Good Cop (1991), she played the strongly supportive wife of police officer Michael Keaton, for whom she successfully tackles the sudden responsibility of caring for the surly children of Keaton's late partner. In Lethal Weapon 3 (1993), Russo could be seen as the karate-chopping cop who wins the confidence (and the love) of "loose cannon" Mel Gibson by proudly showing off her line-of-duty wounds and evincing a fascination with the Three Stooges. In In the Line of Fire (1992), Russo was once more partnered on an equal basis with the leading man, in this case Secret Service agent Clint Eastwood; one of her best scenes featured her wired for sound -- despite a most revealing evening gown -- at a Washington social affair. Apparently there are still reviewers out there who can't quite grasp the concept of a leading lady who can match her leading man blow for blow in a tight situation. In 1995, some observers seemed surprised that Russo, playing a biohazard-suited military research operative in Outbreak, was "as good as" her male counterparts Dustin Hoffman and Morgan Freeman. Despite such ill-founded critical misgivings, Russo has continued to do strong work playing strong women: The acclaimed Get Shorty (1995) featured her as a B-movie actress, while she re-teamed with Gibson for Ron Howard's crime thriller Ransom (1996) and Lethal Weapon 4 (1998). She also played a psychologist who puts the swing back into washed-up golfer Kevin Costner's game in the well-received Tin Cup (1996), and generated considerable heat as a crime investigator who hunts and then beds down with art thief Pierce Brosnan in the 1999 remake of The Thomas Crown Affair.Russo continued worked sporadically through early to mid-2000s, her most recognizable role being that of Natasha Fatale in the live-action adaptation of Rocky and Bullwinkle. In 2005, following her supporting performances in Two for the Money and Yours, Mine, and Ours, Russell took a long break from acting. It wasn't until 2012 that she appeared on the big screen again for the mythological fantasy adventure Thor in the role of Frigga, Thor's mother.
Pierce Brosnan (Actor) .. Thomas Crown
Born: May 16, 1953
Birthplace: Drogheda, County Louth, Ireland
Trivia: Moving to London with his family at an early age, Irish-born actor Pierce Brosnan made ends meet as a commercial illustrator and cab driver before turning to acting full-time. After training at the London Drama Centre, Brosnan made his West End stage bow in 1976, and appeared in his first film, The Long Good Friday, four years later. American audiences got their first glimpse of the charismatic, muscular young actor in the 1981 network miniseries The Manions of America. The following year, he was cast as the suave adventurer hero of the weekly TV series Remington Steele. Brosnan's casual panache and his gift for quippery led the producers of the James Bond movies to select him as the new Bond upon the departure of Roger Moore in 1986. However, at the last moment, the canceled Remington Steele was renewed, and Brosnan was contractually obligated to remain with the program, forcing him to relinquish the James Bond role to Timothy Dalton. Insult was later added to injury when it became evident that the renewal of Steele was something of a subterfuge by its producers to keep Brosnan on their leash. This professional setback was further compounded by personal tragedy seven years later when Brosnan's actress wife Cassandra Harris died after a long illness. The actor began to regain his motion picture bankability when he was cast in a choice secondary role in the 1993 comedy megahit Mrs. Doubtfire. In 1995, he finally got his chance to play Agent 007 in GoldenEye, and proved that the producer's instincts were right on target. Brosnan not only provided a much-needed boost for the ailing series, but also cemented his status as a capable leading man in a variety of roles, ranging from the title character in Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (1996) to a stuffy, love-struck professor who meets a ludicrous fate in Mars Attacks! (1996) to a courageous vulcanologist trying to save a town threatened by a reawakened volcano in Dante's Peak (1997). Brosnan played Bond for the second time in Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), essaying the role with great success. Following his turn as the titular thief in the stylish 1999 remake of The Thomas Crown Affair, the actor went on to his third Bond outing in The World is Not Enough, again proving that saving the world was most convincingly done by those with convincing tans, straight teeth, and plenty of fun gadgets. And the world isn't the only thing Bond saved. While, the next half-decade found Brosnan stumbling with disappointments like The Tailor of Panama and The Laws of Attraction, he found box office success with the Bond franchise yet again 2002 with his final film in the franchise, Die Another Day. He soon followed this with a critically acclaimed comedic performance in the sleeper hit The Matador, before signing on for the highly anticipated film adaptation of the Abba inspired musical Mama Mia!. Next up, Brosnan would appear in some more dramatic fare like Remember Me before lightening up once more for the romantic comedy I Don't Know How She Does It.
Denis Leary (Actor) .. Det. Michael McCann
Born: August 18, 1957
Birthplace: Worcester, Massachusetts, United States
Trivia: Boston-born Denis Leary is the sneering, tousle-haired comedian who popularized the cautionary phrase "two words." (His routine went something like this: "Regarding Bill Clinton's foreign policy, two words: Jimmy...Carter.") Best known for his many MTV appearances, Leary excels in playing characters who wavered between quiet sarcasm and howling insanity. His one-man show No Cure for Cancer premiered in New York in 1991, scoring a hit with its "intellectual guerilla" comedy. Among Leary's numerous films were National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon (1993), Judgment Night (1993), and Operation Dumbo Drop (1995). His best screen showing was as the beleaguered burglar and reluctant kidnapper in The Ref (1994). He later starred in Wag the Dog (1997), Jesus' Son (1999), and Joe Mantegna's directorial debut, Lakeboat (2000). Leary also served as a producer of the 2001 film Blow. In 2001, he starred as a New York detective in a night time drama called The Job. The series was cancelled before the end of the second season, but Leary was soon back in the movies, lending his voice to the character of Diego in the animated feature Ice Age. Then in 2004, Leary took on the character that would come to define the second leg of his career, accepting the lead role of firefighter Tommy Gavin on the FX series Rescue Me. Critically acclaimed and renowned for pushing the borders of cable television, the show proved to be a huge hit, and Leary won an Emmy for his performance. After the show wrapped in 2011, Leary would spend the followng years appearing in projects like The Amazing Spider Man.
Faye Dunaway (Actor) .. The Psychiatrist
Born: January 14, 1941
Birthplace: Bascom, Florida
Trivia: As the co-star of the landmark Bonnie and Clyde, actress Faye Dunaway helped usher in a new golden era in American filmmaking, going on to appear in several of the greatest films of the 1970s. Born January 14, 1941, in Bascom, FL, Dunaway was the daughter of an army officer. She studied theater arts at the University of Boston and later joined the Lincoln Center Repertory Company under the direction of Elia Kazan and Robert Whitehead. Between 1962 and 1967, she appeared in a number of prominent stage productions, including A Man for All Seasons and Arthur Miller's After the Fall, playing a character based on Marilyn Monroe. Dunaway's breakthrough performance came in an off-Broadway production of Hogan's Goat, which resulted in a contract with director Otto Preminger. She made her film debut in his 1967 drama Hurry Sundown, but the two frequently clashed, and she refused to appear in his Skidoo; after a legal battle, Dunaway was allowed to buy out the remainder of her contract, and she then starred in The Happening (1967).Still, Dunaway was virtually unknown when she accepted the role of the notorious gangster Bonnie Parker opposite Warren Beatty in Arthur Penn's 1967 crime saga Bonnie and Clyde. The picture was an unqualified success, one of the most influential films of the era, and she had become a star seemingly overnight, earning a Best Actress Oscar nomination for her sexy performance. Dunaway's next major role cast her with Steve McQueen in 1968's The Thomas Crown Affair, another major hit. However, her next several projects -- Amanti, a romance with Marcello Mastroianni, and the Kazan-directed The Arrangement -- stumbled, and although 1970's Little Big Man was a hit, Puzzle of a Downfall Child (directed by her fiancé, Jerry Schatzberg) was a disaster. Quickly, Dunaway was reduced to projects like the little-seen 1971 thriller La Maison Sous Les Arbres and the Western Doc. When they too failed, she retreated from films, first appearing on-stage in Harold Pinter's Old Times and then starring in the made-for-television The Woman I Love.After portraying Blanche du Bois in a Los Angeles stage adaptation of A Streetcar Named Desire, Dunaway returned to the cinema in Stanley Kramer's 1973 drama Oklahoma Crude. Subsequent to her appearance in Richard Lester's The Three Musketeers, she made headlines for her marriage to rocker Peter Wolf and was then cast in Roman Polanski's 1974 noir Chinatown. The performance was her best since Bonnie and Clyde, scoring another Academy Award nomination, and the film itself remains a classic. The success of The Towering Inferno later that same year confirmed that Dunaway's star power had returned in full, and she next co-starred with Robert Redford in the well-received thriller Three Days of the Condor. In 1976, Dunaway starred as an ambitious television executive in Sidney Lumet's scathing black comedy Network, and on her third attempt she finally won an Oscar. A British feature, Voyage of the Damned, and a TV-movie, The Disappearance of Aimee, quickly followed, and in 1978 she starred in the much-maligned thriller The Eyes of Laura Mars.After 1979's The Champ, Dunaway starred with Frank Sinatra in The First Deadly Sin. An over-the-top turn as Joan Crawford in the tell-all biopic Mommie Dearest followed in 1981, as did another biography, the TV feature Evita Peron. Her career was again slumping, a fate which neither the Broadway production of The Curse of an Aching Heart nor another telefilm, 1982's The Country Girl, helped to remedy. After 1984's Supergirl, Dunaway spent much of the decade on the small screen, appearing in a pair of miniseries -- Ellis Island and Christopher Columbus -- and in 1986 appearing as the titular Beverly Hills Madam. The 1987 feature Barfly found a cult audience, but almost without exception, Dunaway's subsequent films went unnoticed; even the 1990 Chinatown sequel The Two Jakes was a failure. In 1993, she starred in a short-lived sitcom, It Had to Be You, and continued to appear in little-seen projects. Dunaway's most prominent roles of the mid-'90s included a supporting turn as the wife of psychiatrist Marlon Brando in 1995's Don Juan DeMarco and as a barmaid/hostage in the directorial debut of actor Kevin Spacey, Albino Alligator (1996). In 1999, Dunaway gave a nod to her screen past with a cameo appearance in the remake of The Thomas Crown Affair. That same year, she took on the more substantial role of Yolande d'Aragon in The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc.As the new century began she had parts in The Yards and Festival in Cannes. In 2002 she had a part in the big-screen adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis' The Rules of Attraction. She had a brief part in Tim Burton's Big Fish.In 2005 she appeared for one season as the lead judge on the acting reality series The Starlet, where she repeated the painful catchphrase, "don't call us, we'll call you," every time a contestant was dismissed from the program.She continued to work steadily in a variety of projects including Flick, Midnight Bayou, and 2010's A Family Thanksgiving.
Ben Gazzara (Actor) .. Andrew Wallace
Born: August 28, 1930
Died: February 03, 2012
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Both an accomplished character actor and leading man, Ben Gazzara made a name for himself on the stage, screen, and television. The son of an Italian immigrant, Gazzara was born in New York City on August 28, 1930. He channeled his excess energy into acting after dropping out of the engineering department at the City College of New York. After studying at the Actors Studio and with private coach Erwin Piscator, Gazzara exploded onto the Broadway scene in 1953, playing warped military academy upper-classman Jocko De Paris in End as a Man. He went on to create the role of Brick in the original 1955 production of Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. He later starred in Michael V. Gazzo's A Hatful of Rain, only to see his role go to Don Murray in the 1957 movie version, just as Paul Newman would portray Brick in the 1958 film version of Cat. Fortunately, Gazzara was permitted top film billing in 1957, reprising his stage role in End as a Man in the heavily laundered film-version, The Strange One. Two years later, Gazzara played arrogant murder-trial defendant Lieutenant Manion -- the one with the "irresistible impulse" -- in Otto Preminger's Anatomy of a Murder, slyly stealing scenes from the film's "official" star, James Stewart. After this promising beginning in films, Gazzara had trouble finding adequate movie roles. He turned to television in 1963, first as a co-star with Chuck Connors in the experimental 90-minute crime weekly Arrest and Trial. In 1965, Gazzara starred as Paul Bryan, an ex-lawyer with only a short time to live, on the TV popular series Run for Your Life; in spite of his character's fatal illness, Gazzara was able to remain with Run for three healthy seasons. With 1970's Husbands, Gazzara made the first of four film appearances under the direction of his old Actors Studio buddy John Cassavetes. Four years later, Gazzara starred as the Leon Uris counterpart in television's first miniseries, QB VII (1974). In the decades that followed, Gazzara took roles that, while not always prestigious, permitted him ample creative elbow room; a fascinating example of this was his bisexual villain in the Patrick Swayze vehicle Road House (1989). In 1998, he did some of the best work of his career portraying a series of beautifully dysfunctional characters in Buffalo '66, Happiness, and the Coen Brothers' The Big Lebowski. The following year, he traveled into the realm of slick international caper with a supporting role in The Thomas Crown Affair, and then returned to his New York roots to portray the leader of organized crime in the Bronx in Spike Lee's Summer of Sam. Gazzara remained active up through the end of the following decade, continuing to make onscreen appearances even after severe throat cancer that ravaged his vocal chords. He tackled two of his last assignments in the 2006 omnibus picture Paris, je t'aime and the 2008 comedy-drama Looking for Palladin, prior to his death at age 86 in early February 2012.Gazzara was divorced from the late actress Janice Rule.
Fritz Weaver (Actor) .. John Reynolds
Born: January 19, 1926
Died: November 26, 2016
Birthplace: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Trivia: Upon earning his BA degree from the University of Chicago, Fritz Weaver began his formal acting training at the H-B studios. Paying his dues with such regional stock companies as Virginia's Barter Theatre and Massachussett's Group 20 Players, Weaver made his first off-Broadway appearance in a 1954 production of The Way of the World. His inaugural Broadway effort was 1955's The Chalk Circle. Weaver went on to appear in such classic stage roles as Hamlet and Peer Gynt, and also amassed a remarkable list of film credits, including two Twilight Zone appearances. In 1964, he made his film debut as the unstable Colonel Caserio in the doomsday thriller Fail Safe. The following year, he starred on Broadway in Baker Street, a musicalization of Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories. In 1970, he won the Tony award for his work as Jerome Malley in Child's Play. Most often cast as aristocratic villains in films (his resemblance to William F. Buckley has not gone unnoticed by producers), Fritz Weaver made his biggest international impact in the sympathetic role of Josef Weiss in the TV miniseries Holocaust (1978). Weaver worked mostly in television for the rest of his career (save for a supporting role in 1999's The Thomas Crown Affair), with guest spots in shows like The Love Boat, Murder, She Wrote, The X-Files, Frasier and Law & Order. Weaver died in 2016, at age 90.
Esther Cañadas (Actor) .. Anna
James Saito (Actor) .. Paul
Born: March 06, 1955
Trivia: Something of an old standby -- a stalwart -- whenever Hollywood needed to call on an Asian-American character actor during the '70s, '80s, '90s, and 2000s, James Saito made countless guest appearances on such blockbuster programs as M*A*S*H, The Fall Guy, and The A-Team, often without even so much as a character name. (The M*A*S*H appearances list him only as "South Korean" or "Korean Soldier.") From the early '80s onward, Saito's resumé started to incorporate a number of feature films; per the experiences of most character players, these pictures varied substantially in quality -- from the depths of Hot Dog... The Movie! (1983) to the heights of Buckaroo Banzai (1984) and Die Hard: With a Vengeance (1995). In 2007, Saito landed one of his first regular series roles, as Dr. Chen on the spiritual drama Eli Stone.
Mark Margolis (Actor) .. Knutzhorn
Born: November 26, 1939
Died: August 03, 2023
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Studied at the Actors Studio and with Stella Adler, whom he says was the biggest influence in his life. Considers the 1990 action-adventure Delta Force 2 some of his worst work. Has had roles in a number of Darren Aronofsky's films. Imitated some of his mother-in-law's facial expressions for his role as a retired drug-cartel enforcer in Breaking Bad. Doesn't consider himself a character actor, but a "weird-looking romantic lead."
Charles Keating (Actor) .. Friedrich Golchan
Born: October 22, 1941
Died: January 01, 2014
Birthplace: London
Michael Lombard (Actor) .. Bobby McKinley
Born: August 08, 1934
Michael S. Bahr (Actor) .. Proctor
Bill Ambrozy (Actor) .. Proctor
Robert Novak (Actor) .. Proctor
Born: February 26, 1931
Joe Lamb (Actor) .. Proctor
Mischa Hausserman (Actor) .. Crown's Driver
Born: October 31, 1941
Birthplace: Vienna
Daniel Oreskes (Actor) .. Petru
Dominic Chianese Jr. (Actor) .. Dimetri
Ritchie Coster (Actor) .. Janos
Born: July 01, 1967
Gregg Bello (Actor) .. Iggy
John P. McCann (Actor) .. Senior Detective
Gino Lucci (Actor) .. Freight Truck Driver
George Christy (Actor) .. Senior Museum Guard
Mike Danner (Actor) .. Forklift Operator
James J. Archer (Actor) .. J.J. the Security Guard
John Elsen (Actor) .. New York City Cop
Born: August 23, 1964
Robert Spillane (Actor) .. Crown Security Guard
Daniel Jamal Gibson (Actor) .. Sam
Cynthia Darlow (Actor) .. Crown's Secretary
Born: June 13, 1949
Sherry Koftan (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Jane DeNoble (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Gene Bozzi (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Ryan Hecht (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Paul Simon (Actor) .. Crown Employee
Born: October 13, 1941
Birthplace: Newark, New Jersey, United States
Trivia: Rhymin' Paul Simon was writing songs with his future partner, Art Garfunkel, as far back as 1955, when both were high schoolers in Queens, NY. Achieving brief fame as the singing team of Tom and Jerry in 1957, Simon and Garfunkel broke up and re-teamed several times before "officially" emerging as Simon & Garfunkel in 1964. During this period, Simon attended Queens College as an English major, wrote songs for other recording artists, and worked as a rock show promoter. Largely a college campus attraction at first, Simon & Garfunkel attained mainstream popularity when they contributed the songs heard on the soundtrack of the 1967 film hit The Graduate. The two performers went their separate ways after the 1972 album Bridge Over Troubled Water. Like Garfunkel before him, Simon tentatively launched a film acting career, appearing as Diane Keaton's L.A.-based boyfriend in the Oscar-winning Annie Hall (1977). Thus far, Simon's only starring film has been 1980's One Trick Pony, in which he played an over-the-hill rock star planning a comeback. Paul Simon was once married to film actress Carrie Fisher, who nowadays has nothing but nice things to say about her former husband (which is more than can be said for her many ex-boyfriends).
Tom Tammi (Actor) .. Businessman
Born: September 02, 1945
Mark Zeisler (Actor) .. Bulldog
Mark Zimmerman (Actor) .. Bulldog
Dan Southern (Actor) .. Crown Executive
James Yaegashi (Actor) .. Crown Executive
Ira Wheeler (Actor) .. Old Man
Born: November 09, 1920
David Adkins (Actor) .. Son
John A. MacKay (Actor) .. Company Lawyer
Melissa Maxwell (Actor) .. Teacher
Colleen Hamm (Actor) .. Schoolgirl
Timothy Wheeler (Actor) .. Museum Security Tech
John Thrall Bush (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
Dominic Marcus (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
Robert Stephenon (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
David Toney (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
Phillip Douglas (Actor) .. Museum Security Guard
Jeffrey Dreisbach (Actor) .. Junior Proctor
R.J. Remo (Actor) .. Smoking Kid
Caleb Archer (Actor) .. Smoking Kid
Dennis Creaghan (Actor) .. Lenox
Born: May 01, 1942
Randy Phillips (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Gloria Barnes (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Mimi Weddell (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Born: February 15, 1915
Died: September 24, 2009
Pat Friedlander (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Gary L. Catus (Actor) .. National Arts Club Guest
Jeremy Nagel (Actor) .. Crown's Caddie
John C. Havens (Actor) .. Museum Operating Tech
Annie Rose Murray (Actor) .. Woman Spectator
Bill Tatum (Actor) .. Gentleman Yachtsman
Teddy Coluca (Actor) .. Detective in Restaurant
Michael Charles (Actor) .. Detective in Restaurant
Orlando Carafa (Actor) .. Cipriani Waiter
Ben Epps (Actor) .. Male Associate
Kim D. Cannon (Actor) .. Cleaning Man
Douglas Kahelemauna Nam (Actor) .. Cleaning Man
Richard Russell Ramos (Actor) .. Art Inspector
Born: August 23, 1941
John Seidman (Actor) .. Lab Technician
Robert Ian Mackenzie (Actor) .. Jeweler
Yusef Bulos (Actor) .. Second Jeweler
Born: September 14, 1940
Ray Virta (Actor) .. Detective-Museum
Thomas Michael Sullivan (Actor) .. Museum Special Police
J. Paul Boehmer (Actor) .. Museum Detective
Born: October 30, 1965
Tony Cucci (Actor) .. Watching Cop
Paul Geoffrey (Actor) .. Another Cop
R.E. Rodgers (Actor) .. Uniform Cop
Thomas Richard Bloom (Actor) .. Crown Imposter
Kim Craven (Actor) .. Ticket Agent
Marion Mccorry (Actor) .. Stewardess
Born: October 10, 1945
Sean Haberle (Actor) .. Ramp Manager
Mikel Sarah Lambert (Actor) .. Wealthy Woman
Angelo Fraboni (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Born: September 21, 1963
Melanie Lapatin (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Jodi Melnick (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Tony Meredith (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Born: May 24, 1958
Michael Terrace (Actor) .. Featured Dancer
Chico Farrill's Afro-Cuban Orchestra (Actor) .. Band
Robert D. Novak (Actor) .. Proctor
Born: February 26, 1931
Joe H. Lamb (Actor) .. Proctor
Frankie R. Faison (Actor) .. Det. Paretti
Born: June 10, 1949
Birthplace: Newport News, Virginia, United States
Trivia: A veteran character actor whose work has shown he's as comfortable with comedy as drama, Frankie Faison was born in Newport News, VA, in 1949. Faison developed the acting bug while in grade school after appearing in a school play, and after high school he was a theater student at both Illinois Wesleyan University and New York University. Faison began pursuing a career in the theater, and appeared in a number of acclaimed off-Broadway productions, including Athol Fugard's Playland, the New York Shakespeare Festival's production of Before It Hits Home, and an adaptation of King Lear at the NYSF Delacorte Theater. Faison made his film debut in 1981 with a small role in Ragtime, and Faison soon began supplementing his stage work with small parts in motion pictures and guest shots on television. An inkling of what was to come for Faison appeared in 1986, when he was cast in a small role as a cop in Manhunter, an adaptation of Thomas Harris' novel Red Dragon, in which Brian Cox played the murderous Hannibal Lector. In 1987, Faison appeared on Broadway in August Wilson's drama Fences, opposite James Earl Jones; Faison's performance earned him a Tony award nomination. In 1988, Faison scored a showy comic role in the Eddie Murphy vehicle Coming to America, and a year later he was one of the "corner men" in Spike Lee's acclaimed and controversial Do the Right Thing. In 1990, Faison scored the male lead in a short-lived sitcom, True Colors, and in 1991 he appeared in another adaptation of a Thomas Harris novel when he was cast as Barney Matthews, the big but gentle male nurse in The Silence of the Lambs. Faison continued to win supporting roles in a variety of notable films, including City of Hope, Sommersby, Mother Night, I Love Trouble, Albino Alligator, Where the Money Is, and The Thomas Crown Affair, and he had a leading role in the well-regarded police drama Prey; sadly, the show fared poorly in the ratings and didn't survive its first season. Faison revived his role as Barney Matthews in 2001's box-office blockbuster Hannibal, making him the only actor to appear in all three films about the famous cannibal. ~ Mark Deming
George Christie (Actor)
Michael Bahr (Actor)
Esther Cañadas (Actor)

Before / After
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F/X
10:10 am