The Stoned Age


05:32 am - 07:04 am, Wednesday, May 6 on STARZ ENCORE Classic (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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Two '70s youths cruise Southern California searching for the ultimate party.

1994 English
Comedy

Cast & Crew
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Michael Kopelow (Actor) .. Joe
Bradford Tatum (Actor) .. Hubbs
Renee Ammann (Actor) .. Lanie
China Kantner (Actor) .. Jill
Clifton Gonzales (Actor) .. Tack
Clifton Collins Jr. (Actor) .. Tack
David Groh (Actor) .. Jill's Dad
Jake Busey (Actor) .. Otis Muldoon
Kevin Kilner (Actor) .. Officer Dean
Taylor Negron (Actor) .. Himself
Richard Chaim (Actor) .. Norm Hankey
Josh Berman (Actor) .. Perk
Art Chudabala (Actor) .. Mike Dick
David R. Parker (Actor) .. Mike New York
Daniel Collins (Actor) .. Crump
Michael Wiseman (Actor) .. Crump's Brother
Ernest M. Gavoia (Actor) .. Neighbor
Judith Drake (Actor) .. Mrs. Hankey
Stacey Giugliano (Actor) .. Surfer Girl
Tarra Greenhut (Actor) .. Shannon
Frankie Avalon (Actor) .. Himself

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Michael Kopelow (Actor) .. Joe
Bradford Tatum (Actor) .. Hubbs
Born: March 29, 1965
Renee Ammann (Actor) .. Lanie
China Kantner (Actor) .. Jill
Born: January 25, 1971
Trivia: China Wing Kantner was born in San Francisco to Jefferson Airplane and Jefferson Starship band members Grace Slick and Paul Kantner. At 15 she become the youngest ever VJ on MTV. She appeared in a variety of school plays and embarked on an acting career in the 1990s, landing bit parts in such movies as Airheads, S.F.W., The Stoned Age, and The Evening Star. She also made guest appearances on Grace Under Fire, Murphy Brown, and L.A. Firefighters. In 1997 she began a recurring role on Home Improvement as Willow Wilson. Kantner gave up acting following her departure from the Tim Allen series and studied art history at UCLA. She occasionally sang on-stage with her famous parents during Jefferson Starship concerts and received musical credits on several Starship albums. In 2007 Kantner obtained a degree in Christian theology from Loyola Marymount University.
Clifton Gonzales (Actor) .. Tack
Clifton Collins Jr. (Actor) .. Tack
Born: June 16, 1970
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Distinguished by his versatility and uncanny ability to immerse himself in the characters he portrays, filmgoers may recall Clifton Collins Jr. from his role as the intimidating thug Cesar in 187 (1997) or from his numerous other roles in such films as the Hughes brothers' Dead Presidents (1995) and Steven Soderbergh's acclaimed Traffic (2000). A native Angeleno, Collins Jr. is the grandson of actor Pedro Gonzalez. One of the first Mexicans to find Hollywood success, Gonzalez appeared alongside John Wayne in various Westerns and war films. Sometimes credited as Clifton Gonzalez Gonzalez in honor of his grandfather's name, Collins Jr.'s range has found him work in a rich variety of films throughout the 1990s both in television and film. Other roles in The Replacement Killers and Disney's The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit (both 1998) showed great promise for a young actor on the verge of stardom heading into the new millennium. Supporting roles in such wide-release features as The Last Castle, and The Rules of Attraction found the young up-and-comer slowly gaining the momentum to set an enduring career in motion, and in 2004 Collins appeared opposite hot-property Eion Bailey in the thriller Mindhunters and the alcoholism-themed comedy drama Glory Days. That same year also found Collins taking a role in director Troy Duffy's Boondock II: All Saints Day - the eagerly anticipated follow-up to his 1999 cult hit The Boondock Saints.
David Groh (Actor) .. Jill's Dad
Born: May 21, 1939
Died: February 12, 2008
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: The son of an architect, David Groh entered Brown University as an engineering major, but gradually gravitated to the Fine Arts department. Following a few summers with the American Shakespeare Festival, Groh received a Fulbright scholarship to study acting in England. Returning to New York, he was at first limited to "classical" roles, beginning with his off-Broadway bow in The Importance of Being Earnest. He enrolled at the Actors Studio to get some "modern" grounding: evidently he succeeded, inasmuch as his subsequent Broadway credits included such contemporary efforts as The Hot L Baltimore and Chapter Two. During the 1960s and 1970s, he worked steadily in the soap-opera mills, appearing in a dual role on Dark Shadows and as D L Brock in General Hospital. Told by his friends that he might have a future in Hollywood-based cop shows, Groh moved to LA in 1974--where, within a matter of months, he was cast as Rhoda Morgenstern's fiancé Joe Gerard on the popular sitcom Rhoda. The Joe-Rhoda wedding, telecast October 28, 1974, earned the series its highest-ever ratings; but the chemistry was never really there, and in 1977 the Gerards were divorced (many viewers, assuming that Groh and Harper were really married, sent letters of condolence to the two actors). In April of 1978, Groh was back on the small screen in his own sitcom, Another Day (1978), which lasted but a month. David Groh thereafter concentrated on stage work, with occasional forays into films and such TV miniseries as The Dream Merchants and Tourist.. Groh died at age 68 in February 2008.
Jake Busey (Actor) .. Otis Muldoon
Born: June 15, 1971
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Part of a burgeoning "second generation" of Hollywood actors, Jake Busey, the long-limbed son of Gary Busey, established himself as a reliable character actor in the 1990s. Though he made his film debut at age five in Straight Time (1978), Busey had no plans to become an actor until he took a drama class "on a whim" while attending Santa Barbara College. Busey spent three years auditioning before he finally broke through in the early '90s. Despite the slow start, Busey worked steadily throughout the decade, alternating between small roles in high profile studio movies, including I'll Do Anything (1994) and Twister (1996), and more substantial parts in smaller films, such as S.F.W. (1994) and Tail Lights Fade (1999). Busey starred a member of the gung ho young battalion in Paul Verhoeven's ironic, effects-laden science fiction adventure Starship Troopers (1997), but he was back to supporting duties in big movies when he and the more diminutive second generationer Scott Caan were paired as government assassins in Enemy of the State (1998). Happy to do more than dodge special effects, Busey played Luke Wilson's bully older brother in the romantic comedy Home Fries (1998) and co-starred with Jamie Foxx in the crime comedy Held Up (2000). Busey's foray into series TV as the laid-back Dennis on UPN's Shasta McNasty (1999) proved short-lived. Returning to movies after his unfortunate foray into series TV, Busey appeared in the weak Jamie Foxx comedy Held Up (2000). Busey then co-starred as a resolute bachelor moved to compete with Jerry O'Connell for Shannon Elizabeth's love in the tasteless comedy Tomcats (2001). Tomcats, however, mercifully failed at the box office. Busey's next comedy, the office farce The First $20 Million Is Always the Hardest (2002), suffered a similar fate. Busey finally added a success to his resume, though, with the creepy murder by numbers thriller Identity (2003). Featuring Busey as a snarling convict trapped in a motel with other Agatha Christie-esque little Indians John Cusack, Amanda Peet, Ray Liotta and Clea DuVall, Identity reveled in movie-literate scares and deftly survived the pre-summer blockbuster late spring box office lull.
Kevin Kilner (Actor) .. Officer Dean
Born: May 03, 1958
Birthplace: Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Trivia: Won three NCAA national championships as a defensive midfielder for the Johns Hopkins University lacrosse team. Worked briefly as a credit analyst at a bank in Baltimore after graduating from college. Played semi-professional football for the Baltimore Eagles in 1982. Began taking acting classes in 1983 at the Baltimore Dance Center, before quitting his full-time banking job and moving to New York City. Television debut came in 1989, guest starring in an episode of The Cosby Show. Broadway debut was in 1994, starring opposite Julie Harris and Calista Flockhart in the critically acclaimed 50th anniversary revival of Tennessee Williams' classic The Glass Menagerie.
Taylor Negron (Actor) .. Himself
Born: August 01, 1958
Died: January 10, 2015
Richard Chaim (Actor) .. Norm Hankey
Josh Berman (Actor) .. Perk
Born: December 20, 1970
Art Chudabala (Actor) .. Mike Dick
Born: September 10, 1970
David R. Parker (Actor) .. Mike New York
Daniel Collins (Actor) .. Crump
Michael Wiseman (Actor) .. Crump's Brother
Born: April 12, 1967
Ernest M. Gavoia (Actor) .. Neighbor
Judith Drake (Actor) .. Mrs. Hankey
Stacey Giugliano (Actor) .. Surfer Girl
Tarra Greenhut (Actor) .. Shannon
Frankie Avalon (Actor) .. Himself
Born: September 18, 1939
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: One of the more talented members of the "Philadelphia school" of rock-n-rollers, Frankie Avalon was the reigning teen singing idol from 1958 through 1960. Devotees of American Bandstand will hold affectionate memories of such Avalon top-tenners as "Gingerbread" and "Venus." Avalon made a gradual transition from singer to actor beginning in 1957. He successfully essayed supporting roles in such films as Guns of the Timberland (1960) and The Alamo (1960) before starring in a string of inexpensive but moneymaking "Beach Party" flicks for American-International. As his film stardom eclipsed in the early 1970s, Avalon returned to singing, briefly starring in the 1976 nostalgia-oriented TV variety series Easy Does It. In 1987, Frankie Avalon was reteamed with his "Beach Party" leading lady Annette Funicello in the retro film musical Back to the Beach (1987), which he also co-produced. Over the next few years he could be seen in cameo performances portraying himself in a diverse string of projects including Troop Beverly Hills, the kid-friendly ABC sitcom Full House, and Martin Scorsese's violent Vegas gangster film Casino. In 1995 he reteamed with many of his old co-horts, including Annette and Dick Clark, for the feel-good made-for-TV showbiz film A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes: The Annette Funicello Story.

Before / After
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Easy A
07:04 am