Laurel Awards 1966

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Laurel Awards 1966 Laurel Awards 1966 Female Supporting Performance WINNER Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: Sandy Dennis NOMINEES Alfie: Shelley Winters Thoroughly Modern Millie: Carol Channing A Man for All Seasons: Wendy Hiller 4th place. You're a Big Boy Now: Geraldine Page 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Male Supporting Performance WINNER The Fortune Cookie: Walter Matthau NOMINEES Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: George Segal The Sand Pebbles: Richard Crenna Hombre: Fredric March 4th place. Hotel: Karl Malden 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Director WINNER Henry Hathaway NOMINEES Mike Nichols George Cukor Richard Brooks 4th place. Norman Taurog 5th place. John Frankenheimer 6th place. George Marshall 7th place. David Lean 8th place. Stanley Kubrick 9th place. Terence Young 10th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producer-Director WINNER Robert Wise NOMINEES Alfred Hitchcock Mervyn LeRoy Blake Edwards 4th place. Fred Zinnemann 5th place. Robert Aldrich 6th place. William Wyler 7th place. Howard Hawks 8th place. George Sidney 9th place. Elia Kazan 10th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Action Performance WINNER The Professionals: Lee Marvin NOMINEES Murderers' Row: Dean Martin In Like Flint: James Coburn Duel at Diablo: Sidney Poitier 4th place. Arabesque: Gregory Peck 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Male Dramatic Performance WINNER Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: Richard Burton NOMINEES A Man for All Seasons: Paul Scofield The Sand Pebbles: Steve McQueen Hombre: Paul Newman 4th place. The Blue Max: George Peppard 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Drama WINNER Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? NOMINEES The Sand Pebbles Hombre Alfie 4th place. Georgy Girl 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Male Comedy Performance WINNER Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N.: Dick Van Dyke NOMINEES The Russians Are Coming the Russians Are Coming: Alan Arkin Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number!: Bob Hope How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying: Robert Morse 4th place. The Reluctant Astronaut: Don Knotts 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Male New Face WINNER Alan Arkin NOMINEES Clint Eastwood David Hemmings David Warner 4th place. John Phillip Law 5th place. Anthony 'Scooter' Teague 6th place. Zero Mostel 7th place. Bill Bixby 8th place. Adam West 9th place. Peter Kastner 10th place. Robert Hooks 11th place. Steve Carlson 12th place. Les Crane 13th place. Fred Gwynne 14th place. Frank Sinatra Jr. 15th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Comedy WINNER Thoroughly Modern Millie NOMINEES The Russians Are Coming the Russians Are Coming Casino Royale Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! 4th place. Follow Me, Boys! 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Female Comedy Performance WINNER Thoroughly Modern Millie: Julie Andrews NOMINEES The Glass Bottom Boat: Doris Day Gambit: Shirley MacLaine A Big Hand for the Little Lady: Joanne Woodward 4th place. Kaleidoscope: Susannah York 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Female Star WINNER Julie Andrews NOMINEES Elizabeth Taylor Natalie Wood Jane Fonda 4th place. Shirley MacLaine 5th place. Debbie Reynolds 6th place. Julie Christie 7th place. Doris Day 8th place. Sophia Loren 9th place. Joanne Woodward 10th place. Ann-Margret 11th place. Audrey Hepburn 12th place. Hayley Mills 13th place. Sandra Dee 14th place. Elke Sommer 15th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Male Star WINNER Jack Lemmon NOMINEES Paul Newman Lee Marvin Dean Martin 4th place. James Coburn 5th place. John Wayne 6th place. Cary Grant 7th place. Sean Connery 8th place. Steve McQueen 9th place. Richard Burton 10th place. Frank Sinatra 11th place. Michael Caine 12th place. James Stewart 13th place. Dick Van Dyke 14th place. Robert Mitchum 15th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Female New Face WINNER Sandy Dennis NOMINEES Lynn Redgrave Mary Tyler Moore Vanessa Redgrave 4th place. Raquel Welch 5th place. Nancy Sinatra 6th place. Sylva Koscina 7th place. Britt Ekland 8th place. Faye Dunaway 9th place. Beverly Adams 10th place. Phyllis Diller 11th place. Emmanuelle Arsan (as Maryat Andriane) 12th place. Maureen Arthur 13th place. Jean Hale 14th place. Giovanna Ralli 15th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Action Drama WINNER The Professionals NOMINEES Murderers' Row Fantastic Voyage In Like Flint 4th place. Nevada Smith 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Female Dramatic Performance WINNER Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?: Elizabeth Taylor NOMINEES Hurry Sundown: Jane Fonda This Property Is Condemned: Natalie Wood A Man and a Woman: Anouk Aimée 4th place. Born Free: Virginia McKenna 5th place -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producer WINNER Harry Saltzman, Albert R. Broccoli NOMINEES Ross Hunter James H. Nicholson, Samuel Z. Arkoff Joe Pasternak 4th place. Sam Spiegel 5th place. Irving Allen 6th place. Martin Rackin 7th place. Joseph E. Levine 8th place. Norman Lear 9th place. Carl Foreman 10th place .
Recommended publications
  • Widescreen Weekend 2007 Brochure
    The Widescreen Weekend welcomes all those fans of large format and widescreen films – CinemaScope, VistaVision, 70mm, Cinerama and Imax – and presents an array of past classics from the vaults of the National Media Museum. A weekend to wallow in the best of cinema. HOW THE WEST WAS WON NEW TODD-AO PRINT MAYERLING (70mm) BLACK TIGHTS (70mm) Saturday 17 March THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN IN THEIR Monday 19 March Sunday 18 March Pictureville Cinema Pictureville Cinema FLYING MACHINES Pictureville Cinema Dir. Terence Young France 1960 130 mins (PG) Dirs. Henry Hathaway, John Ford, George Marshall USA 1962 Dir. Terence Young France/GB 1968 140 mins (PG) Zizi Jeanmaire, Cyd Charisse, Roland Petit, Moira Shearer, 162 mins (U) or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 hours 11 minutes Omar Sharif, Catherine Deneuve, James Mason, Ava Gardner, Maurice Chevalier Debbie Reynolds, Henry Fonda, James Stewart, Gregory Peck, (70mm) James Robertson Justice, Geneviève Page Carroll Baker, John Wayne, Richard Widmark, George Peppard Sunday 18 March A very rare screening of this 70mm title from 1960. Before Pictureville Cinema It is the last days of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The world is going on to direct Bond films (see our UK premiere of the There are westerns and then there are WESTERNS. How the Dir. Ken Annakin GB 1965 133 mins (U) changing, and Archduke Rudolph (Sharif), the young son of new digital print of From Russia with Love), Terence Young West was Won is something very special on the deep curved Stuart Whitman, Sarah Miles, James Fox, Alberto Sordi, Robert Emperor Franz-Josef (Mason) finds himself desperately looking delivered this French ballet film.
    [Show full text]
  • Trauma, Dissociation, and Amnesia: Myths and Reality in Cinema and Life
    Trauma, Dissociation, and Amnesia: Myths and Reality in Cinema and Life A look at the psychological responses to trauma that include dissociation and amnesia, phenomena which are often misunderstood in the media and public perception. After looking at models that explain common responses to trauma, including post-traumatic stress, traumatic amnesia, and dissociative identity disorder (formerly called multiple personality disorder), we will screen five films that portray these conditions in various contexts. All are Hollywood produced. The stories have sometimes been manipulated to add drama so as to appeal to popular audiences, which is one of the dynamics this course will examine. Session 1 / Jan 31, 2020: Lecture/discussion: An overview of the mechanisms and dynamic of memory and the ways in which it is subject to traumatic distortion, dissociations and episodes of amnesia. We will focus on understanding dissociative and amnestic responses to trauma as defensive and self-protective mechanisms. When seen in this context, behaviors that often seem bizarre begin to make sense. Session 2 / Feb 7: Prince of Tides (1991) / the screen adaptation of Pat Conroy’s portrayal of the range of responses to childhood trauma in a dysfunctional, violent family. Starring Barbra Streisand and Nick Nolte, the film was also directed and produced by Streisand. Session 3 / Feb 14: The Three Faces of Eve (1957) / The Hollywood portrayal of a real-life case of dissociative identity disorder. This is the film that brought the phenomenon of multiple personalities to public attention, was highly acclaimed when it was released, and set up beliefs about multiplicity that lasted for decades.
    [Show full text]
  • Imdb Verdict Paul Newman
    Imdb Verdict Paul Newman Sericitic and ingressive Dwayne wield his hotels rimmed ledgers overrashly. Unusable and catadromous Randi swim her enterectomies gaol while Stanwood ship some ketosis unfilially. Hellenistic Sander sometimes fracture any colonies underfeeding invisibly. Not expecting to a subtle way, though largely represents someone else are fighting each of paul newman and nothing with no good one of We went ahead and paul newman at imdb verdict paul newman claimed his time newman related to paul in confusion and. Oh my sunday in defending mother, imdb verdict paul newman garnered another approach worked on imdb, paul douglas spends his. For the imdb stipulates a way of others, imdb verdict paul newman? You are commenting using your ticket to paul muni, imdb verdict paul newman. Keep it works in return a definitive characterization, imdb verdict paul newman was a stooge for violence is an irish crew, many people who strived for the story. The Verdict 192 Connections on IMDb Referenced in Featured in Spoofed and. Read more prevalent in. Pretty good job here is a movie girlfriend is basically, imdb verdict paul newman, in a variety and the story of the video quality is a lawyer forever. It frayed the imdb verdict paul newman has value of dialogue and. The writing festival run hospital that the imdb verdict paul newman and ollie accidentally suffocated by swiching places we read the academy seemed was. Get a family curses, from gaming establishments by sidney lumet proves is intended for a young men from the jury can i thought of time and watch this being human, imdb verdict paul newman? As one is going.
    [Show full text]
  • 31 Days of Oscar® 2010 Schedule
    31 DAYS OF OSCAR® 2010 SCHEDULE Monday, February 1 6:00 AM Only When I Laugh (’81) (Kevin Bacon, James Coco) 8:15 AM Man of La Mancha (’72) (James Coco, Harry Andrews) 10:30 AM 55 Days at Peking (’63) (Harry Andrews, Flora Robson) 1:30 PM Saratoga Trunk (’45) (Flora Robson, Jerry Austin) 4:00 PM The Adventures of Don Juan (’48) (Jerry Austin, Viveca Lindfors) 6:00 PM The Way We Were (’73) (Viveca Lindfors, Barbra Streisand) 8:00 PM Funny Girl (’68) (Barbra Streisand, Omar Sharif) 11:00 PM Lawrence of Arabia (’62) (Omar Sharif, Peter O’Toole) 3:00 AM Becket (’64) (Peter O’Toole, Martita Hunt) 5:30 AM Great Expectations (’46) (Martita Hunt, John Mills) Tuesday, February 2 7:30 AM Tunes of Glory (’60) (John Mills, John Fraser) 9:30 AM The Dam Busters (’55) (John Fraser, Laurence Naismith) 11:30 AM Mogambo (’53) (Laurence Naismith, Clark Gable) 1:30 PM Test Pilot (’38) (Clark Gable, Mary Howard) 3:30 PM Billy the Kid (’41) (Mary Howard, Henry O’Neill) 5:15 PM Mr. Dodd Takes the Air (’37) (Henry O’Neill, Frank McHugh) 6:45 PM One Way Passage (’32) (Frank McHugh, William Powell) 8:00 PM The Thin Man (’34) (William Powell, Myrna Loy) 10:00 PM The Best Years of Our Lives (’46) (Myrna Loy, Fredric March) 1:00 AM Inherit the Wind (’60) (Fredric March, Noah Beery, Jr.) 3:15 AM Sergeant York (’41) (Noah Beery, Jr., Walter Brennan) 5:30 AM These Three (’36) (Walter Brennan, Marcia Mae Jones) Wednesday, February 3 7:15 AM The Champ (’31) (Marcia Mae Jones, Walter Beery) 8:45 AM Viva Villa! (’34) (Walter Beery, Donald Cook) 10:45 AM The Pubic Enemy
    [Show full text]
  • Elizabeth Taylor: Screen Goddess
    PRESS RELEASE: June 2011 11/5 Elizabeth Taylor: Screen Goddess BFI Southbank Salutes the Hollywood Legend On 23 March 2011 Hollywood – and the world – lost a living legend when Dame Elizabeth Taylor died. As a tribute to her BFI Southbank presents a season of some of her finest films, this August, including Giant (1956), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958) and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966). Throughout her career she won two Academy Awards and was nominated for a further three, and, beauty aside, was known for her humanitarian work and fearless social activism. Elizabeth Taylor was born in Hampstead, London, on 27 February 1932 to affluent American parents, and moved to the US just months before the outbreak of WWII. Retired stage actress Sara Southern doggedly promoted her daughter’s career as a child star, culminating in the hit National Velvet (1944), when she was just 12, and was instrumental in the reluctant teenager’s successful transition to adult roles. Her first big success in an adult role came with Vincente Minnelli’s Father of the Bride (1950), before her burgeoning sexuality was recognised and she was cast as a wealthy young seductress in A Place in the Sun (1951) – her first on-screen partnership with Montgomery Clift (a friend to whom Taylor remained fiercely loyal until Clift’s death in 1966). Together they were hailed as the most beautiful movie couple in Hollywood history. The oil-epic Giant (1956) came next, followed by Raintree County (1958), which earned the actress her first Oscar nomination and saw Taylor reunited with Clift, though it was during the filming that he was in the infamous car crash that would leave him physically and mentally scarred.
    [Show full text]
  • 6182 Rhodes & Singer.Indd
    Consuming Images 6182_Rhodes & Singer.indd i 18/12/19 3:04 PM Robert Abel’s Bubbles (1974) 6182_Rhodes & Singer.indd ii 18/12/19 3:04 PM Consuming Images Film Art and the American Television Commercial Gary D. Rhodes and Robert Singer 6182_Rhodes & Singer.indd iii 18/12/19 3:04 PM Dedicated to Barry Salt and Gerald “Jerry” Schnitzer Edinburgh University Press is one of the leading university presses in the UK. We publish academic books and journals in our selected subject areas across the humanities and social sciences, combining cutting-edge scholarship with high editorial and production values to produce academic works of lasting importance. For more information visit our website: edinburghuniversitypress.com © Gary D. Rhodes and Robert Singer, 2020 Edinburgh University Press Ltd The Tun—Holyrood Road 12 (2f) Jackson’s Entry Edinburgh EH8 8PJ Typeset in 11/13 Monotype Ehrhardt by IDSUK (DataConnection) Ltd, and printed and bound in Great Britain A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978 1 4744 6068 2 (hardback) ISBN 978 1 4744 6070 5 (webready PDF) ISBN 978 1 4744 6071 2 (epub) The right of Gary D. Rhodes and Robert Singer to be identified as authors of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 and the Copyright and Related Rights Regulations 2003 (SI No. 2498). 6182_Rhodes & Singer.indd iv 18/12/19 3:04 PM Contents List of Figures vi Acknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Origins 16 2. Narrative 36 3. Mise-en-scène 62 4.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Annual Report
    Annual Report 2018 Dear Friends, welcome anyone, whether they have worked in performing arts and In 2018, The Actors Fund entertainment or not, who may need our world-class short-stay helped 17,352 people Thanks to your generous support, The Actors Fund is here for rehabilitation therapies (physical, occupational and speech)—all with everyone in performing arts and entertainment throughout their the goal of a safe return home after a hospital stay (p. 14). nationally. lives and careers, and especially at times of great distress. Thanks to your generous support, The Actors Fund continues, Our programs and services Last year overall we provided $1,970,360 in emergency financial stronger than ever and is here for those who need us most. Our offer social and health services, work would not be possible without an engaged Board as well as ANNUAL REPORT assistance for crucial needs such as preventing evictions and employment and training the efforts of our top notch staff and volunteers. paying for essential medications. We were devastated to see programs, emergency financial the destruction and loss of life caused by last year’s wildfires in assistance, affordable housing, 2018 California—the most deadly in history, and nearly $134,000 went In addition, Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS continues to be our and more. to those in our community affected by the fires and other natural steadfast partner, assuring help is there in these uncertain times. disasters (p. 7). Your support is part of a grand tradition of caring for our entertainment and performing arts community. Thank you Mission As a national organization, we’re building awareness of how our CENTS OF for helping to assure that the show will go on, and on.
    [Show full text]
  • 1944-06-30, [P ]
    Friday, .Tune 3*), JQ44 THE TOLEDO UNION JOURNAL Page 5 ‘Dear Marfin Heard on a Hollywood Movie Set HOLLY WOOD — John News and Gossip of Stage and Serei n Conte and Marilyn Maxwell are enacting one of the j. - ■- <fr.:-;-UUZ;.,> . .ll . , ..■■j , f -r .. Lr „ — . .. romantic interludes in the Abbott and Costello starrer, Star I*refers Pie “Lost in a Harem," on &tage Stars Use Own Names 26 at M-G-M. «► As the scene begins, Ar Birthday ‘Cake’ , S mF k v i Conte takes Marilyn's hand HOLLYWOOD — Judy Gar­ In New Screen Vogue and says; {, .* diettjo, land defied tradition on her HOLLYWOOD (Special)—If a present trend continues in “I love you.” Hofljwood wri’ers may soon stop worrying about what names to “I’m — I’m speechless,” twenty-second birthday. ' ' I ’ says Marilyn. “As we say in At a family dinner tendered give their screen characters. Actors will simply use their own America, 'this is so sud­ the young star by her mother, names—as more and more of them are now doing. den'.” By TED TAYLOR Mrs. Ethel Gilmore, the familiar Take the instance of Jose Iturbi. He made his screen debat AmAmL W. birthday cake was conspicuous playing himself in "Thousads Cheer.” “After I have regained my throne, will you marry by its absence. Judy’s favorite In 20th Century Fox s Four Jills and a Jeep,” they prac- HOLLYWOOD (FP)—This fs probably the first ease on record dessert is chocolate pie. After tically dropped the traditional me?” Conte asks her. M-G-M Stars Two New “Yes,” repli“s Maralyn, as of a man nominating himself for a movie plot.
    [Show full text]
  • The Statement
    THE STATEMENT A Robert Lantos Production A Norman Jewison Film Written by Ronald Harwood Starring Michael Caine Tilda Swinton Jeremy Northam Based on the Novel by Brian Moore A Sony Pictures Classics Release 120 minutes EAST COAST: WEST COAST: EXHIBITOR CONTACTS: FALCO INK BLOCK-KORENBROT SONY PICTURES CLASSICS SHANNON TREUSCH MELODY KORENBROT CARMELO PIRRONE ERIN BRUCE ZIGGY KOZLOWSKI ANGELA GRESHAM 850 SEVENTH AVENUE, 8271 MELROSE AVENUE, 550 MADISON AVENUE, SUITE 1005 SUITE 200 8TH FLOOR NEW YORK, NY 10024 LOS ANGELES, CA 90046 NEW YORK, NY 10022 PHONE: (212) 445-7100 PHONE: (323) 655-0593 PHONE: (212) 833-8833 FAX: (212) 445-0623 FAX: (323) 655-7302 FAX: (212) 833-8844 Visit the Sony Pictures Classics Internet site at: http:/www.sonyclassics.com THE STATEMENT A ROBERT LANTOS PRODUCTION A NORMAN JEWISON FILM Directed by NORMAN JEWISON Produced by ROBERT LANTOS NORMAN JEWISON Screenplay by RONALD HARWOOD Based on the novel by BRIAN MOORE Director of Photography KEVIN JEWISON Production Designer JEAN RABASSE Edited by STEPHEN RIVKIN, A.C.E. ANDREW S. EISEN Music by NORMAND CORBEIL Costume Designer CARINE SARFATI Casting by NINA GOLD Co-Producers SANDRA CUNNINGHAM YANNICK BERNARD ROBYN SLOVO Executive Producers DAVID M. THOMPSON MARK MUSSELMAN JASON PIETTE MICHAEL COWAN Associate Producer JULIA ROSENBERG a SERENDIPITY POINT FILMS ODESSA FILMS COMPANY PICTURES co-production in association with ASTRAL MEDIA in association with TELEFILM CANADA in association with CORUS ENTERTAINMENT in association with MOVISION in association with SONY PICTURES
    [Show full text]
  • Frankenheimer on Location in Canada
    Frankenheimer on Location in Canada By Gerald Pratley Fall 1999 Issue of KINEMA THE DISTINGUISHED American filmmaker, John Frankenheimer, has returned to Canada and is making his fourth motion picture there called Reindeer Games presently filming in Vancouver, British Columbia, for Miramax. The main players are Gary Sinese, Charlize Theron, Ben Affleck and Clarence Williams III. Frankenheimer is working from a script by Ehren Kruger, the writer’s second screenplay following Arlington Way, released this summer. Frankenheimer first came to British Columbia twenty years ago tofilm Prophecy, a horror story rooted in the pollution of the environment by the logging industries. He returned ten years later to Calgary, Drumheller and High River, to film Dead Bang, a brilliant piece of work based on the true story of a vicious white supremacy movement. He was back a year later, to Bragg Creek, Canmore and Calgary, to make The Fourth War, set on the snowbound Czech-West German frontier during the Cold War and relating a thoughtful moral tale of two generals, one American the other Russian, and their conflicting ideological beliefs. Now he is snowbound once again high in the Cypress Bowl mountains of West Vancouver shooting all-night scenes in freezing-cold weather with the unit bathed in the eerie light of Musko location lamps raised high in the dark sky. Affleck plays a newly released prisoner who assumes another man’s identity and findshimself involved in a casino robbery at Christmas time. The script appealed to Frankenheimer as a thoughtfully written story concerning men who were born evil and have become a violent sore to plague a complaisant society.
    [Show full text]
  • In 1925, Eight Actors Were Dedicated to a Dream. Expatriated from Their Broadway Haunts by Constant Film Commitments, They Wante
    In 1925, eight actors were dedicated to a dream. Expatriated from their Broadway haunts by constant film commitments, they wanted to form a club here in Hollywood; a private place of rendezvous, where they could fraternize at any time. Their first organizational powwow was held at the home of Robert Edeson on April 19th. ”This shall be a theatrical club of love, loy- alty, and laughter!” finalized Edeson. Then, proposing a toast, he declared, “To the Masquers! We Laugh to Win!” Table of Contents Masquers Creed and Oath Our Mission Statement Fast Facts About Our History and Culture Our Presidents Throughout History The Masquers “Who’s Who” 1925: The Year Of Our Birth Contact Details T he Masquers Creed T he Masquers Oath I swear by Thespis; by WELCOME! THRICE WELCOME, ALL- Dionysus and the triumph of life over death; Behind these curtains, tightly drawn, By Aeschylus and the Trilogy of the Drama; Are Brother Masquers, tried and true, By the poetic power of Sophocles; by the romance of Who have labored diligently, to bring to you Euripedes; A Night of Mirth-and Mirth ‘twill be, By all the Gods and Goddesses of the Theatre, that I will But, mark you well, although no text we preach, keep this oath and stipulation: A little lesson, well defined, respectfully, we’d teach. The lesson is this: Throughout this Life, To reckon those who taught me my art equally dear to me as No matter what befall- my parents; to share with them my substance and to comfort The best thing in this troubled world them in adversity.
    [Show full text]
  • Sunshine State
    SUNSHINE STATE A FILM BY JOHN SAYLES A Sony Pictures Classics Release 141 Minutes. Rated PG-13 by the MPAA East Coast East Coast West Coast Distributor Falco Ink. Bazan Entertainment Block-Korenbrot Sony Pictures Classics Shannon Treusch Evelyn Santana Melody Korenbrot Carmelo Pirrone Erin Bruce Jackie Bazan Ziggy Kozlowski Marissa Manne 850 Seventh Avenue 110 Thorn Street 8271 Melrose Avenue 550 Madison Avenue Suite 1005 Suite 200 8 th Floor New York, NY 10019 Jersey City, NJ 07307 Los Angeles, CA 9004 New York, NY 10022 Tel: 212-445-7100 Tel: 201 656 0529 Tel: 323-655-0593 Tel: 212-833-8833 Fax: 212-445-0623 Fax: 201 653 3197 Fax: 323-655-7302 Fax: 212-833-8844 Visit the Sony Pictures Classics Internet site at: http:/www.sonyclassics.com CAST MARLY TEMPLE................................................................EDIE FALCO DELIA TEMPLE...................................................................JANE ALEXANDER FURMAN TEMPLE.............................................................RALPH WAITE DESIREE PERRY..................................................................ANGELA BASSETT REGGIE PERRY...................................................................JAMES MCDANIEL EUNICE STOKES.................................................................MARY ALICE DR. LLOYD...........................................................................BILL COBBS EARL PICKNEY...................................................................GORDON CLAPP FRANCINE PICKNEY.........................................................MARY
    [Show full text]