|
|
|
2020 Los Angeles Dodgers: The Official World Series Film (2020)
Character: Narrator
The Los Angeles Dodgers are World Series champions of 2020. On a quest for redemption after losing the World Series in 2017 and 2018, the Dodgers clinched their 2020 title in six games against the Tampa Bay Rays during a season—a year—so unique.
|
|
|
|
|
Generations of the Game (2018)
Character: N/A
Generations of the Game, playing at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum’s Grandstand Theater, features Hall of Fame narrators along with voices such as Hall of Fame Chairman of the Board Jane Forbes Clark, Ford C. Frick Award winner Bob Costas, recently retired heroes and current stars.
|
|
|
|
|
Flashing Spikes (1962)
Character: Announcer
An old ballplayer, thrown out of baseball due to a bribery scandal, becomes friends with a young phenom. The younger player is at first tainted by his association with the oldtimer, but eventually the truth about the scandal is revealed.
|
|
|
It Ain't Over (2023)
Character: Self
The life and times of New York Yankee catcher Yogi Berra, a 10 time World Series champion whose unique personality and unforgettable Yogi-isms sometimes got in the way of his being recognized as one of baseball’s greatest players.
|
|
|
Fireball 500 (1966)
Character: The Narrator (voice)
Stock car racer Dave Owens plays into the hands of whiskey runners by agreeing to drive in a cross-country road race.
|
|
|
Secret in Their Eyes (2015)
Character: Voice of the Dodgers (voice)
A tight-knit team of FBI investigators, along with their District Attorney supervisor, is suddenly torn apart when they discover that one of their own teenage daughters has been brutally murdered.
|
|
|
Improbably Gibson (2018)
Character: Self
An entertaining and fresh retrospective of Gibson's historic walk-off home run in Game 1 of the 1988 World Series.
|
|
|
Say Hey, Willie Mays! (2022)
Character: Self
Follow Willie Mays’ life both on and off the field over five decades as he navigated the American sports landscape and the country’s ever-evolving cultural backdrop, all while helping to define what it means to be one of America’s first Black sports superstars. He left an indelible mark in New York City and San Francisco, building a love affair with both cities’ fans.
|
|
|
Bachelor in Paradise (1961)
Character: Dodgers Game Announcer (uncredited)
A bachelor author of sleazy books moves to a family-oriented subdivision where he becomes an unofficial relationship advisor to unhappy local housewives, to the dismay of their respective husbands who suspect him of sexual misconduct.
|
|
|
For Love of the Game (1999)
Character: Vin Scully
A baseball legend almost finished with his distinguished career at the age of forty has one last chance to prove who he is, what he is capable of, and win the heart of the woman he has loved for the past four years.
|
|
|
The Party (1968)
Character: Himself - baseball announcer (archive sound)
Hrundi V. Bakshi, an accident-prone actor from India, is accidentally put on the guest list for an upcoming party at the home of a Hollywood film producer. Unfortunately, from the moment he arrives, one thing after another goes wrong with compounding effect.
|
|
|
Catching Hell (2011)
Character: Self
After the Chicago Cubs blow an opportunity to reach the World Series in 2003, Cubs fans blame the team's misfortune on fellow fan Steve Bartman, who interfered with a foul ball and prevented Moises Alou from making a catch.
|
|