|
Snavely (1978)
Character: Chief
Henry Snavely is a cynical hotelier that in this pilot is faced with the threat of hotel inspectors.
|
|
|
Nero Wolfe (1979)
Character: Evers
Gourmet Nero Wolfe interrupts his orchid-tending to take on the case of a lady tycoon who wants to know why she's under investigation by the FBI, only to find himself enmeshed in a puzzling murder-mystery. TV movie based on Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe series.
|
|
|
Honky (1971)
Character: N/A
Sheila, an affluent black teenager, begins dating working class white teen Wayne, and asks him for help to sell a kilo of marijuana.
|
|
|
Will There Really Be a Morning? (1983)
Character: Drama Teacher
This is the story of actress Frances Farmer, her struggles with mental illness and involuntary confinement in an insane asylum.
|
|
|
State Fair (1976)
Character: Judge
Melissa and Jim Bryant live on an Iowa farm with their adult son Chuck, their adult daughter Karen, and their teenage son Wayne, who is a high school sophomore. Wayne is a talented singer and guitarist who dreams of country music stardom. Karen, newly separated from her husband, has recently rejoined the family with her own young son Tommy, who misses his father. This was a pilot film for a proposed television series that was not picked up.
|
|
|
The Suicide Club (1973)
Character: N/A
A young gambler seeking greater challenges joins a card club where the members literally gamble for their lives.
|
|
|
Goldie and the Boxer Go to Hollywood (1981)
Character: The Doctor
In this sequel to 1979's "Goldie and the Boxer," the ingratiating twosome, heavyweight champ and his 10-year-old manager, flee to California when a vengeful promoter who lost a bundle on the title fight wants retribution.
|
|
|
Goodnight Jackie (1974)
Character: Professor at Funeral
Wendell Burton is a guy who can't get over his ex-girlfriend, Lana Wood. He is caught up in a nutty crisis of trying to survive life without her!
|
|
|
The Return of the World's Greatest Detective (1976)
Character: Spiner
A Los Angeles cop falls off his motorcycle, strikes his head and wakes up believing himself to be Sherlock Holmes. Along with the social worker who is treating him, he sets out to solve the murder of an embezzler.
|
|
|
I Love My Wife (1970)
Character: Dr. Korngold
Young surgeon becomes bored with his wife and family, he has a very successful career, but even with having so much in life, he feels empty and goes through a series of brief and meaningless relations with attractive women.
|
|
|
The Wackiest Wagon Train in the West (1976)
Character: Brookhaven
This comical western chronicles the silly adventures of a bumbling wagonmaster and his clutzy assistant as they attempt to take seven passengers across the prairie. Among the passengers are two wealthy Bostonians, an aspiring showgirl, a teacher, and bachelor. The story is adapted from Dusty's Trail, a television sitcom.
|
|
|
Splendor in the Grass (1961)
Character: Dr. Judd (uncredited)
A fragile Kansas girl's unrequited and forbidden love for a handsome young man from the town's most powerful family drives her to heartbreak and madness.
|
|
|
Superdad (1973)
Character: Dr. Skinner on TV
A dad tries to impress the daughter -- a soon-to-be college student he thinks is hanging around with a bad crowd.
|
|
|
The Night Strangler (1973)
Character: Dr. Webb
After being run out of Las Vegas, reporter Carl Kolchak heads for Seattle and another reporting job with the local paper. It's not long before he’s on the trail of another string of bizarre murders. It seems that every 21 years, for the past century, a killer murders a certain number of people, drains them of their blood, and then disappears into the night. Kolchak is on his trail, but can he stop him?
|
|
|
Outrage! (1973)
Character: Judge Cox
One man decides to wage war against a gang of teenage punks besieging an affluent California community. Based on a true incident.
|
|
|
The Last Child (1971)
Character: Doctor Young
In a badly-overpopulated future, where each couple is only allowed one child and where people over 65 are forbidden medical care under a very draconian set of laws, a young couple, pregnant with their second child (the first died shortly after birth) enlist the help of an elderly former US Senator to help them escape to Canada.
|
|
|
The North Avenue Irregulars (1979)
Character: Rev. Wainwright
When crooks set up operations in a traditional town, a minister and a group of church ladies are willing to do anything, no matter how wacky, to get them out.
|
|
|
In Name Only (1969)
Character: Father
In this romantic comedy, an unwed couple who run a wedding planning business discover, to their horror, that the Justice of the Peace who had officiated their first three weddings was only an actor. Hilarity ensues as they set about trying to get these marrieds married...again.
|
|
|
The Prisoner of Second Avenue (1975)
Character: Psychiatrist
Mel Edison has just lost his job after many years and now has to cope with being unemployed at middle age during an intense NYC heat wave.
|
|
|
Hunters Are for Killing (1970)
Character: Carl Farnell
A man comes home after serving time in prison to claim his share of his deceased mother's estate. However, his adoptive father, who holds him responsible for his biological son's death, intends to fight him for everything.
|
|
|
|
|
Mir hat es immer Spaß gemacht (1970)
Character: Ward Collins
Playboy magazine darling (and one-time playmate of Hugh Hefner) Barbi Benton is Naughty Cheerleader Lynne Keefe, a small-town, small-brained babe who gets caught up big-time in the sex business. As a high school cheerleader who can really twirl a baton back in hometown Scranton, Lynne gets knocked up by a horny hunk on a motorcycle who then dumps her, sending her into a sexual spiral that takes her to The Catskills, Boston, New York, Miami and Rome.
|
|
|
Pieces of Dreams (1970)
Character: Father Paul Schaeffer
A young priest questions his faith after he falls in love with a social worker.
|
|
|
The House of the Dead (1978)
Character: The Mortician
When a philandering husband accidentally finds himself lost during a rainstorm, he’s taken in by an elderly mortician and is forced to learn the ghastly origins of four freshly arrived corpses.
|
|
|
The Steagle (1971)
Character: Rev. Ernest Barrow
In the midst of the Cuban missile crisis, a mild-mannered professor decides to live out all of his daydreams, travelling across the country and adopting a different persona in each city.
|
|
|
Busting (1974)
Character: Judge Fred R. Simpson
Defying orders to lay-off the case, two Los Angeles vice-squad cops go after a local mobster and use unorthodox methods to achieve results.
|
|
|
Spider-Man (1977)
Character: Prof. Noah Tyler
When an extortionist threatens to force a multi-suicide unless a huge ransom is paid, only Peter Parker can stop him with his new powers as Spider-Man.
|
|