Doin' Time on Planet Earth
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Charles Matthau
Isabelle Walker
Dominick Brascia
Richard Connor
Nicholas Strouse
Adam West
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Ryan Richmond, a lonely teenager living a Holiday Inn in Arizona, finds his world turned upside down when he learns there's a chance he may be an alien prince from another planet.
Director
Charles Matthau
Cast
Isabelle Walker
Dominick Brascia
Richard Connor
Nicholas Strouse
Adam West
Andrea Thompson
Hugh O'brian
Michael Allen Ryder
Peggy Rea
Kellie Martin
Susan Ursitti
Nathan Dyer
Matt Adler
Roddy Mcdowall
Amy Lynne
Christian Hoff
Maureen Stapleton
Kelly Mohre
Paula Irvine
David Koneff
Charles Matthau
Timothy Patrick Murphy
Kyra Stempel
Hugh Gillin
Martha Scott
Candice Azzara
Gloria Henry
Diana Chesney
Linda Lutz
Crew
Haim Adut
George S Ball
Alan Balsam
Martin Becker
Izak Benmeir
Carol D Bonnefil
Shunil Borpujari
Mayling Braun
Frank Bueno
Duane Clark
Denise Cochran
Byron J Cohen
Richard Connor
Andre B Costa
Anne Couk
Michelle Deal
Anna Delanzo
Mary Jo Devenney
Martha Elcan
Evan A Ensign
Joseph Fiacco
Robert N Field
Paul D Fischer
Sarah Fitzsimmons
Rachel A. Flores
Gabe Cubos Gabriel
Yoram Globus
Menahem Golan
Scott Guthrie
Robert Guzman
Nancy Banta Hansen
Paula Herold
Cindy Hochman
Vered Hochman
Steve Housewright
Colin D Irwin
Robert Jackson
Libby Jacobs
Jimmy Jones
Ronald Judkins
Dana Kaproff
Mark D Karen
Michael Kasyan
Bettie Kauffman
Dianne Ketchum
Joe Killian
Andrew Kimbrough
Karen Koch
Cynthia K Lagerstrom
Suzanne Lapick
Adrian Licciardi
Andrew Licht
David Lux
Richard Manfredi
Frances Mathias
Greg Mccullough
Michele Mcguire
Eric Mcleod
Bill Millar
Douglas Mowat
Jeffrey Mueller
Mike Nomad
Patrick Peach
Christopher Pearce
Donald Paul Pemrick
Michael Pizzuto
Robert A Preston
Joel Renfro
Reve Richards
Bill Roberts
Sharyn L Ross
Karen R Sachs
Curtis A Schnell
Katharine Read Slonaker
Darren Star
Darren Star
Marcy Stoeven
Garreth Stover
Timothy Suhrstedt
George T Sweney
Gil Talamantes
Anton Uhl
Dennis K Wilson
Tamar Mor Wyman
Wendy Yorkshire
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Martha Scott, 1914-2003
Martha Ellen Scott was born in Jamesport, Missouri on September 24, 1914, and raised in Kansas City, where a high school teacher encouraged her interest in acting. She majored in drama at the University of Michigan and after graduation, she joined The Globe Theatre Troupe, a stock company that performed truncated Shakespeare at the Chicago World's Fair in between 1933-34. She went to New York soon after and found work in radio and stock before playing making her breakthrough as Emily Webb in Our Town. When the play opened on Broadway in February 1938, Scott received glowing reviews in the pivotal role of Emily, the wistful girl-next-door in Grovers Corners, New Hampshire, who marries her high school sweetheart, dies in pregnancy and gets to relive a single day back on Earth. Her stage success brought her to Hollywood, where she continued her role in Sam Wood's film adaptation of Out Town (1940). Scott received an Academy Award nomination for best actress and was immediately hailed as the year's new female discovery.
She gave nicely understated performances in her next few films: as Jane Peyton Howard in Frank Lloyd's historical The Howards of Virginia (1940), opposite Cary Grant; the dedicated school teacher in Tay Garnett's Cheers for Miss Bishop (1941) in which she aged convincingly from 17 to 85; and as a devoted wife to preacher Frederic March in Irving Rapper's warm family drama One Foot in Heaven (1941). Sadly, Scott's maturity and sensitivity ran against the glamour-girl persona that was popular in the '40s (best embodied by stars like Lana Turner and Veronica Lake) and her film appearances were few and far between for the remainder of the decade.
Her fortunes brightened in the '50s, when she found roles in major productions, such as a suburban wife trapped in her home by fugitives, led by Humphrey Bogart, in William Wyler's taut The Desperate Hours (1955) and played Charlton Heston's mother in the Cecil B. Demille's The Ten Commandments (1956) and again for William Wyler in Ben-Hur (1959). Scott found steady work for the next 30 years in matronly roles, most notably on television, where she played Bob Newhart's mother on The Bob Newhart Show (1972-1978) and the mother of Sue Ellen Ewing on Dallas (1978-1991). Her second husband, pianist and Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Mel Powell, died in 1998. Survivors include a son and two daughters.
by Michael T. Toole
Martha Scott, 1914-2003
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall 1988
Released in United States Fall September 21, 1988
Released in United States on Video April 26, 1989
Feature directorial debut for Charles Matthau, the son of Academy Award-winning actor Walter Matthau.
Began shooting October 29, 1986.
Ultra-Stereo
Released in United States Fall 1988
Released in United States Fall September 21, 1988
Released in United States on Video April 26, 1989