How to Beat the High Cost of Living
Cast & Crew
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Robert Scheerer
Director
Dabney Coleman
Cathryn Damon
Tom Gressler
Hubert Laws
Performer
Daniel Mayes
Film Details
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Release Date
1980
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 50m
Synopsis
Director
Robert Scheerer
Director
Cast
Dabney Coleman
Cathryn Damon
Tom Gressler
Hubert Laws
Performer
Daniel Mayes
Harvey Lewis
Scott Barkhust
Michael Bell
Jon Dickman
Joan Schumacher
Jack Krupnick
Art Metrano
Colleen Murff
Ronnie Schell
Carmen Zapata
Jonathan Schwartz
Linda Hall
Jane Curtin
Al Checco
James Whetstine
Richard Benjamin
Susan Saint James
Bill Ritchie
Byron Morrow
Earl Klugh
Performer
Ralph Garrett
Wendy Shawn
Robin Hickman
Robert W Talboi
Philip Miller
Sarah Leonard
Garrett Morris
Tom Morrison
Wesley Baldwin
Nanci Wexterland
Craig J Jackson
Jerry Zinnamon
Jessica Lange
Jane Van Boskirk
Dru Wagner
Sybil Danning
Larry Woodruff
Michael K Daly
James Aday
Susan Tolsky
Robert Canaga
Allan Warnick
Fred Willard
David Lunney
Stan Boyd
Eddie Albert
Crew
Samuel Z. Arkoff
Executive Producer
Michael A Benson
Camera Operator
Salvatore Billitteri
Post-Production Supervisor
Mitchell Bock
Assistant Director
Bill Butler
Editor
Steve Butler
Assistant Editor
Daniel Allen Carlin
Music Editor
James A. Crabe
Director Of Photography
Peg Cummings
Set Decorator
Richard Elmore
Stunts
Buddy Epstein
Music
Carolina Ewart
Costume Supervisor
Jane Feinberg
Casting
Mike Fenton
Casting
George Fisher
Stunts
Donna Freed
Production Coordinator
Donna Garrett
Stunts
Gary Gillingham
Production Associate
Jere Henshaw
Production Supervisor
Robert Kaufman
Producer
Robert Kaufman
Screenplay
Herbert Jay Kerner
Stunts
Marvin I Kosberg
Sound Editor
Robin Krause
Associate Producer
Len Lookabaugh
Key Grip
Gil Marchant
Sound Editor
William Mccaughey
Sound
Henry Millar
Special Effects
Pat Mitchell
Sound
Don Nunley
Props
Lawrence G Paull
Production Designer
Marina Pedraza
Hair
Sidney Perell
Makeup
Erica Edell Phillips
Costumes
Ana Maria Quintana
Script Supervisor
John W. Rogers
Production Manager
Edward Sandlin
Sound Editor
Jonathan Schwartz
Production Assistant
Gregory Sill
Music
Irby Smith
Assistant Director
Peter Sorel
Photography
Paul Stanhope
Makeup
Maurice Stein
Makeup
Adele Taylor
Hair
Leonora Thuna
From Story
Delree Todd
Hair
Bernard Wilens
Producer
Patrick Williams
Music
Jerome M Zeitman
Producer
Film Details
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Release Date
1980
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 50m
Articles
Eddie Albert (1906-2005)
The son of a real estate agent, Albert was born Edward Albert Heimberger in Rock Island, Ill., on April 22, 1906. His family relocated to Minneapolis when he was still an infant. Long entralled by theatre, he studied drama at the University of Minnesota. After years of developing his acting chops in touring companies, summer stock and a stint with a Mexican circus, he signed a contract with Warner Bros. and made his film debut in Brother Rat (1938). Although hardly a stellar early film career, he made some pleasant B-pictures, playing slap happy youths in Brother Rat and a Baby (1940), and The Wagons Roll at Night (1941).
His career was interrupted for military service for World War II, and after his stint (1942-45), he came back and developed a stronger, more mature screen image: Smash-Up: The Story of a Woman (1947); Carrie (1952); his Oscar® nominated turn as the Bohemian photographer friend of Gregory Peck in Roman Holiday (1953); a charming Ali Hakim in Oklahoma (1955); and to many critics, his finest hour as an actor, when he was cast unnervingly against type as a cowardly military officer whose lack of commitment to his troops results in their deaths in Attack! (1956).
As he settled into middle-age, Albert discovered belated fame when he made the move to Hooterville. For six seasons (1965-71), television viewers loved Eddie Albert as Oliver Wendal Douglas, the bemused city slicker who, along with his charming wife Lisa (Eva Gabor), takes a chance on buying a farm in the country and dealing with all the strange characters that come along their way. Of course, I'm talking about Green Acres. If he did nothing else, Alberts proved he could be a stalwart straight man in the most inane situations, and pull it off with grace.
After the run of Green Acres, Albert found two of his best roles in the late stages of his career that once again cast him against his genial, good-natured persona: the fiercly overprotective father of Cybill Shepherd in The Heartbreak Kid (1972), for which he earned his second Oscar® nomination; and the sadistic warden in Robert Aldrich's raucous gridiron comedy The Longest Yard (1974). Soon, Albert was in demand again, and he had another hit series, playing a retired police officer who partners with a retired con artist (Robert Wagner) to form a detective agency in Switch (1975-78).
The good roles slowed down slightly by the dawn of the '80s, both film: The Concorde: Airport '79 (1979), How to Beat the High Co$t of Living (1980), Take This Job and Shove It (1981); and television: Highway to Heaven, Murder, She Wrote, Thirtysomething, offered him little in the way of expansion. Yet, Albert spent his golden years in a most admirable fashion, he became something of activist for world health and pollution issues throughout the latter stages of his life. It is widely acknowledged that International Earth Day (April 22) is honored on his birthday for his tireless work on environemental matters. Albert was married to famed hispanic actress Margo (1945-85) until her death, and is survived by his son, actor Edward Albert, a daughter, and two granddaughters.
by Michael T. Toole
Eddie Albert (1906-2005)
Eddie Albert, a versatile film and television actor whose career spanned over seven decades, and who will forever be cherished by pop culture purists for his role as Oliver Douglas, that Manhattan attorney who sought pleasures from the simple life when he bought a rundown farm in the long-running sitcom Green Acres, died of pneummonia on May 26, at his Pacific Palisades home. He was 99.
The son of a real estate agent, Albert was born Edward Albert Heimberger in Rock Island, Ill., on April 22, 1906. His family relocated to Minneapolis when he was still an infant. Long entralled by theatre, he studied drama at the University of Minnesota. After years of developing his acting chops in touring companies, summer stock and a stint with a Mexican circus, he signed a contract with Warner Bros. and made his film debut in Brother Rat (1938).
Although hardly a stellar early film career, he made some pleasant B-pictures, playing slap happy youths in Brother Rat and a Baby (1940), and The Wagons Roll at Night (1941).
His career was interrupted for military service for World War II, and after his stint (1942-45), he came back and developed a stronger, more mature screen
image: Smash-Up: The Story of a Woman (1947); Carrie (1952); his Oscar® nominated turn as the Bohemian photographer friend of Gregory Peck in Roman Holiday (1953); a charming Ali Hakim in Oklahoma (1955); and to many critics, his finest hour as an actor, when he was cast unnervingly against type as a cowardly military officer whose lack of commitment to his troops results in their deaths in Attack! (1956).
As he settled into middle-age, Albert discovered belated fame when he made the move to Hooterville.
For six seasons (1965-71), television viewers loved Eddie Albert as Oliver Wendal Douglas, the bemused city slicker who, along with his charming wife Lisa (Eva Gabor), takes a chance on buying a farm in the country and dealing with all the strange characters that come along their way. Of course, I'm talking about Green Acres. If he did nothing else, Alberts proved he could be a stalwart straight man in the most inane situations, and pull it off with grace.
After the run of Green Acres, Albert found two of his best roles in the late stages of his career that once again cast him against his genial, good-natured persona: the fiercly overprotective father of Cybill Shepherd in The Heartbreak Kid (1972), for which he earned his second Oscar® nomination; and the sadistic warden in Robert Aldrich's raucous gridiron comedy The Longest Yard (1974). Soon, Albert was in demand again, and he had another hit series, playing a retired police officer who partners with a retired con artist (Robert Wagner) to form a detective agency in Switch (1975-78).
The good roles slowed down slightly by the dawn of the '80s, both film: The Concorde: Airport '79 (1979), How to Beat the High Co$t of Living (1980), Take This Job and Shove It (1981); and
television: Highway to Heaven, Murder, She Wrote, Thirtysomething, offered him little in the way of expansion. Yet, Albert spent his golden years in a most admirable fashion, he became something of activist for world health and pollution issues throughout the latter stages of his life. It is widely acknowledged that International Earth Day (April 22) is honored on his birthday for his tireless work on environemental matters. Albert was married to famed hispanic actress Margo (1945-85) until her death, and is survived by his son, actor Edward Albert, a daughter, and two granddaughters.
by Michael T. Toole
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Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States June 1980
Released in United States Summer June 1, 1980
Released in United States June 1980
Released in United States Summer June 1, 1980