Sail a Crooked Ship
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Irving Brecher
Robert Wagner
Dolores Hart
Carolyn Jones
Ernie Kovacs
Frankie Avalon
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Gilbert Barrows, an inept ex-Navy officer, tries to impress his boss's daughter, Elinor, by ignoring her father's order to scrap a fleet of Liberty ships. Attempting to prove the vessels seaworthy by having one of them refit for cargo transport, he mistakes petty thief Bugsy F. Foglemeyer for a ship builder and turns the project over to him. The ambitious Bugsy, nicknamed "The Captain," decides to use the ship for his getaway after robbing a Boston bank. Gilbert and Elinor arrive and are taken prisoner as Bugsy prepares to sail from New York City with his girl friend Virginia, his nephew Rodney, and his crew of crooks. Gilbert helps skipper the ship to Boston, triumphing over such potential disasters as seasickness, fire, hurricane, and collision, but he is unable to halt the bank robbery itself. Meanwhile, gang member George Wilson tries to gain leadership of the crew by killing Gilbert, Bugsy, and the two women; Gilbert, however, uses Elinor's brassiere as a slingshot and attracts the attention of the Coast Guard, who arrest the crooks. Later, Gilbert and Elinor are married, Virginia becomes the godmother of their child, and Bugsy receives a light prison sentence.
Director
Irving Brecher
Cast
Robert Wagner
Dolores Hart
Carolyn Jones
Ernie Kovacs
Frankie Avalon
Frank Gorshin
Jesse White
Harvey Lembeck
Sid Tomack
Guy Raymond
Buck Kartalian
Wilton Graff
Marjorie Bennett
Terry Huntingdon
Graeme Ferguson
Tom Symonds
Howard Wendell
Mary Young
Bru Mysak
Hope Sansberry
Mark Myer
Crew
Jack Angel
Philip Barry Jr.
Joseph Biroc
James M. Crowe
Lambert Day
George Duning
Russ Faith
Ruth Brooks Flippen
Bruce Geller
Ben Lane
William A. Lyon
Bob Marcucci
Frances Mcdowell
Alice Monte
Arthur Morton
Sam Nelson
Robert Peterson
Charles J. Rice
Michael Vidor
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Frank Gorshin (1933-2005)
He was born on April 5, 1933, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania into a family of modest means, his father was a railroad worker and mother a homemaker. His childhood impressions of Edward G. Robinson and James Cagney paid off when he won a local talent contest at 17, and that led to his first gig at 17 at a the prize was a one week engagement at Jackie Heller's Carousel night club, Pittsburgh's hottest downtown spot in the day. The taste was there, and after high school Frank enrolled in the Carnegie-Mellon Tech School of Drama did hone his craft.
His career was interrupted briefly when he entered the US Army in 1953. He spent two years in Special Services as an entertainer. Once he got out, Frank tried his luck in Hollywood. He made his film debut in a forgettable William Holden vehicle The Proud and Profane, but his fortunes picked up soon when he and when he hooked up with American Internation Pictures (AIP). With his charasmatic sneer and cocky bravado that belied his slender, 5' 7" frame, Frank made a great punk villian in a series of entertaining "drive-in" fare: Hot Rod Girl (1956), Dragstrip Girl, Invasion of the Saucer Men, and of course the classic Portland Expose (all 1957).
By the '60s, he graduated to supporting roles in bigger Hollywood fare: Where the Boys Are, Bells Are Ringing (both 1960), Ring of Fire, and his biggest tole to date, that of Iggy the bank robber in Disney's hugely popular That Darn Cat (1965). Better still, Frank found some parts on television: Naked City, Combat!, The Untouchables, and this would be the medium where he found his greatest success. Little did he realize that when his skeletal physique donned those green nylon tights and cackled his high pitch laugh that Frank Gorshin would be forever identified as "the Riddler," one of Batman's main nemisis. For two years (1966-68), he was a semi-regular on the show and it brought him deserved national attention.
By the '70s, Frank made his Broadway debut, as the star of Jimmy, a musical based on the life of former New York City Mayor Jimmy Walker. He spent the next two decades alternating between the stage, where he appeared regularly in national touring productions of such popular shows as: Promises, Promises, Prisoner of Second Street, and Guys and Dolls; and nightclub work in Los Angeles and Las Vegas.
He recently found himself in demand for character roles on televison: Murder, She Wrote, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman and film: Terry Gilliam's Twelve Monkeys (1995), and the quirky comedy Man of the Century (1999). Yet his biggest triumph was his two year stint (2002-2004) as George Burns in the Broadway smash, Say Goodnight Gracie. It ran for 364 performances and he received critical raves from even the toughest New York theater critics, proving undoubtly that he was a performer for all mediums. He is survived by his wife Christina; a son, Mitchell; grandson Brandon and sister Dottie.
by Michael T. Toole
Frank Gorshin (1933-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Winter December 1961
Released in United States Winter December 1961