Wolfen
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Rupert Hitzig
Robert Mobeley
Ralph Bell
Burr Debenning
Dick O'neill
Michael Wadleigh
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Detective Dewey Wilson is investigating several strange murders in New York City. All the victims look as if they have been mutilated by wild animals. His investigation leads him to a group of Native Americans who tell him about the legend of a superior species that once roamed the area, but who are now living and hunting in the slums of New York.
Cast
Robert Mobeley
Ralph Bell
Burr Debenning
Dick O'neill
Michael Wadleigh
Anne Marie Photamo
Albert Finney
Dan Sturkie
Peter Michael Goetz
Caitlin O'heaney
Paul Skyhorse
Linda Gary
Corey Burton
Rino Thunder
Jery Hewitt
Gregory Hines
Dehl Berti
Reginald Veljohnson
Gordon Eagle
William Sheridan
Charles Howerton
Richard Minchenberg
Jeff Ware
David Connell
Ricky Hawkeye
Roy Brocksmith
Mel Welles
Pete Dyer
Glenn Benoit
Cullen Johnson
Max Goff
Jane Lind
Max M Brown
Sam Gray
Tony Latham
Victor Arnold
John Ferraro
Donald Symington
Robert King
Raymond Serra
Edward James Olmos
Thomas Ryan
Annie Gagen
E Brian Dean
Jeffery Thompson
Evening Lilly
Sarah Felder
Javier First-day-of-light
James Tolkan
John Mccurry
Diane Venora
Frank Adonis
Andre Stolka
Joaquin Rainbow
Patricia Parris
Tom Noonan
Tony Stratta
Chris Manor
Eddy Navas
George Stonefish
Crew
Frederick M Abeles
Frederick M Abeles
Bill Anagnos
Bob Badami
Bob Bailin
Steve Barnett
Patricia Barrow
Bernard Baschet Batola
Mary Bauer
Lon Bender
Glenn Benoit
Jack Benson
Francois Baschet Bertola
Michael Besman
Frank Bianco
Robert Blalack
Marshall M. Borden
John Boxer
Martin Bram
Conrad V Brink
Betzy Bromberg
Garrett Brown
Timothy Burke
Lisa A Cain
David Chapman
Arthur Coburn
James A Corbett
Cis Corman
David Delia
Dennis Dolan
John Duffy
David Eyre
David Eyre
David Eyre
Tony Farentino
Janis Feiger
Steven Felder
Jonathan Filley
Gerry Fisher
Gerry Fisher
Wayne Fitzgerald
Carl Fullerton
Tim Gallin
Janiss Garza
Edward Garzero
Sidney Gecker
William C. Gerrity
Stan Gilbert
Michael Ginsburg
Dulcinda Gose
Robert Grieve
Alex Hapsas
Ricky Hawkeye
Jeff Haynes
Scott Hecker
Dan Helleck
Jery Hewitt
Alan Hicks
Hall Hitzig
Rupert Hitzig
Joe Hornak
James Horner
Richard Hughes
Steve James
Kenneth Karman
Randy Kelley
Alan King
Laurel Klick
Richard Kline
Chris Lebenzon
Jordan Leondopoulos
Candy Lewis
William Loger
Andrew London
Vic Magnotta
Dennis Maitland
Kim Maitland
Paula Mazur
Lauren Mcgowan
Peter Mcintosh
Anthony R Milch
Billy Miller
Pete Miller
Michael Minkler
Edgard Mourino
Herb Mulligan
Eddy Navas
Ron Ottesen
Sarah Pasanen
Ken S Polk
Tom Priestley
Joaquin Rainbow
Jimmy Raitt
Christopher Regan
Paul Bruce Richardson
John Roesch
John Roesch
Andrew Romanoff
Nancy Rushlow
Robert R Rutledge
Robert R Rutledge
Bruce Sands
Adeline Leonard Seakwood
Konrad Sheehan
Eion Sprott
Don Stern
Bruce Stoff
Tony Stratta
Whitley Strieber
Paul Sylbert
Jacque Toberen
George N Toth
George N Toth
Nicholas Toth
Nicholas Toth
Donna Tracy
Anne Van Der Vort
Victoria Vanderkloot
Michael Wadleigh
Michael Wadleigh
Michael Wadleigh
Tom Waits
Dan Wallin
Marvin Walowitz
Helena Walsh
Allen Weisinger
Jerry Winikoff
Paul Zydel
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Gregory Hines, 1946-2003
Born Gregory Oliver Hines on February 14, 1946, in New York City, he began taking dance lessons at age three and by the time he was six he and his brother Maurice were performing jazz tap at Harlem's Apollo Theater. By 1954, Hines was already on Broadway when he joined the cast of the Broadway musical The Girl in Pink Tights. He then spent the next 20 years perfecting the craft and art of tap dancing as he toured with his brother and father Maurice Sr. in a nightclub circuit act called "Hines, Hines and Dad", before he left in 1973 to form a rock band called Severance in Southern California.
Itching to put his dancing shoes on again, Hines made it back to New York a few years later and in 1978, scored his first Broadway success with Eubie, and earned a Tony nomination. With his vitality, charm and grace, Hines became one of the leading lights on Broadway for the next few years, as exemplified by two more Broadway hits in Comin' Uptown (1980) and Sophisticated Ladies (1981), for which he received two more Tony nominations for his performances.
His charismatic presence made him natural for films, and he notched his first film role as a last minute replacement for Richard Pryor in Mel Brooks' History of the World, Part I (1981), where he immediately displayed his sharp comic abilities. Other solid roles followed over the next decade: an unorthodox coroner in Michael Wadleigh's urban thriller Wolfen (1981); a nightclub dancer in Francis Ford Coppola's The Cotton Club (1984); an American defector to the Soviet Union in Taylor Hackford's overheated melodrama White Nights (1985); a wise-cracking cop in Peter Hyam's Running Scared (1986), and as the fast-talking con artist Goldy in Bill Duke's underrated A Rage in Harlem (1991).
He returned to Broadway in 1992 for his biggest triumph, a portrayal of Jelly Roll Morton, the famed jazz composer, in Jelly's Last Jam and earned a Tony Award in the process. A few more film appearances came in the '90's, most memorably in Forest Whitaker's Waiting to Exhale (1995), but Hines found a new lease on his career when he appeared on the small screen. He played a single father in a fine, if short-lived sitcom The Gregory Hines Show (1997-98); was popular as Ben Doucette, a love interest for Grace in the hugely popular show Will & Grace for two seasons (1999-2001); and received strong critical notice for his moving take as Bill "Bojangles" Robinson in the television film Bojangles (2001) that he also produced. His last televised appearance was in June 2002, when he co-hosted the Tony Awards with Bernadette Peters. In addition to his father and brother, he is survived by his fiancee Negrita Jayde; a daughter, Daria Hines; a son, Zach; a stepdaughter, Jessica Koslow; and a grandson.
by Michael T. Toole
Gregory Hines, 1946-2003
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States July 1981
Released in United States Summer July 24, 1981
Released in USA on video.
Released in United States July 1981
Released in United States Summer July 24, 1981