William Harrison


Biography

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Rollerball (1975) -- (Movie Clip) He Shoots He Scores! From the lengthy opening sports-action sequence, the Houston team, led by Jonathan-E (James Caan), with buddy Moonpie (John Beck) puts away Madrid, then hits the showers talking Tokyo, from Norman Jewison's Rollerball, 1975.
Rollerball (1975) -- (Movie Clip) For The Common Good Following a big win, Houston "Rollerball" team star Jonathan-E (James Caan) is received by super-executive Bartholomew (John Houseman) of "Energy," the division of Corporate Society he oversees, who offers some history and a proposal, in Norman Jewison's Rollerball, 1975.
Mountains Of The Moon (1990) -- (Movie Clip) Of Course There's The Nile In director Bob Rafelson’s opening, aspiring explorer Speke (Iain Glen) arrives on the east coast of Africa, 1854, Pip Torrens and Philip Voss representing the British army, then Christoper Fulford and Garry Cooper as followers of the vaunted Captain Richard Burton (Patrick Bergin), in Mountains Of The Moon, 1990.
Mountains Of The Moon (1990) -- (Movie Clip) Fevers And Madness Setting out from Zanzibar or thereabouts, Burton (Patrick Bergin) narrates as he and Speke (Iain Glen) begin their famous 1857 expedition to seek the source of the Nile, eventually coming on Delroy Lindo, in trouble with some lions, in director Bob Rafelson's Mountains Of The Moon, 1990.
Mountains Of The Moon (1990) -- (Movie Clip) Royal Geographic Society Explorer Burton (Patrick Bergin) lobbying the society in director Bob Rafelson’s emphatically Victorian London, introducing Lord Murchison (John Savident), Fiona Shaw as Isabel, Richard E. Grant as Larry, Peter Vaughan and Frances Cuka as Lord and Lady Houghton and Craig Crosbie as the poet Swinburne, in Mountains Of The Moon 1990.
Rollerball (1975) -- (Movie Clip) I'm Daphne Troubled sports superstar Jonathan-E (James Caan) not quite relaxing at his ranch, watches high-tech video of his former wife (Maud Adams), taken from him by a high ranking executive, and is nonplussed upon meeting his latest company-supplied companion (Barbara Trentham), in Rollerball, 1975.

Bibliography