The Bad News Bears In Breaking Training
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Michael Pressman
William Devane
Clifton James
Gene Rader
Lane Smith
Chris Barnes
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
After miraculously winning the the Little League champions of California, the team is invited to play an exhibition game at the Houston Astrodome with the local champs, the Toros. Kelly, the Bears' star player, decides to rejoin the team for the trip to Houston, where he confronts his estranged father, Mike.
Director
Michael Pressman
Cast
William Devane
Clifton James
Gene Rader
Lane Smith
Chris Barnes
Quinn Smith
Jeffrey Louis Starr
Fred Stuthman
Jimmy Baio
Alfred Lutter
David Pollock
Brett Marx
Pat Corley
David Stambaugh
George Gonzales
Jackie Earle Haley
Jaime O Escobedo
Erin Blunt
Dolph Sweet
Crew
Howard Beals
Stephen Berger
Paul Brickman
Michael Daves
Wayne Fitzgerald
Nick Gaffey
Fred Gallo
Fred Gallo
Norman Gimbel
Leonard Goldberg
Jack Hayes
John Inzerella
Nikita Knatz
Fred J. Koenekamp
Kim Kurumada
Bill Lancaster
Jack Martell
David Nicksay
Fred Price
Craig Safan
Craig Safan
Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky
John W. Wheeler
John Wilkinson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Lane Smith (1936-2005)
Born in Memphis, Tennessee on April 29, 1936, Smith had a desire to act from a very young age. After a brief stint in the Army, he moved to New York to study at the Actors Studio and made his debut on off-Broadway debut in 1959. For the next 20 years, Smith was a staple of the New York stage before sinking his teeth into television: Kojak, The Rockford Files, Dallas; and small parts in big films: Rooster Cogburn (1975), Network (1976).
In 1978, he moved to Los Angeles to focus on better film roles, and his toothy grin and southern drawl found him a niche in backwoods dramas: Resurrection (1980), Honeysuckle Rose (1980); and a prominent role as the feisty Mayor in the dated Cold War political yarn Red Dawn (1984).
Smith returned to New York in 1984 and scored a hit on Broadway when he received a starring role in David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross and earned a drama desk award in the process. His breakthrough role for many critics and colleagues was his powerful turn as Richard Nixon in The Final Days (1989); a docudrama based on the book by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. He earned a Golden Globe nomination for his spot-on portrayal of the fallen President, and his career picked up from there as parts in prominent Hollywood films came his way: Air America (1990), My Cousin Vinny, The Mighty Ducks (both 1992), and the Pauly Shore comedy Son in Law (1993).
For all his dependable performances over the years, Smith wasn't a familiar presence to millions of viewers until he landed the plump role of Perry White, the editor of the Daily Planet in Superman: Lois and Clark which co-starred Dean Cain and Teri Hatcher (1993-1997). After that run, he gave a scorching performance as Reverend Jeremiah Brown in the teleplay Inherit the Wind (1999); and he appeared last in the miniseries Out of Order (2003). He is survived by his wife Debbie; and son, Rob.
by Michael T. Toole
Lane Smith (1936-2005)
Quotes
By way of introduction, I'm what you call your basic versatile ball-thrower.- Carmen Ronzonni
Trivia
During the game at the Astrodome, a Toros player comments that Jimmy Feldman looks like "one of the Marx Brothers". Brett Marx, who plays Jimmy, is the grandson of Gummo Marx, a brother of the Marx Brothers.
The baseball field where the Bears are training is in real life, Bayland Park off Bissonnet in Southwest Houston. During the baseball training scenes, there is an advertisement for Discount Trophies (off South Post Oak), which went out of business in 1993.
The factory where Kelly Leak locates his father is located on Old Galveston Road south of Loop 610 west of Pasadena, Texas. In the film, the facility is the former location of Texas Pipe and Supply (now the Boccard Pipe and Supply company).
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Summer July 8, 1977
Released in United States Summer July 8, 1977