Mad Dog Time
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Larry Bishop
Larry Bishop
Richard Pryor
Rob Reiner
Diane Lane
Real Andrews
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
It begins with the buzz: "Vic's getting out." Vic is the boss of bosses, capo di tutti, but he's been out of commission--locked up in a mental institution. His chief enforcer, "Brass Balls" Ben London, has been keeping an eye on the operation in his absence. He's a motor-mouthed overdose of testosterone about to implode. Vic's right-hand man, super-cool Mickey Holliday, has been keeping more than his eye on the boss' girlfriend, the sublime Grace Everly, all the while two-timing her sister, the fiery Rita. Vic's been away. Now he needs to get the balance back, clean up the outfit, eliminate his rivals... and he must reclaim Grace. Welcome to Vic's world, where there's always time for another round of ammunition (cocktails or cartridges), where life is in limbo--a smoky nightlife spent in hotspots like The Rough House, La Difference and the DNA Club. And everybody is trigger happy.
Director
Larry Bishop
Cast
Larry Bishop
Richard Pryor
Rob Reiner
Diane Lane
Real Andrews
Christopher Jones
Billy Drago
Kyle Maclachlan
Burt Reynolds
Paul Anka
Gabriel Byrne
Richard Dreyfuss
Gregory Hines
Billy Idol
Michael J. Pollard
Henry Silva
Jeff Goldblum
Joey Bishop
Juan Fernandez
Angie Everhart
Jon Ingrassia
Edward Mccarthy
Ellen Barkin
Crew
Scott C Adams
David Anderson
Bunny Andrews
Paul Anka
Paul Anka
Salvatore Aprile
Harold Arlen
Joey Aroesti
Joseph Aroesti
Michael Atwell
Matthew St C Baker
Wenden K Baldwin
Tony Barattini
Audrey Barber
Colin Bardon
Randy Bauling
Kevin Beach
Huston Beaumont
Deborah Beaver
Richard Beban
Philip Beech
Charles Belardinelli
Tom Bellissimo
Anthony Bendt
Kathleen Berkeley
Ron Berkeley
Mel Berns
Henri Betti
Matt Beville
Larry Bishop
Larry Bishop
Robin Bishop
Joel Blanchard
Daniel Bracamonte
William Brao
Betsy Brockhurst
Harold Brown
Allan Bruce
Trisha Burlage
Steven Butensky
Christopher Byers
Frank Byers
Gabriel Byrne
Tom Cabbell
Luis Cabrera
Steven Carmer
Ronald Carr
Cristen Carr Strubbe
John Carson
Joe Celeste
Rick Chinelli
Lana Chirco
Mark Christie
Curtis E Clark
Janis Clark
Matthew J Clark
Marne Cohen
Larry Commans
Spero Conomikes
Kevin Cook
Gloria Cooper
Hugo Cortez
Joe Cosentino
Pat Cosentino
Sheri Cosentino
Duke Crawford
Charlie Crutcher
Stephan Dalyai
Pamela Davis
Sammy Davis Jr.
Suzanne Davis
Terry Delsing
Jose Depadilla
Angel Desanti
William Dixon
Amy Dodson
Roberta Doheny
Darryl Drake
Ross Dunkerley
Gregg Edler
Tom Elkins
Paul Emmons
Gordon Eto
Robert Ferrara
Robert M Fischer
Judee Flick
Stephen Hunter Flick
Robert Ford
Carrie Beth Foresman
Johnny Franco
Claude Francois
Heidi Fugeman
Dino Ganziano
Heriberto Alanis Garcia
Rusty Geller
Anthony Giglio
Mark Gillson
Lisa Goldsmith
Dana W Gonzales
Nicola Goode
Harvard Gordon
Gerard Gorman
Jane E. Graves
Frederika Gray
Ron Greenwood
Robert Griggin
George Halstead
Adrienne Hamalian-mangine
Liz Harley Jensen
Barbara Harris
Geno Hart
John Hathcock
Shane Hawkins
Shawn Hawkins
Kimberly L Hawks
Bill Heath
Phillip W Heath
Ron Herbes
Jennifer Hirsch
Mark S Hoerr
Desne Holland
Alan Holly
Norman Hollyn
Bernard John Horn-bostell
Andre Hornez
Steve Hurson
John Inzerella
William Isaacson
Thomas Jaeger
Patrick Jagaille
Judith James
Gary Jensen
Bruce Jogoda
Adam Jones
Leslie Ann Jones
Steve Jones
Billy Judkins
Jeffrey Kaplan
David King
Steven Klinghoffer
Ted Koehler
Kim Koski
Jamie Lagerhausen
Michael Lang
Eric Learnard
Linda Leiter-sharp
Gus Lepre
Patricio Libenson
Dick Lieb
Amy Lieberman
Dina Lipton
Sharon Lipton
Ron Longo
Dennis J Lootens
Jason Lord
Kathy Lucas
Joseph Lucio
Andrew Macdonald
Lori Madrigal
Calvin Maehl
Stephan Manpearl
Maria Mantia
Kevin Marks
Dean Martin
Harvey Mason
Scott R Mauritzen
Paul Mayersohn
Charles B Maynes
Gregg Mazzy
Jackie Mcardle
John Mccormack
Dennis Mccoy
Sean Mcfarlane
Gabriel Mckail
Bill Mclellan
Brian K Mcmanus
Dennis Mcneill
Patricia Mcnulty
Louis Medrano
Ileane Meltzer
Eric Mention
Johnny Mercer
Johnny Mercer
Ralph B. Meyer
Scott R Meyers
Beth I Miller
Dean Minnerly
Theresa Repola Mohammed
Jose Mojica
Sam Montiforte
Victor A Moore
James Moriarty
Phillip Morrison
Robert Muchnicki
Elliot Nachbar
Salvador Navarro
Steve M Nickolai
Nelson Noguera
Robert Norin
Patricia O'keefe
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Richard Pryor (1940-2005)
He was born Richard Thomas Pryor III on December 1, 1940 in Peoria, Illinois. By all accounts, his childhood was a difficult one. His mother was a prostitute and his grandmother ran a brothel. His father was rarely around and when he was, he would physically abuse him. From a young age, Pryor knew that humor was his weapon of choice to cut through all the swath he came across and would confront in his life.
After high school, he enlisted in the Army for a two-year stint (1958-60). When he was discharged (honorably!) he concentrated on stand-up comedy and worked in a series of nightclubs before relocating to New York City in 1963. In 1964, he made his television debut when he was given a slot on the variety program On Broadway Tonight. His routine, though hardly the groundbreaking material we would witness in later years, was very well received, and in the late '60s Pryor found more television work: Toast of the Town, The Wild Wild West, The Mod Squad ; and was cast in a two movies: The Busy Body (1967) with Sid Caesar; and Wild in the Streets (1968) a cartoonish political fantasy about the internment of all American citizens over 30.
Pryor's career really didn't ignite until the '70s. His stand up act became raunchier and more politically motivated as he touched on issued of race, failed relationships, drug addiction, and street crimes. His movie roles became far more captivating in the process: the piano man in Lady Sings the Blues (1972); as a wise-talking hustler in a pair of slick urban thrillers: The Mack (1973) and Uptown Saturday Night (1974); the gregarious Daddy Rich in Car Wash; his first pairing with Gene Wilder as Grover, the car thief who helps stops a runaway train in his first real box office smash Silver Streak (both 1976); and for many critics, his finest dramatic performance as a factory worker on the edge of depression in Paul Schrader's excellent working class drama Blue Collar (1978).
On a personal level, his drug dependency problem worsened, and on June 9, 1980, near tragedy struck when he caught fire while free-basing cocaine. Pryor later admitted that the incident, was, in fact, a suicide attempt, and that his management company created the lie for the press in hopes of protecting him. Fortunately, Pryor had three films in the can that all achieved some level of financial success soon after his setback: another pairing with Gene Wilder in the prison comedy Stir Crazy (1980); a blisteringly funny cameo as God who flips off Andy Kaufman in the warped religious satire In God We Tru$t (1980); an a ex-con helping a social worker (Cicely Tyson) with her foster charges in Bustin' Loose (1981). He capped his recovery with Live on the Sunset Strip (1982), a first-rate documentation of the comic's genius performed in front of a raucous live audience.
In 1983, Pryor signed a $40 million, five-year contract with Columbia Pictures. For many fans and critics, this was the beginning of his downslide. His next few films: The Toy, Superman III (both 1983), and Brewster's Millions (1985) were just tiresome, mediocre comedies. Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling (1986), was his only attempt at producing, directing, and acting, and the film, which was an ambitious autobiographical account of a his life and career, was a box-office disappointment. He spent the remainder of the '80s in middling fare: Condition Critical (1987), Moving; a third pairing with Gene Wilder in See No Evil, Hear No Evil; and his only teaming with Eddie Murphy in Harlem Nights (1989).
In 1986, Pryor was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a degenerative disease of the nervous system that curtailed both his personal appearances and his gift for physical comedy in his latter films. By the '90s, little was seen of Pryor, but in 1995, he made a courageous comeback on television when he guest starred on Chicago Hope as an embittered multiple sclerosis patient. His performance earned him an Emmy nomination and he was cast in a few more films: Mad Dog Time (1996), Lost Highway (1997), but his physical ailments prohibited him from performing on a regular basis. In 1998, The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington gave Pryor the first Mark Twain Prize for humor. It was fitting tribute for a man who had given so much honesty and innovation in the field of comedy. Pryor is survived by his wife, Jennifer Lee; his sons Richard and Steven; and daughters Elizabeth, Rain and Renee.
by Michael T. Toole
Richard Pryor (1940-2005)
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
Limited Release in United States November 8, 1996
Released in United States Fall November 8, 1996
Released in United States on Video June 3, 1997
Project was previously in development with producer Ed Pressman.
Feature directorial debut for Larry Bishop.
Completed shooting March 3, 1996.
Began shooting January 18, 1996.
Limited Release in United States November 8, 1996
Released in United States Fall November 8, 1996
Released in United States on Video June 3, 1997