Painted Heart
Brief Synopsis
A comedy-thriller revolving around a paint crew and a love triangle.
Cast & Crew
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Michael Taav
Director
Will Patton
Wesley
Bebe Neuwirth
Margaret
Robert Pastorelli
Willie
Casey Siemaszko
Cal
Mark Boone
Tom
Film Details
Also Known As
Paint Job, The
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Thriller
Release Date
1993
Production Company
Clein & White Public Relations; Goldcrest Films International; Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Distribution Company
Metro Tartan Distributors; Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Location
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Kenosha, Wisconsin, USA; South Eastern Wisconsin, USA
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 36m
Synopsis
A comedy-thriller revolving around a paint crew and a love triangle.
Director
Michael Taav
Director
Cast
Will Patton
Wesley
Bebe Neuwirth
Margaret
Robert Pastorelli
Willie
Casey Siemaszko
Cal
Mark Boone
Tom
Jayne Haynes
Mrs Thack
Richard Hamilton
Robert
Jeff Weiss
Mr Emilio
Everett Smith
Dave
John Diehl
Father
Dale Rehfeld
Mother
Cody Dobson
Child
Robert Breuler
White Wino
Okoro H Johnson
Black Wino
Jim Kruse
Derelict
Wendy Bastrup
Sandwich Queen
Mark Pollard
Vice Head
Henry Heinisch
Claude
Terry Lawler
Claude'S Customer
Steve Buscemi
Terry Lawler
Crew
Julia Beale
Set Dresser
Trevor Bezotte
Art Department Production Assistant
John Boccaccio
1st Assistant Camera
Tina Carbonell
Production Auditor
Charles S Carroll
Line Producer
Stephanie Carroll
Set Decorator
Jeff Charbonneau
Additional Music
Curtiss Clayton
Editor
Cathy Cook
Other
Theresa Corraol
Art Department Intern
Jennifer V Dennis
Associate Producer
Merry Donner
Script Supervisor
Susan Dupre
Unit Manager
Susan Dupre
Associate Producer
Sean Fallon
Property Master
Dan Filippelli
Office Intern
Mark Friedberg
Production Designer
Sean Gallager
Art Department Intern
Marc Glimcher
Executive Producer
Lynn Goldner
Associate Producer
Lynn Goldner
Associate Art Director
Ann Goulder
Associate Casting
Jill Haggard
Publicist (Clein + White)
John Wesley Harding
Music
Daryl Harris
Art Department Intern
Zdeena Hayssen
Art Department Intern
Nancy Hildebrant
Art Department Intern
Jeff Hill
Publicist (Clein + White)
Billy Hopkins
Casting
Tom Jarmusch
Set Dresser
Carl Johnson
Art Department Intern
Jerome Johnson
Art Department Swing
Barbara Ann Koehler
Assistant Production Auditor
Serena Krouse
Production Assistant
Steven Langenecker
Art Department Intern
Steven Langenecker
Other
Terry Lawler
Office Intern
Terry Lawler
Office Assistant
Kelly Mackay
Art Department Intern
Allen Malmstrom
Art Department Intern
Wendy Mardigian
Other
George Mccann
Transportation Coordinator
Patrick Melly
Gaffer
Doug Murray
Supervising Sound Editor
Richard Piscuskas
Construction Coordinator
Mark Pollard
Producer
Nan Pollard
Graphic Artist
Randall Poster
Producer
Alexa Rando
Art Department Intern
Patricia Reagan
Key Hair/Makeup
Nancy Richardson
Editor
Wendy Richardson
2nd Assistant Director
Christopher Rogers
Key Grip
Alice Rojas
Office Intern
Wendy Rolfe
Costume Designer
Jeanette Scheibe
2nd Assistant Director
Ursula Schrader
Wardrobe Supervisor
Melissa Schuch
Art Department Intern
John Serpe
Assistant Production Coordinator
Suzanne Smith
Casting
Michele Steckler
2nd Props
Chris Steinke
Office Intern
Michael Taav
Screenwriter
Kathryn Takacs-colbert
Production Coordinator
Ginger Tougas
Art Director
Mark Von Holstein
Location Manager
Brit Warner
Sound Recordist
Kathy White
Office Intern
Kato Wittich
1st Assistant Director
Robert Yeoman
Director Of Photography
Joel Zolin
Stunt Coordinator
Film Details
Also Known As
Paint Job, The
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Thriller
Release Date
1993
Production Company
Clein & White Public Relations; Goldcrest Films International; Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Distribution Company
Metro Tartan Distributors; Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Location
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Kenosha, Wisconsin, USA; South Eastern Wisconsin, USA
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 36m
Articles
Robert Pastorelli (1954-2004)
Born on June 21, 1954 in New Brunswick, New Jersey, Pastorelli had dreams of becoming a boxer, but when he was just 19, he was involved in a near fatal car accident that forced him to choose another career. By the late '70s, he chose acting. After doing some theater in New York, Pastorelli found work on both television: Barney Miller, Cagney & Lacey, Hill Street Blues; and film: Outrageous Fortune, Beverly Hills Cop II (both 1987), where his beefy frame and Runyonesque demeanor almost always had him play thugs and hoodlums.
In 1988, he found fame when he was cast opposite Candice Bergen as Eldin, the house painter who could never quite finish the job in Murphy Brown. Pastorelli's likable raffishness countered well with Bergen's icy charms, and he stayed on for six seasons.
After Murphy Brown, Pastorelli continued to play variations of the streetwise character, but this time to considerable comic effect in films like: Sister Act 2 (1994), Eraser, and Michael (both 1996). He returned to television impressively when he starred in the short-lived, but critically lauded Americanized version of the British Television hit Cracker. Pastorelli had just completed work on the Get Shorty (1995) sequel Be Cool with John Travolta, which is scheduled for release later this year. He is survived by a daughter.
by Michael T. Toole
Robert Pastorelli (1954-2004)
Robert Pastorelli, the rough and ready actor best known to television viewers for his portrayal of the devilish but lovable house painter Eldin on the long-running CBS comedy Murphy Brown (1988-97), was found dead on March 8 in his Hollywood Hills home. Authorities believe the cause of death was a drug overdose. He was 49.
Born on June 21, 1954 in New Brunswick, New Jersey, Pastorelli had dreams of becoming a boxer, but when he was just 19, he was involved in a near fatal car accident that forced him to choose another career. By the late '70s, he chose acting. After doing some theater in New York, Pastorelli found work on both television: Barney Miller, Cagney & Lacey, Hill Street Blues; and film: Outrageous Fortune, Beverly Hills Cop II (both 1987), where his beefy frame and Runyonesque demeanor almost always had him play thugs and hoodlums.
In 1988, he found fame when he was cast opposite Candice Bergen as Eldin, the house painter who could never quite finish the job in Murphy Brown. Pastorelli's likable raffishness countered well with Bergen's icy charms, and he stayed on for six seasons.
After Murphy Brown, Pastorelli continued to play variations of the streetwise character, but this time to considerable comic effect in films like: Sister Act 2 (1994), Eraser, and Michael (both 1996). He returned to television impressively when he starred in the short-lived, but critically lauded Americanized version of the British Television hit Cracker. Pastorelli had just completed work on the Get Shorty (1995) sequel Be Cool with John Travolta, which is scheduled for release later this year. He is survived by a daughter.
by Michael T. Toole
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall October 1, 1993
Released in United States on Video December 22, 1993
Began shooting July 6, 1991.
Completed shooting August 10, 1991.
Ultra Stereo
Released in United States on Video December 22, 1993
Released in United States Fall October 1, 1993