Eve of Destruction
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Duncan Gibbins
Ross Malinger
Eugene Robert Glazer
Eddie Matthews
Richard Manfredi
Jay Pickett
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
The robot known as Eve was designed to be a weapon for peace. But when something goes wrong during Eve's shakedown tests, the android snaps and launches a killing spree that may end in nuclear annihilation, and only a terrorism expert stands in her way.
Director
Duncan Gibbins
Cast
Ross Malinger
Eugene Robert Glazer
Eddie Matthews
Richard Manfredi
Jay Pickett
Maryedith Burrell
David Hayward
Norman Merrill
Nelson Mashita
Renee Soutendijk
Christopher Kriesa
Nancy Locke
Tom Morga
Jeff Mccarthy
Coleen Maloney
Daniel W. Barringer
Marga Chavez
Alan Haufrect
Kurt Fuller
Gregory Hines
Paul Tuerpe
Bill Gratton
Craig Oldfather
Tim Russ
Greg Collins
Ronald William Lawrence
Bethany Richards
Thomas L Lupo
Derek Barton
Thomas Knickerbocker
Daryk Sebastian
Sue Burke
Mike Jolly
Joe Kane
John Moio
Richard Collier
Randy Hall
Jim Antonio
Daniel O'haco
Michael Greene
John Jackson
Richard Cummings
Dakin Matthews
Carl Ciarfalio
Larry Anderson
Loren Haynes
George Wilbur
Crew
Frans J Afman
Karyn L Alexander
Kenny Alexander
John Anderson
Raymond M Banigan
Lissa Barkwer
Gary Baxley
Bob Bender
Kimberly N Bennett
Sheryl Berkoff-lowe
Brian Bernstein
Caroline Biggerstaff
Chris Biggs
Marsha Blackburn
Richard L Blackwell
Carissa Blix
Fritz Braden
Brent Brewington
Judith Brown
Kelly Cabral
Jeff Cadiente
Kevin Caffrey
Mike Cain
Carina Camamile-barr
Keith Campbell
Pat Carman
Tina Marie Carriere
Giovanni Casalenuovo
Mike Cassidy
Zane Cassidy
Carlos Cave
Marienus Cetani
Daryk Christian
T W Chu
Joseph Cicio
Martin Coblenz
Heather Conroy
David H Cooper
Glen Cooper
Robert Cort
Douglas M Crawford
Everett Creach
Gary Cruise
Phil Culotta
Gary Dally
Dock A Davis
Mike Davis
Catherine Demeis
Rodney Dennis
Scott Frank Deshields
Larry Dimauro
Mark Donaldson
Jessica Drake
Sherry Dreizen
Robert Dreyer
Clint Duvall
Sandy Dvore
Kevin Edwards
Paul A. Edwards
Ousaun Elam
John A Escobar
Debbie Evans
Antonio Faretta
Dennis Fill
Ken Fisher
Cliff Fleming
Charles Edward Flint
Cindy Folkerson
Jeffrey Frink
Kelcey Fry
Steve Galich
Duncan Gibbins
Janet Gilmore
Alan Gitlin
Charles Gray
Bonnie Grossblatt
Kimberly Guenther
Mando Guerrero
Peter Gulla
Michael Hachey
Mary Hallman-ramirez
Wayne Harbour
Ronald R Harris
Val Harris
David Harshbarger
Orwin Harvey
Graham Henderson
Diane Hintz
Robin Hinz
Brent P Hirn
Tom Hoeck
Larry Holt
Alan Hume
Martin Hume
John A Huskins
Niels Irgens-moller
Terry Jackson
Matthew Jacobs
Melinda Jason
James Jensen
Lynn Johanson
John M Johnson
Gordon K Kee
Billy Kelly
Chris Kennard
David Koneff
Tom Kramer
Tom Kramer
Tom Kramer
Philip M Krystosek
Tammy Kusian
Steve Lambert
Peter Lamont
William T Lane
Lane Leavitt
Jules Lichtman
David Lindup
Marci Liroff
Frank Lloyd
Kimberly Lord
Vincent Lozano
Walter Lucas
Brian R Lukas
Brett Mabry
James A Macdonald
Don Macdougall
David Madden
Dessie Markovsky
Dessie Markovsky
Jeff Mart
Bob Mayberry
William Mccaughey
Dwayne Mcgee
Tim Mchenry
Tony Meade
Carey Meyer
David Michels
Mike Milliken
Mindy
Wayne Montanio
Paula Moody
Robert R Moore
T A Moore
William L Morrison
Ron Moser
Amy Ness
Angela Nogaro
Angela Nogaro
Randy Nolen
Terry O'brien
Mike Paventi
Nat Peck
Reinhart Peschke
John F Peterson
Ron Peterson
Joseph Ponticelle
Harry Rabinowitz
Emile Razpopov
Emile Razpopov
Bill Reed
P Bradford Reed
Ross Reynolds
Brad Ricker
Steven Riley
Richard Robbins
Mario Roberts
Jack Roe
Tim Roe
Doug Roosendahl
David Russell
Philippe Sarde
Philippe Sarde
Christopher Saunders
Frank Scheidbach
Dan Schlax
Harold Schlax
Robin Schreer
Michael Schultz
Pat Schunk
Pat Schunk
Deborah Scott
John-clay Scott
Tim Segulin
Tim Segulin
Adr Voice Services
Dylan Shepherd
John Shoemaker
Mark Skupen
James Smith
Marcee Smith
Jeff Smolek
David Snell
Kurt Soderling
Karen Sorum
Impact Sound
Donald F Spinney
John Stabile
Paul Stader
Edward Steidele
Jonathan Earl Stein
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 1991
Released in United States on Video September 11, 1991
Released in United States Winter January 18, 1991
Shown at American Film Market (AFM) in Santa Monica February 28 - March 8, 1991.
Began shooting December 11, 1989.
Released in United States 1991 (Shown at American Film Market (AFM) in Santa Monica February 28 - March 8, 1991.)
Released in United States Winter January 18, 1991
Released in United States on Video September 11, 1991