Radio Days
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Woody Allen
Mia Farrow
Seth Green
Michael Tucker
Terry Lee Swarts
Lee Erwin
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
A young boy's coming of age is mirrored by his favorite radio shows and the lives of their stars.
Director
Woody Allen
Cast
Mia Farrow
Seth Green
Michael Tucker
Terry Lee Swarts
Lee Erwin
Martin Sherman
Joel Eidelsberg
Kitty Carlisle
Roger Hammer
Maurice Shrog
Frank O'brien
Ira Wheeler
Steve Mittleman
Peter Lombard
Paul Berman
Helen Miller
Mercedes Ruehl
Danny Aiello
David Warrilow
Ray Marchica
Jeff Daniels
Dianne Wiest
William Magerman
Jane Jarvis
Sal Tuminello
Tony Roberts
Michael Murray
Kenneth Welsh
Kenneth Mars
Tito Puente
Crystal Field
Ken Levinsky
Joy Newman
Martin Rosenblatt
Oliver Block
Ivan Kornenfeld
Hy Anzell
Mike Starr
Philip Shultz
Josh Mostel
Hannah Rabinowitz
Bruce Jarchow
David Mosberg
Peter Castellotti
Julie Kavner
Paul Herman
Todd Field
Diane Keaton
Kuno Sponholz
Artie Butler
Larry David
Woody Allen
Shelley Delaney
Roberta Bennett
Don Pardo
Richard Portnow
Belle Berger
Robert Joy
Fletcher Farrow Previn
Mindy Morgenstern
Margaret Thomson
Judith Malina
Norman Rose
Gregg Almquist
Barbara Gallo
Rebecca Schaeffer
David Cale
Greg Gerard
Dimitri Vassilopoulos
Brian R Mannain
William Flanagan
Julie Kurnitz
Edward S Kotkin
Wallace Shawn
Dwight Weist
Gina Deangelis
Rebecca Nickels
Liz Vochecowizc
Andrew Clark
Danielle Ferland
Ruby Payne
Renee Lippin
J.r. Horne
Denise Dummont
Henry Cowen
Leah Carrey
Jackson Beck
Maurice Toueg
Ken Roberts
Henry Yuk
Yoland Childress
Guy Lebow
Stan Burns
Harry James
Wendell Craig
Sydney A Blake
Marc Colner
William H. Macy
Jaqui Safra
Crew
Zequinha Abreu
Woody Allen
Arthur Altman
Maxwell Anderson
George Bassman
Johnny S Black
Leslie Bloom
Nat Bonx
Lew Brown
Fern Buchner
Nat Burton
Bill Christians
Larry Clinton
Bing Crosby
Xavier Cugat
Xavier Cugat
Stanley J Damerell
Emil Decameron
Al Dexter
Carlo Di Palma
Lee Dichter
Claudette Didul
Howard Dietz
A Dominguez
Tommy Dorsey
Ervin Drake
Milton Drake
Al Dubin
Jimmy Eaton
Patricia Eiben
Edward Eliscu
Duke Ellington
Tolchard Evans
Frank Eyton
Sammy Fain
Judie Fixler
Chet Forrest
Janet Frank
Rudolf Friml
Joe Garland
Benny Goodman And His Orchestra
Mack Gordon
Frank Graziadei
Barbara Green
Johnny Green
Robert Greenhut
Robert Hargreaves
Joseph R Hartwick
Robert Hein
Edward Heyman
Richard Himber
Al Hoffman
Speed Hopkins
Dick Hyman
Dick Hyman
Moe Jaffe
Gordon Jenkins
William Jerome
Carol Joffe
Charles H. Joffe
Allan Jones
Gus Kahn
Sammy Kaye
Sammy Kaye
Walter Kent
Jeffrey Kurland
Jack Lawrence
Margarita Lecuona
Walt Levinsky
Ellen Lewis
Jerry Livingston
Glenn Lloyd
Frank Loesser
Guy Lombardo
Santo Loquasto
Joe Malin
Jimmy Mchugh
F W Meacham
Glenn Miller
Dick Mingalone
Carmen Miranda
Susan E Morse
Michael Moyse
Aloysio Oliveira
Sy Oliver
Doug Ornstein
Ken Ornstein
Sam Parkins
Richard Patrick
Cole Porter
Don Reid
Thomas Reilly
Nikolai Rimsky-korsakov
Helen Robin
Tracy Robin
Matos Rodriguez
Jack Rollins
Drew Ann Rosenberg
Larry Rudolph
S K Russell
James Sabat
Angela Salgado
Scott Schaffer
Jay Scherick
Arthur Schwartz
Jean Schwartz
Terry Shand
Artie Shaw
Gail Sicilia
Frank Sinatra
James Sorice
Robert Sour
Al Stillman
Herbert Stothart
Billy Strayhorn
Jule Styne
Ezra Swerdlow
Ezra Swerdlow
Juliet Taylor
Jordan Thaler
Todd Thaler
The Andrews Sisters
The Merry Macs
The Mills Brothers
Harry Warren
Ned Washington
Kurt Weill
David Weinman
Meredith Wilson
Bob Wright
Roy B Yokelson
Vincent Youmans
Videos
Movie Clip
Trailer
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Art Direction
Best Original Screenplay
Articles
Radio Days
Radio Days followed one of Allen's most ambitious films, Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), and seemed to be done for comic relief after the emotional complexity of the previous film. Allen himself told interviewer Stig Bjorkman, "I think of Radio Days basically as a cartoon. If you look at my mother, my Uncle Abe, my schoolteacher, my grandparents, they were supposed to be cartoon exaggerations of what my real-life people were like." Allen himself narrates the film, in the first person.
Allen's use of music in his films has always been masterful, and Radio Days is one of the finest examples of his mastery. In fact, he told Bjorkman, music was the original starting point for the film. "It originated from an idea that I wanted to pick out a group of songs that were meaningful to me, and each one of those songs suggested a memory. Then this idea started to evolve: how important radio was to me when I was growing up, and how important and glamorous it seemed to everyone." There are 43 songs used in the film, and some standout musical moments. In one scene, a teenage girl lip-synchs to a Carmen Miranda song, her head wrapped in a towel turban, watching herself in the mirror. Her father and uncle, charmed by her charade, join in. Near the end of the film, it's New Year's Eve 1943. Diane Keaton, in a cameo as a band vocalist, sings (in her own voice) the Cole Porter standard that expresses the longing of a war-weary nation: You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To. Allen says, "I wanted to make sure, since Diane was making one little appearance in the picture, that the song was potent." It was.
Radio Days marks the only time that Allen's two longtime companions and muses - former flame Diane Keaton and his then-current partner Mia Farrow - appeared in the same film. Keaton has remained friends with Allen over the years; Farrow has not. After a bitter, litigious, and highly publicized breakup, Farrow remains estranged from Allen and her daughter, Allen's wife Soon-Yi Previn.
Reviews for Radio Days were mostly raves, although there were a few dissenters, such as the always-acerbic John Simon of the National Review, who called it "really a congeries of blackout sketches barely bothering to make like a connected narrative, scoring now and then and falling flat the rest of the time." But Variety called it "One of Allen's most purely entertaining pictures. It's a visual monolog of bits and pieces from the glory days of radio and people who tuned in.... Radio Days is not simply about nostalgia, but the quality of memory and how what one remembers informs one's present life." Roger Ebert compared it to Fellini's Amarcord (1973). "What they evoke isn't the long-ago time itself, but the memory of it." Vincent Canby wrote in the New York Times, "Radio Days is so densely packed with vivid detail of place, time, music, event and character that it's impossible to take them all in at one sitting." Allen's warm, funny screenplay and Santo Loquasto's nostalgic and detailed art direction both received Oscar® nominations.
After Radio Days, Allen returned to more somber, complex stories, starting with September (1987). It was a cycle that would last through several films, before he took another purely comic break with Manhattan Murder Mystery in 1993.
Director: Woody Allen
Producer: Robert Greenhut
Screenplay: Woody Allen
Cinematography: Carlo Di Palma
Editor: Susan E. Morse
Costume Design: Jeffrey Kurland
Production Designer: Santo Loquasto
Music Director: Dick Hyman
Cast: Seth Green (Little Joe), Julie Kavner (Mother), Michael Tucker (Father), Dianne Wiest (Aunt Bea), Josh Mostel (Uncle Abe), Renee Lippin (Aunt Ceil), Joy Newman (Ruthie), Mia Farrow (Sally White), Wallace Shawn (Masked Avenger), Danny Aiello (Rocco).
C-89m. Letterboxed. Closed captioning.
by Margarita Landazuri
Radio Days
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Winter January 30, 1987
Released in United States January 23, 1987
Shown at United States Film Festival Park City, Utah January 23, 1987.
Began shooting October 27, 1986.
Released in United States Winter January 30, 1987
Released in United States January 23, 1987 (Shown at United States Film Festival Park City, Utah January 23, 1987.)