A no-name? The niece of Doodles Weaver a no-name? Not in my universe!
[quote=“Wendell_Wagner, post:56, topic:746198”]
Chronos writes:
> Sigourney Weaver was, at the time, a no-name.
Interesting piece of trivia: Before Alien, Sigourney Weaver appeared in one minor movie, one minor TV show, and one minor TV mini-series, all in what were apparently small roles, and also in one other movie which was an Oscar Best Picture winner, although her time on screen was only ten seconds.
That movie was Annie Hall. She appeared in the scene at the end where Woody Allen and Diane Keaton’s characters meet again at a showing of The Sorrow and the Pity. She played Allen’s date in the scene. You would never recognize her if you weren’t told that it was her:
[/QUOTE] But, once you knew who she was, it's easy to spot her - standing a foot taller than anyone else in the scene!yes
Yeah one or two of them got a couple minutes, at best, along with Dan Ackroyd, explaining his webbed toes, which was about the only thing remotely holding my interest in what was otherwise, yeah - execrable. A bring down for this Mr. Mike fan. < (from early SNL, which he also wrote for).
Surely the greatest sci-fi ever - “Star Crash” - teases us, cruelly (or at least their ad campaign does) with the munificent promise of the venerable, not-quite-inestimable Christopher Plummer, but we sure don’t get a whole shitload of’im.
Cruel.
Wendell Wagner - Yes, I knew that, that was my point exactly.
Completely underwhelmed by the parody, though that’s no surprise from SNL these days.
Here’s one : Beetlejuice
He appears in only 17 1/2 minutes of a 92 minute film in which he’s the title character.
There probably should be some sort of exception for actors in roles without much screen time, but whose time is integral or part of the climactic scenes. Nicholson in “A Few Good Men” was a main character, and pivotal to the story. Hell, the most quoted lines from the movie come out of his mouth. Four scenes or not, he ***should ***have been top billed for that movie.
I’m not sure, but I think that’s longer than Nimoy appears in Search for Spock.
HA! That reminds me…“Caveman” used to be “Starring Ringo Starr and Barbara Bach” then later on TV viewings it became “Starring Dennis Quaid and Shelley Long”!
If we’re going to allow characters rather than actors, then there’s no shortage of productions where the title character dosen’t appear on screen at all. The various televised performances of Waiting for Godot come to mind.