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For the 1965 tv series The 1965 Parade of Homes, Richard Pryor plays the part of Montgomery Brewster.
He takes the role of Himself (Honoree) in the 1998 release Afternoon Delight.
Richard Pryor's character is Cpl. Eddie Keller/Ted Segal in the 1985 show Agrippina.
In 2007, he plays Jack Brown in the release All Internal 1.
For the 2003 video Asia Noir, Richard Pryor plays the part of Sugar Ray.
For the 2003 release Assficianado 4, Richard Pryor's character is Daddy Rich.
For the 2005 Asshole Passions 2, Richard Pryor's character is Harry Monroe.
In 2006, he plays the part of Himself - Co-host in the release of 20,13.
In 2005, he plays the part of Visitors from Chicago - Dr. Chauncey Gump in the show The 5th Rangers.
In 2007, he stars as Joe Braxton in the production of Aaj Kal.
Richard Pryor plays Arlo Pear in the 1952 feature Abbott and Costello Meet Captain Kidd.
For the 1990 production of Adavi Diviteelu, Richard Pryor plays Himself.
In 1971, Richard Pryor is cast in the role of Jo Jo Dancer/Alter Ego in the movie Addio zio Tom.
Richard Pryor plays Himself in the 1981 movie Adventure for Imperial Treasure.
In 1997, Richard Pryor stars as Wendell Scott in the movie Advising Michael.
For the 1976 feature Aeg elada, aeg armastada, Richard Pryor plays Himself.
Eddie/Kevin in the 1988 release of Akira.
For the 1967 production of Amiguitas de los ricos, Las, he plays the part of Jimmy the Grave Digger.
Richard Pryor plays the part of Himself in the 1995 show Andere Seite, Die.
Richard Pryor plays the part of Himself/Host in the 1992 movie Andrey Svislotskiy.
Stanley X in the 1984 show Aphrodesia's Diary.
For the 1934 feature Apples to You!, he is cast in the role of Zeke Brown.
In 2007, he stars as Grover Muldoon in the video Bare Invasion.
For the 1994 video Battle of the Glands, he is cast in the role of Himself - Co-host.
He takes the role of Himself in the 1980 show Battle of the Network Stars VIII.
In 2003, Richard Pryor stars as Pharaoh in the tv series Broken Morning.
He takes the role of Slim in the 2009 movie Bakers Dozen.
He plays the part of Mike Willmer in the 1913 movie Barred from the Mails.
He is cast in the role of Wallace 'Wally' Karue in the 1920 release of Bars of Iron.
For the 1999 production of Basta't ikaw nanginginig pa, Richard Pryor plays Whittaker.
He plays the part of Piano Man in the 1995 production of Basta't kasama kita.
Richard Pryor plays Gus Gorman in the 2002 show Beneath Clouds.
In 1987, Eddie Dash in the release of Berserker.
In 1903, he takes the role of Sharp Eye Washington in the feature Biddy's Day Off.
Richard Pryor plays Himself in the 1915 production of Billy's Wager.
In 1916, he stars as Wino in the movie Blowing Broadway.
He plays the part of Balloon Vendor in the 1987 show Blue Heart.
In 1929, Richard Pryor's character is Himself/Various Characters in the movie Broadway Fever.
In 1980, Himself in the release of Brontosaurus.
Richard Pryor's character is Arnie in the 1913 movie Brother and Sister.
He takes the role of Jonathan Crunk in the 2002 video release of Cool Summer.
In 1969, he is cast in the role of Himself in the movie Can wen can shi can can you.
He plays Host in the 1979 movie Canada Vignettes: The Visitor.
He takes the role of Himself in the 1950 show Cantiga da Rua.
Richard Pryor plays Himself/honoree in the 2008 show Chad Chucker.
In 1956, Richard Pryor plays the part of Regular in the release of Chips Ahoy.
In 1992, Himself in the production of Chuchelo.
For the 1981 movie Ci-Gisent, he is cast in the role of Himself - Presenter.
For the 2005 show Des femmes dans la guerre, he is cast in the role of Himself.
Richard Pryor plays the part of Himself in the 1993 Dieses naive Verlangen.
Richard Pryor plays Himself - Co-host in the 2003 production of D.E.B.S..
In 1999, Richard Pryor plays the part of Jeff in the movie Da di qin qing.
Richard Pryor plays Himself in the 2005 show Dead Long Enough.
In 1930, Richard Pryor is cast in the role of Narrator/Wino/Bartender in the feature Dhruva Narayan.
In 1982, he takes the role of Himself/Various in the production Ernie Kovacs: Television's Original Genius.
Richard Pryor plays the part of Host in the 2000 video Fresh Meat 9.
Richard Pryor plays Himself in the 2004 Fresh Porn Babes 6.
For the 1964 movie Follie d'Europa, he takes the role of Himself/Honoree.
Himself in the 1939 release of Follie del secolo.
In 1978, Richard Pryor plays the part of Himself in the production of Follie di notte.
In 1949, Richard Pryor plays Himself in the movie Follie per l'opera.
For the 1939 release of The Golden West, Richard Pryor plays the part of Himself.
Marlon Wayans Lands The Role of Richard Pryor
One man’s trash is another man’s gold. Last year, Eddie Murphy bailed on the Richard Pryor biopic. Allegedly, his reason for dropping the project was due to conflicts with Paramount Pictures. While it has been well known that comedian Marlo
on 2010-02-23 04:47:55
Rock's Dog-Fighting Comments Cost Him Pryor Role?
The animal-loving widow of Richard Pryor banned Chris Rock from portraying the late comedy icon on the big screen after he made a joke about dog fighting, according to reports. The Head of State star was among the frontrunners to land the main rolein a ne
on 2009-10-22 04:49:14
Marlon Wayans Is Totally the New Eddie Murphy
Finally one douche in H'wood isn't getting his day?Eddie Murphy's out of the Richard Pryor biopic, and Marlon Wayans is in.
Wayans is pretty much set to star as the...
on 2009-10-13 04:46:19
Marlon Wayans in talks for Richard Pryor role in new biopic
Comic actor Marlon Wayans' next screen role could turn out to be portraying a real-life comedy icon.
on 2009-10-09 04:46:15
Isaiah Washington to play Lou Rawls
Biopics are all the rage now — Angela Davis, Richard Pryor and even RUN DMC. Well, there is good news for Isaiah Washington — just when you thought he was about to get evicted from his apartment for owing back rent of $20,000 a month - he ha
on 2009-04-07 04:49:17
Eddie Murphy as Richard Pryor?
The picture above is of Richard Pryor and Eddie Murphy on the cover of People in July 1983. Pryor was a mentor and inspiration to Eddie Murphy and now The Nutty Professor star is more than likely starring in a biopic of the late-great comedian?s life.
Th
on 2009-03-02 04:46:39
PRYOR AUCTION ON EBAY ENDS SOON
Entertainment memorabilia buffs only have a few hours left to take a bite at Richard Pryor spare tooth. Pryor's widow is hawking his dental plate to raise money for their animal charity, but bidding on the eBay auction has been slow. More than...
on 2008-04-28 20:46:58
Cutler acquires 'Comedy at the Edge'
Front Page: Documentary may feature Martin, Pryor, Carlin -- Yukster icons such as Steve Martin, Richard Pryor and George Carlin will get the documentary treatment from filmmaker R.J. Cutler, who's purchased the rights to Richard Zoglin's just-published "
on 2008-03-20 00:45:25
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It's just that I didn't know that there existed in Hollywood a Comic Mafia!
Guys who decide who is funny and who isn't and then blackballing them based
on their Mafia vote, regardless if most of the public think otherwise. That
to me is very unamerican. Guys like that "meathead" are very dangerous people.
Especially when that meathead dabbles into politics, ...he's becoming a *problem*.
If anybody needs to be hit it should be the meathead and not Jerry.
The Starmaker
Is "Jerry" a common name with these people? Is "Jerry" like the Italian version of "Paulie"??
Tommy Joe wrote:
> Hollywood insider. I know just about everything about famous people.
> Famous people love me. I managed to creep into their inner circle
> years ago by pretending to be a standup comic after taking lessons from
> a real pro for 3 years and also reading as many books on the subject as
> possible. Once they thought I was the real deal they opened up to me.
> is a hit out on Jerry Seinfeld and at least 50 comics have chipped in
> financially to support the hit. One of them even offered to pop Jerry
> himself, but the rest of them nixed the idea because it might be too
> obvious.
> soon - the victim of a professional hit - paid for by fellow comics.
> They can't stand Jerry because he became famous and made enough money
> to never have to standup comedy again unless he wants to. He attained
> what most standups really want - wild financial success that will
> enable them to put an end to the drudgery of the standup life they
> openly profess to love.
> - soon. That's the inside scoop.........Now, as for your question, do
> I think he's funny? I don't think he's hilarious, but I did enjoy his
> show, and I think he's probably a hard worker and maybe a pretty sharp
> guy who is probably responsible to some degree for whatever success
> he's had.........
> people talking about how important Richard Pryor'>Richard Pryor was as a social force
> - that his comedy was somehow 'socially relevant', because he talked
> about being black and having a mother who ran a whore-house, etc. To
> me, Richard Pryor'>Richard Pryor was no more socially relevant than Professor Irwin
> Corey or Jackie Vernon or Sam Kinnison or any number of comics who did
> what they were supposed to do - work to get laughs.
-
RICHARD PRYOR'S FLAWED LEGACY
By STANLEY CROUCH
ON SATURDAY, Richard Pryor left this life and bequeathed to our culture
as much darkness as he did the light his extraordinary talent made
possible.
When we look at the remarkable descent this culture has made into smut,
contempt, vulgarity and the pornographic, those of us who are not
willing to drink the Kool-Aid marked "all's well" will have to address
the fact that it was the combination of confusion and comic genius that
made Pryor a much more negative influence than a positive one.
I do not mean positive in the way Bill Cosby was when his TV show
redefined situation comedy by turning away from all the stereotypes of
disorder and incompetence that were then and still are the basic
renditions of black American life in our mass media.
Richard Pryor was not that kind of a man. His was a different story.
Pryor was troubled, and he had seen things that so haunted him that the
comedian found it impossible to perform and ignore the lower-class
shadow worlds he had known so well, filled with pimps, prostitutes,
winos and abrasive types of one sort or another.
The vulgarity of his material, and the idea that a "real" black person
was a foul-mouthed type was his greatest influence. It was the result
of seeing the breaking of "white" convention as a form of "authentic"
definition.
Pryor reached for anything that would make white America uncomfortable
and would prop up a smug belief among black Americans that they were
always "more cool" and more ready to "face life" than the members of
majority culture.
Along the way, Pryor made too many people feel that the n-word was open
currency and was more accurate than any other word used to describe or
address a black person.
In the dung piles of pimp and gangster rap we hear from slime meisters
like Snoop Dogg and 50 Cent, the worst of Pryor's influence has been
turned into an aspect of the new minstrelsy in which millions of
dollars are made by "normalizing" demeaning imagery and misogyny.
What is so unfortunate is that the heaviest of Pryor's gifts was
largely ignored by so many of those who praised the man when he was
alive and are now in the middle of deifying him.
The pathos and the frailty of the human soul alone in the world or
insecure or looking for something of meaning in a chaotic environment
were a bit too deep for all of the simple-minded clowns like Andrew
Dice Clay or those who thought that mere ethnicity was enough to define
one as funny, like the painfully square work of Paul Rodriguez.
Of course, Russell Simmons' Def Comedy Jam is the ultimate coon show
update of human cesspools, where "cutting edge" has come to mean
traveling ever more downward in the sewer.
In essence, Pryor stunned with his timing, his rhythm, his ability to
stand alone and fill the stage with three-dimensional characters
through his remarkably imaginative gift for an epic sweep of mimicry.
That nuanced mimicry crossed ethnic lines, stretched from young to old,
and gave poignancy to the comedian's revelations about the hurts and
the terrors of life.
The idea of "laughing to keep from crying" was central to his work and
has been diligently avoided by those who claim to owe so much to him.
As he revealed in his last performance films, Pryor understood the
prison he had built for himself and the shallow definitions that
smothered his audience's understanding of the humanity behind his work.
But, as they say, once the barn door has been opened, you cannot get
all of the animals to return by whistling. So we need to understand the
terrible mistakes this man of comic genius made and never settle for a
standard that is less than what he did at his very best, which was as
good as it has ever gotten.
-
> Blacks in America have pent up anger and rage, especially collectively.
> Richard Pryor was one of the first to come along that vented it.
Many blacks are wimps. They aren't the only race who has been enslaved
and dehumanized.
-
The Starmaker wrote:
> I heard they don't like him. They don't think he's funny. And I heard they don't want him doing movies. I think they are blackballing him from movies because they don't think he's funny. Is that true?
I'm glad you asked that question. You came to the right guy. I'm a
Hollywood insider. I know just about everything about famous people.
Famous people love me. I managed to creep into their inner circle
years ago by pretending to be a standup comic after taking lessons from
a real pro for 3 years and also reading as many books on the subject as
possible. Once they thought I was the real deal they opened up to me.
One really famous comic (I won't reveal his identity), told me there
is a hit out on Jerry Seinfeld and at least 50 comics have chipped in
financially to support the hit. One of them even offered to pop Jerry
himself, but the rest of them nixed the idea because it might be too
obvious.
So, that's the inside info, Starmaker - Seinfeld is going to die -
soon - the victim of a professional hit - paid for by fellow comics.
They can't stand Jerry because he became famous and made enough money
to never have to standup comedy again unless he wants to. He attained
what most standups really want - wild financial success that will
enable them to put an end to the drudgery of the standup life they
openly profess to love.
You read it first here, Starmaker. Seinfeld is going to be killed
- soon. That's the inside scoop.........Now, as for your question, do
I think he's funny? I don't think he's hilarious, but I did enjoy his
show, and I think he's probably a hard worker and maybe a pretty sharp
guy who is probably responsible to some degree for whatever success
he's had.........
My initial entry into this discussion came about as a result of
people talking about how important Richard Pryor'>Richard Pryor was as a social force
- that his comedy was somehow 'socially relevant', because he talked
about being black and having a mother who ran a whore-house, etc. To
me, Richard Pryor'>Richard Pryor was no more socially relevant than Professor Irwin
Corey or Jackie Vernon or Sam Kinnison or any number of comics who did
what they were supposed to do - work to get laughs.
Tommy Joe (Inside Info)
-
Percy Von Trapp III wrote:
> I could not have said it better myself. Pryor was a bufoon that set the
> black race back 50 years, yet people put him on a thrown like some ignorant
> god. He opened the door to other bufoons such as rap artist who portray
> their onstage minstrel shows as talent.
Blacks in America have pent up anger and rage, especially collectively.
Richard Pryor was one of the first to come along that vented it.
-
Percy Von Trapp III wrote:
> I could not have said it better myself. Pryor was a bufoon that set the
> black race back 50 years, yet people put him on a thrown like some ignorant
> god. He opened the door to other bufoons such as rap artist who portray
> their onstage minstrel shows as talent.
Blacks in America have pent up anger and rage, especially collectively.
Richard Pryor was one of the first to come along that vented it.
-
http://www.13wham.com/entertainment/story.aspx?content_id=C1DBF3DA-3F13-4316
-9E3F-8478429CB698
Pryor Goes Out Fighting Against Animal Cruelty
A week before his death Saturday of a heart attack, Richard Pryor and his
wife Jennifer Lee Pryor sent a letter to an Indiana county sheriff
expressing outrage about an animal cruelty case.
The couple had learned that a St. Joseph County police officer, Curt
Seufert, was placed on administrative leave last month while state police
investigated whether he killed his girlfriend's dog. The Pryors' letter
urged that the ?oshocking? case be given prompt attention.
"We respectfully ask you to not let this be 'swept under the rug,'" read the
letter, signed by the groundbreaking comedian and his wife.
Sheriff Frank Canarecci said a police report indicated Seufert and his
girlfriend, Jennifer L. Radican, 27, a corporal with the South Bend Police
Department, had argued on Nov. 25. The next day, Radican returned home to
find one of her two dogs dead in the basement.
Jennifer Pryor confirmed Tuesday to the South Bend Tribune that the couple
sent the letter to the sheriff.
"We were so disturbed by that," she said. "Richard and I have always had a
strong affinity for animals."
The internal investigation is ongoing, and no decision has yet been made,
according to Canarecci.
Copyright 2005 EUR Web
-
yeah.... I can see Richard Pryor typing away in html to program his
website.... oh yeah, while he has MS and can't feel his fingers or type.
"de Fragile Warrior Sports Supplies" wrote in message
news:439ba328$1_2@newspeer2.tds.net...
> news:RzNmf.33120$Y7.19715@trnddc02...
>
-
In article ,
Phoenix wrote:
> In article ,
> farsley@juno.com says...
> I'm remembering his Pet Monkies sketch right now. Good golly is there
> anything funnier than THAT?
Nothing I can think of. Ms. Rudolph and her pet monkey is the funniest
story I've heard. It's outrageous, ridiculous, brilliant, vulgar and
insightful. I'll listen to it tonight remembering a comic who made a
difference. Thanks for mentioning it. :)
> When I used to work late at a DC public library, the staff and I would
> sit around playing a game called "Two Most Influential of the
> 21th Century" We could never nail down one of anything, so we let
> everyone have 2.
> ground breaking and undiluted, comic.
Stop it. You're making me giggle again--the Samurai sketch with Belushi
was another gem.
He'll be missed.
Meredith
-
In article ,
farsley@juno.com says...
> The reports are that Pryor was 65, but I seem to think he was older
> than that. Whatever he was a comic genius and made so many laugh, but
> yet seemed not to have much happiness in his own life. RIP.
I'm remembering his Pet Monkies sketch right now. Good golly is there
anything funnier than THAT?
When I used to work late at a DC public library, the staff and I would
sit around playing a game called "Two Most Influential of the
21th Century" We could never nail down one of anything, so we let
everyone have 2.
Everyone had Richard Pryor'>Richard Pryor on their list of most influential, out there,
ground breaking and undiluted, comic.
What a treasure he was. RIP Samurai.
bel
-
The reports are that Pryor was 65, but I seem to think he was older
than that. Whatever he was a comic genius and made so many laugh, but
yet seemed not to have much happiness in his own life. RIP.
bc wrote:
> BC-APNewsAlert,0023
> LOS ANGELES (AP)-- Comedian Richard Pryor has died at his home,
> his ex-wife said Saturday.
> (Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
> APTV 12-10-05 1617EST
-
http://www.13wham.com/entertainment/story.aspx?content_id=D2664882-6049-4AF5
-A797-F9D85A7163C6
Richard Pryor Sues Record Label
Comedian Richard Pryor finds nothing funny about the fact that 11 of his
recordings are being sold by Universal Music Group without a license,
according to his lawsuit against the music conglomerate filed Wednesday in
Los Angeles Superior Court.
Pryor, who suffers from multiple sclerosis, is seeking unspecified damages
for unfair competition, conversion, unjust enrichment and other claims after
recently realizing that UMG was claiming to have licensed such titles as
'Are You Serious?,' 'Wizard of Comedy,' 'Black Ben and the Blacksmith,'
'Richard Pryor, I Ain?Tt Lied Yet,' 'Everything?Ts Big' and others,
according to the Hollywood Reporter.
In the complaint, Pryor accuses the company of "reaping substantial profits
from (the recordings) without ever having acquired any rights in such
recordings."
Copyright 2005 EUR Web
-
A Purpose Driven Ice wrote:
> "S. Taylor" wrote in message
> news:nKqdndI_U5vSKc7eRVn-jA@comcast.com...
> 22 years of personal Bond fandom flushed down the toilet with the hiring of
> Craig. They'd have to cast Bryce Dallas Howard AND Evangeline Lilly in this
> movie to star opposite Craig for me to go see this. Hiring Craig ranks up
> their with other stupid decisions such as:
> #2 Go ahead and pose for that photographer in the battle tank, Governor
> Dukakis.
> #3 I'm a big star. I can leave NYPD Blue after one year and have a hit movie
> career.
> #4 My home is just over the Chappaquidick. Let me drive you home, Mary Jo
> #5 Let's do an episode of Happy Days where Fonzie jumps a shark with his
> motorcycle.
How about:
6. Let's use this new guy Clinton Spillsbury to play the Lone Ranger.
7. Hey Madonna honey, let's do a remake of "Swept Away," you can star in
it and I'll direct!
8. Let's do "Casino Royale" and we can use Richard Pryor as the lead,
make it a comedy.
9. Hey Ellen, let's boost ratings by you outing yourself and developing
some homosexual themes on the series.
10. Hey Dan, let's go with the National Guard story.
11. Sure, Senator Kerry, we can spray on a natural looking tan. How
about some Botox?
12. Let's skunk Letterman and Leno, we use Chevy Chase as the host.
-
it was the guy who gave the green light that was on coke! Who do you
think
Richard Pryor was buying his coke from?
Kenny wrote:
> winners.
> "Gooserider" wrote in message
> news:_Lq2f.181685$p_1.151453@tornado.tampabay.rr.com...
> money
> him?
> heard
> choice.
-
No amount of coke could have made him think some of those s were
winners.
Maybe the coke helped them to be more tollerable?
"Gooserider" wrote in message
news:_Lq2f.181685$p_1.151453@tornado.tampabay.rr.com...
> news:4346E815.3FE0@ix.netcom.com...
money
him?
heard
choice.
-
"The Starmaker" wrote in message
news:4346E815.3FE0@ix.netcom.com...
> Gooserider wrote:
> a lot
> of writers are on drugs, ...I think heroin is their drug of choice.
I meant Pryor made bad decisions because he was a cocaine addict.
-
Yeah, you're right. That's why Robert Downing is ALWAYS standing in the
unemployment line.
"Nero Burner" wrote in message
news:11kim0fc1j03t58@corp.supernews.com...
> news:hed1f.3190$R4.491182@news20.bellglobal.com...
and
> only that not many in the movie industry wants to have much to do with a
> known drug addict.
-
On Sun, 9 Oct 2005 13:48:57 -0400, "Nero Burner"
wrote:
>news:hed1f.3190$R4.491182@news20.bellglobal.com...
>only that not many in the movie industry wants to have much to do with a
>known drug addict.
>
If you don't want to have much to do with known drug addicts, you
won't have much of a career in Hollywood.
John Harkness
- Celebrity Gossip
-
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