Harlem Nights
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Eddie Murphy
Eddie Murphy
Richard Pryor
Danny Aiello
Arsenio Hall
Redd Foxx
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Jive with two of Hollywood's greatest funnymen in this cool comedy caper! Written and directed by Eddie Murphy, "Harlem Nights" (1989) co-stars all-time great Richard Pryor, as these two comic geniuses head back into the 1930s in this action-packed adventure. Murphy is Quick, Pryor is Sugar Ray, and the two run a sleek Harlem gambling house filled with gorgeous gals and smooth-talking card sharps. Quick and Ray soon discover they have an adversary in gangster Bugsy Calhoun, who wants the club for himself, and is using a corrupt cop and an alluring femme fatale to do the dirty work for him. But the streetwise father and son are not easily duped, and instead hatch a plan to teach the mobster a lesson he'll never forget.
Director
Eddie Murphy
Cast
Eddie Murphy
Richard Pryor
Danny Aiello
Arsenio Hall
Redd Foxx
Della Reese
Jasmine Guy
Carmen Filpi
Mike Genovese
Joe Pecoraro
Bill Bateman
Cliff Strong
Howard Sims
Margaret Wheeler
Joe Litlefield
Miguel A Nunez
Tyrone Granderson Jones
Prince C Spencer
Clarence Ladnry
Michael Goldfinger
Randy Harris
Lezley Price
Michael Buffer
Charlie Murphy
Ricky Aiello
Don Nardini
Gene Hartline
Christopher Jackson
Don Familton
Desi Arnez Hines Ii
Roger Reid
Bobby Mcgee
Uncle Ray
Dexter A Wilkins
Don Blakely
Lela Rochon
Dennis J Vannatta
Michael Stroka
Eddie Bo Smith
Reynaldo Rey
Roy L Jones
Stan Shaw
Marc Figueroa
George Kyle
Dennis Lee Kelly
Dennis Kemper
Nona Gaye
Rudy Challenger
Robin Harris
Kathleen Bradley
Karen Armstead
Nick Savage
Roberto Duran
Larry L Johnson
Berlinda Tolbert
Steve White
William Utay
Vic Polizos
Eugene Robert Glazer
Dan Tullis
Robert Vento
Michael Lerner
Alvin Silver
Robi Reed-humes
David Marciano
J Kennedy Horne
Woody Omens
Ji-tu Cumbuka
Crew
Fred E. Ahlert
Peter Albiez
Pamela Alch
Arthur Altman
Bernadine M Anderson
Bunny Andrews
Louis Armstrong
Ron Ashmore
Edward Baken
James Balker
Alan Balsam
Count Basie
Count Basie
John Benson
Pamela Bentkowski
Chemin Sylvia Bernard
Albany Bigard
David Blumberg
Steve Bonner
Rene Botana
George Bowers
Bryn Boyd
Marc Brandin
Nat Brandwynne
Garnett Brown
Garnett Brown
Ed Burza
Norman A Burza
Caryn E Campbell
Gene S Cantamessa
Steve Cantamessa
Philip Caplan
Robert J Carlyle
Roberto M Carneiro
Mike Carroll
Marie Carter
Michael Casper
James Cavanaugh
Buddy Clark
Kenneth C Clark
Fetteroff Colen
Theresa Conant
Edward Cooper
Joseph Cosko
Sam Coslow
Russell B Crone
Gregroy J Curda
Alan B. Curtiss
Desiree Dacosta
Stephen C Dawson
Reginald Dekoven
Yvonne Bonitto Doggett
Eddy Duchin
Ken Dufva
Roberto Duran
Craig D Edgar
Duke Ellington
Duke Ellington
Juno J. Ellis
Tom Embree
Jon Falkengren
Dianne Farrington
David Fein
Richard W. Flores
Bruce Fortune
Chuck Gaspar
Gerry Gates
Thomas Gerard
Karen Ginsberg
Karen Ginsberg
Rocco Gioffre
Norman Glasser
Lloyd Gowdy
Jim Greenspan
Nicholas Gross
Joe Gutowski
Cecelia Hall
Herbie Hancock
Barbara Harris
Carey Harris Jr.
Randall I Harris
Jimmie Herron
Lindsay P Hill
Harold D Hinzo
Thomas Hoke
Billie Holiday
Jerome Holmes
Frank Howard
Carmon Howell
Martin Hubbard
Mentor Huebner
Darlene Jackson
Jack Jennings
Mark R Jennings
James C Johnson
Jennie Johnson
Arthur Johnston
Frank Jones
Thomas B Jones
Violette Jones-faison
Alan S Kaye
Nick Kenny
Harry S Knapp
Christopher Lucien Koefoed
Mark Konkel
Norman Langley
Teresa Volpe Laursen
Daniel Leahy
Don Lewis
Burton Lindemoen
Mark Lipsky
Anthony S Lloyd
Renita Lorden
Don Lynch
Art Mack
Robert Maddy
Maria Martin
Victoria Martin
W Scott Mason
John Mccormack
Scott Mcknight
Kim Mclaren
Carolyn Mclaurin
Julie Mcnulty
Richard A Mention
Thomas Mertz
F Hudson Miller
Irving Mills
James M Morris
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Eddie Murphy
Eddie Murphy
Ray Murphy
George R. Nelson
John Nettles
Bob Noland
Betty M Nowell
Karl Eric Nygren
Alan Oliney
Woody Omens
Woody Omens
Donald Ortiz
Vicente Paiva
R J Palmer
Mitchell Parish
Lawrence G Paull
Tom Peitzman
Don Petrie
Teddy Powell
Clarence Lynn Price
Ray Rarick
Robi Reed-humes
Lise Richardson
Ricardo Robinson
Barbara Rosing Hoke
John Rusk
David Russell
Anthony Saenz
Neil Jay Saiger
Walter G Samuels
Robert Schaper
Ron Schroeder
Clement Scott
Fred Seibly
Rodney Sharpp
Steve Shaver
Ron Sica
Craig Sims
Ralph Singleton
Ralph Singleton
Aaron Siskind
Eddie Bo Smith
Wayne H Smith
Prince C Spencer
Loring I Spicer
Roger Spurgeon
Fred Stafford
Craig Staley
Dorothy Steinicke
Beth Sterner
Robert L Stevenson
Al Stillman
Billy Strayhorn
Aida M Swinson
John Z Szajner
Bruce Talamon
Kelly Tartan
The Andrews Sisters
Barry K Thomas
Neal Thompson
William Timmerman
Joe I Tompkins
Dawn Tshombe
Mathew Unger
Robert D Wachs
Andrea Weaver
Ward Welton
Tania G Werbizky
Mike Wever
Ronnie Sue Wexler
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Costume Design
Articles
Richard Pryor (1940-2005)
He was born Richard Thomas Pryor III on December 1, 1940 in Peoria, Illinois. By all accounts, his childhood was a difficult one. His mother was a prostitute and his grandmother ran a brothel. His father was rarely around and when he was, he would physically abuse him. From a young age, Pryor knew that humor was his weapon of choice to cut through all the swath he came across and would confront in his life.
After high school, he enlisted in the Army for a two-year stint (1958-60). When he was discharged (honorably!) he concentrated on stand-up comedy and worked in a series of nightclubs before relocating to New York City in 1963. In 1964, he made his television debut when he was given a slot on the variety program On Broadway Tonight. His routine, though hardly the groundbreaking material we would witness in later years, was very well received, and in the late '60s Pryor found more television work: Toast of the Town, The Wild Wild West, The Mod Squad ; and was cast in a two movies: The Busy Body (1967) with Sid Caesar; and Wild in the Streets (1968) a cartoonish political fantasy about the internment of all American citizens over 30.
Pryor's career really didn't ignite until the '70s. His stand up act became raunchier and more politically motivated as he touched on issued of race, failed relationships, drug addiction, and street crimes. His movie roles became far more captivating in the process: the piano man in Lady Sings the Blues (1972); as a wise-talking hustler in a pair of slick urban thrillers: The Mack (1973) and Uptown Saturday Night (1974); the gregarious Daddy Rich in Car Wash; his first pairing with Gene Wilder as Grover, the car thief who helps stops a runaway train in his first real box office smash Silver Streak (both 1976); and for many critics, his finest dramatic performance as a factory worker on the edge of depression in Paul Schrader's excellent working class drama Blue Collar (1978).
On a personal level, his drug dependency problem worsened, and on June 9, 1980, near tragedy struck when he caught fire while free-basing cocaine. Pryor later admitted that the incident, was, in fact, a suicide attempt, and that his management company created the lie for the press in hopes of protecting him. Fortunately, Pryor had three films in the can that all achieved some level of financial success soon after his setback: another pairing with Gene Wilder in the prison comedy Stir Crazy (1980); a blisteringly funny cameo as God who flips off Andy Kaufman in the warped religious satire In God We Tru$t (1980); an a ex-con helping a social worker (Cicely Tyson) with her foster charges in Bustin' Loose (1981). He capped his recovery with Live on the Sunset Strip (1982), a first-rate documentation of the comic's genius performed in front of a raucous live audience.
In 1983, Pryor signed a $40 million, five-year contract with Columbia Pictures. For many fans and critics, this was the beginning of his downslide. His next few films: The Toy, Superman III (both 1983), and Brewster's Millions (1985) were just tiresome, mediocre comedies. Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling (1986), was his only attempt at producing, directing, and acting, and the film, which was an ambitious autobiographical account of a his life and career, was a box-office disappointment. He spent the remainder of the '80s in middling fare: Condition Critical (1987), Moving; a third pairing with Gene Wilder in See No Evil, Hear No Evil; and his only teaming with Eddie Murphy in Harlem Nights (1989).
In 1986, Pryor was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a degenerative disease of the nervous system that curtailed both his personal appearances and his gift for physical comedy in his latter films. By the '90s, little was seen of Pryor, but in 1995, he made a courageous comeback on television when he guest starred on Chicago Hope as an embittered multiple sclerosis patient. His performance earned him an Emmy nomination and he was cast in a few more films: Mad Dog Time (1996), Lost Highway (1997), but his physical ailments prohibited him from performing on a regular basis. In 1998, The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington gave Pryor the first Mark Twain Prize for humor. It was fitting tribute for a man who had given so much honesty and innovation in the field of comedy. Pryor is survived by his wife, Jennifer Lee; his sons Richard and Steven; and daughters Elizabeth, Rain and Renee.
by Michael T. Toole
Richard Pryor (1940-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall November 17, 1989
Released in United States on Video May 17, 1990
Re-released in United States on Video March 23, 1994
Directorial debut for Eddie Murphy.
Began shooting April 3, 1989.
Completed shooting July 17, 1989.
Released in United States Fall November 17, 1989
Released in United States on Video May 17, 1990
Re-released in United States on Video March 23, 1994