Thursday, July 24, 2025

Woody Allen Filmography

 


Woody Allen has acted in, directed, and written many films starting in the 1960s. His first film was the 1965 comedy What's New Pussycat?, which featured him as both writer and performer. Feeling that his New Yorker humor clashed with director Clive Donner's British sensibility, he decided to direct all future films from his own material. He was unable to prevent other directors from producing films based on previous stage plays of his to which he had already sold the film rights, notably 1972's successful film Play it Again, Sam from the 1969 play of the same title directed by Herbert Ross.

Allen's directorial debut, the 1966 film What's Up, Tiger Lily?, was a dramatic Japanese spy movie re-dubbed in English with completely new, comedic dialog. He continued to write, direct, and star in comedic slapstick films such as Take the Money and Run (1969), Bananas (1971) and Sleeper (1973), before finding widespread critical acclaim for his romantic comedies Annie Hall (1977) and Manhattan (1979); he won Academy Awards for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay for the former. Despite being influenced by European art cinema and venturing into more dramatic territory, with Interiors (1978) and Another Woman (1988) being prime examples of this transition, he continued to direct several comedies.

In addition to works of fiction, Allen appeared as himself in many documentaries and other works of non-fiction, including Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures, Wild Man Blues and The Concert for New York City. He has also been the subject of and appeared in three documentaries about himself, including To Woody Allen, From Europe with Love in 1980, Woody Allen: A Life in Film in 2001 and the 2011 PBS American Masters documentary, Woody Allen: a Documentary (directed by Robert B. Weide). He also wrote for and contributed to a number of television series early in his career, including The Tonight Show as guest host.

According to Box Office Mojo, Allen's films have grossed a total of more than $575 million, with an average of $14 million per film (domestic gross figures as a director). Currently, all of the films he directed for American International Pictures, United Artists and Orion Pictures between 1965 and 1992 are owned by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, which acquired all the studios in separate transactions. The films he directed by ABC Pictures are now property of American Broadcasting Company, who in turn licensed their home video rights to MGM.

Films

Feature films

Year Title Director Writer Actor Role Ref.
1965 What's New Pussycat? No Yes Yes Victor Shakapopulis [1]
1966 What's Up, Tiger Lily? Yes Yes Yes Himself / Various voices [2]
1967 Casino Royale No No Yes Dr. Noah / Jimmy Bond [3]
1969 Take the Money and Run Yes Yes Yes Virgil Starkwell [2]
Don't Drink the Water No Yes No [2]
1971 Bananas Yes Yes Yes Fielding Mellish [2]
1972 Play It Again, Sam No Yes Yes Allan Felix [I]
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex*
(*But Were Afraid to Ask)
Yes Yes Yes Victor Shakapopulis / Fabrizio / The Fool / Sperm #1 [2]
1973 Sleeper Yes Yes Yes Miles Monroe [2]
1975 Love and Death Yes Yes Yes Boris Grushenko [2]
1976 The Front No No Yes Howard Prince [4]
1977 Annie Hall Yes Yes Yes Alvy Singer [2]
1978 Interiors Yes Yes No [2]
1979 Manhattan Yes Yes Yes Isaac Davis [2]
1980 Stardust Memories Yes Yes Yes Sandy Bates [2]
1982 A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy Yes Yes Yes Andrew [2]
1983 Zelig Yes Yes Yes Leonard Zelig [2]
1984 Broadway Danny Rose Yes Yes Yes Danny Rose [2]
1985 The Purple Rose of Cairo Yes Yes No [2]
1986 Hannah and Her Sisters Yes Yes Yes Mickey Sachs [2]
1987 Radio Days Yes Yes Yes Joe (voice) [2]
King Lear No No Yes Mr. Alien (cameo) [5]
September Yes Yes No [2]
1988 Another Woman Yes Yes No [2]
1989 New York Stories Partial Partial Yes Sheldon Mills
Crimes and Misdemeanors Yes Yes Yes Cliff Stern [2]
1990 Alice Yes Yes No [2]
1991 Scenes from a Mall No No Yes Nick Fifer [4]
Shadows and Fog Yes Yes Yes Kleinman [2]
1992 Husbands and Wives Yes Yes Yes Gabe Roth [2]
1993 Manhattan Murder Mystery Yes Yes Yes Larry Lipton [2]
1994 Bullets Over Broadway Yes Yes No [2]
Don't Drink the Water Yes Yes Yes Walter Hollander [6]
1995 Mighty Aphrodite Yes Yes Yes Lenny Weinrib [2]
1996 Everyone Says I Love You Yes Yes Yes Joe Berlin [2]
1997 Deconstructing Harry Yes Yes Yes Harry Block [2]
1998 Antz No Uncredited Yes Z-4195 (voice) [4]
The Impostors No No Uncredited Audition Director (cameo) [4]
Celebrity Yes Yes No [2]
1999 Sweet and Lowdown Yes Yes Yes Himself [2]
2000 Company Man No No Uncredited Lowther (cameo)
Small Time Crooks Yes Yes Yes Ray [2]
Picking Up the Pieces No No Yes Tex Crowley [2]
2001 The Curse of the Jade Scorpion Yes Yes Yes C.W. Briggs [2]
2002 Hollywood Ending Yes Yes Yes Val Waxman [2]
2003 Anything Else Yes Yes Yes David Dobel [2]
2004 Melinda and Melinda Yes Yes No [2]
2005 Match Point Yes Yes No [2]
2006 Scoop Yes Yes Yes Sid Waterman [2]
2007 Cassandra's Dream Yes Yes No [2]
2008 Vicky Cristina Barcelona Yes Yes No [2]
2009 Whatever Works Yes Yes No [2]
2010 You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger Yes Yes No [2]
2011 Midnight in Paris Yes Yes No [7]
2012 Paris Manhattan No No Yes Himself (cameo) [2]
To Rome with Love Yes Yes Yes Jerry [2]
2013 Blue Jasmine Yes Yes No [8]
Fading Gigolo No No Yes Murray Schwartz [9]
2014 Magic in the Moonlight Yes Yes No [2]
2015 Irrational Man Yes Yes No [2]
2016 Café Society Yes Yes Yes Narrator (voice) [10]
2017 Wonder Wheel Yes Yes No [11]
2019 A Rainy Day in New York Yes Yes No [12]
2020 Rifkin's Festival Yes Yes No [13]
2023 Coup de chance Yes Yes No [14]

Short films

Year Title Director Writer Actor Role Notes Ref.
1971 Men of Crisis: The Harvey Wallinger Story Yes Yes Yes Harvey Wallinger
[15]
2001 The Concert for New York City Partial Partial No Segment: "Sounds from a Town I Love" [16]
TBA Mr. Fischer’s Chair No No Yes Narrator Animated short [17]

Television

Year Title Director Writer Notes Ref.
1950–55 The Colgate Comedy Hour No Yes

1956 Caesar's Hour No Yes

Stanley No Yes

1960 General Electric Theater No Yes Episode: "Hooray for Love"
Candid Camera No Yes

1961 The Garry Moore Show No Yes

1963 The Sid Caesar Show No Uncredited

1965 The Woody Allen Show No Yes Standup TV Special (UK) [18]
1966 Gene Kelly in New York, New York No Yes TV special
1967 Woody Allen Looks at 1967 No Yes TV special
1969 The Woody Allen Special No Yes TV special [19]
1979 Bob Hope: My Favorite Comedian Yes Yes Special [20]
2016 Crisis in Six Scenes Yes Yes Also creator, Amazon [21]

Acting roles

Year Title Role Notes Ref
1960 Candid Camera Himself

1963-67 What's My Line? Himself - Mystery Guest 9 episodes
1964, 67 The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson Guest host 2 episodes
1965 The Woody Allen Show Himself Standup Special [22]
1966 Gene Kelly in New York, New York Himself TV special
1969 The Woody Allen Special Himself, Various TV special [23]
1970–71 Hot Dog Co-host Documentary Series, NBC [24]
1996 The Sunshine Boys Al Lewis TV movie
1997 Just Shoot Me! Himself (voice) Episode: "My Dinner with Woody"
2001 Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures Himself Documentary Film, Warner Bros.
2002 Woody Allen: A Life in Film Documentary, TCM
The Magic of Fellini Documentary Film
2011 Woody Allen: A Documentary
American Masters (PBS & WNET)
2 part Documentary, PBS
directed by Robert B. Weide

2013 Marvin Hamlisch: What He Did for Love Documentary
David Blaine: Real or Magic Television Special
AFI Life Achievement Tribute: Mel Brooks Television Special, TNT
2016 Crisis in Six Scenes Sidney Muntzinger Amazon Miniseries; 6 episodes [25]
2017 AFI Life Achievement Tribute: Diane Keaton Himself Television Special, TNT
This is Bob Hope Documentary; PBS
2018 Always at the Carlyle Documentary
2019 Very Ralph Documentary; HBO
2020 What She Said: The Art of Pauline Kael Documentary

Reception

Movies directed by Woody Allen shown by year and Rotten Tomatoes score.
Year Title Grossed[1] Rotten Tomatoes[2]
1965 What's New Pussycat? 28%
1966 What's Up, Tiger Lily? 81%
1969 Don't Drink the Water 44%
Take the Money and Run 91%
1971 Bananas 83%
1972 Play It Again, Sam 97%
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex*
(*But Were Afraid to Ask)
$83,934,700 88%
1973 Sleeper $82,084,900 100%
1975 Love and Death $77,746,400 100%
1977 Annie Hall $135,852,600 97%
1978 Interiors $35,309,500 81%
1979 Manhattan $126,047,200 94%
1980 Stardust Memories $30,587,700 68%
1982 A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy $24,453,100 74%
1983 Zelig $29,665,100 97%
1984 Broadway Danny Rose $24,986,900 100%
1985 The Purple Rose of Cairo $23,718,300 92%
1986 Hannah and Her Sisters $85,057,900 91%
1987 Radio Days $29,963,900 91%
September $985,300 63%
1988 Another Woman $3,109,700 59%
1989 New York Stories $10,700,000 75%
Crimes and Misdemeanors $36,417,400 92%
1990 Alice $13,791,700 71%
1991 Shadows and Fog $2,735,731 54%
1992 Husbands and Wives $10,555,619 93%
1993 Manhattan Murder Mystery $21,676,500 94%
1994 Bullets Over Broadway $25,358,700 95%
1995 Mighty Aphrodite $25,985,927 78%
1996 Everyone Says I Love You $34,588,635 77%
1997 Deconstructing Harry $18,046,900 73%
1998 Antz $171,757,863 92%
Celebrity $6,153,836 42%
1999 Sweet and Lowdown $6,231,400 77%
2000 Small Time Crooks $29,934,477 66%
2001 The Curse of the Jade Scorpion $18,496,522 45%
2002 Hollywood Ending $14,839,383 47%
2003 Anything Else $13,203,044 40%
2004 Melinda and Melinda $19,826,280 51%
2005 Match Point $87,989,926 77%
2006 Scoop $40,107,018 41%
2007 Cassandra's Dream $22,539,685 46%
2008 Vicky Cristina Barcelona $104,504,817 80%
2009 Whatever Works $35,106,706 50%
2010 You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger $34,275,987 46%
2011 Midnight in Paris $162,942,835 93%
2012 To Rome with Love $74,363,777[26] 46%
2013 Blue Jasmine $102,912,961 91%
2014 Magic in the Moonlight $51,029,361[27] 51%
2015 Irrational Man $27,938,377 46%
2016 Café Society $43,429,116[28] 71%
2017 Wonder Wheel $15,899,124 31%
2019 A Rainy Day in New York $21,071,507 47%
2020 Rifkin's Festival $2,228,001 41%
2023 Coup de chance $7,427,878 82%

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Wayne Cochran and the CC Riders

Wayne Cockran (1939-2017)

 


Talvin Wayne Cochran (May 10, 1939 – November 21, 2017)[1] was an American singer, known for his outlandish outfits and platinum blond pompadour hairstyle. He was sometimes referred to as The White Knight of Soul.[4] Cochran is best known today for writing the song "Last Kiss", which he performed with the C.C. Riders.[5]

Biography

Talvin Wayne Cochran was born on May 10, 1939, in Thomaston, Georgia, to Talvin A. Cochran, a cotton mill worker, and the former Mini Lee Starley, who came from a farming family.[6][7]

Influenced by the country and rhythm and blues music he heard on the radio, Cochran fronted his first band - a group called the Rockin' Capris - as a teenager, and eventually left high school to pursue music as a full-time career. He moved to Macon, Georgia, where he befriended the soul singer Otis Redding (playing bass guitar on Redding's early recording of "Shout Bamalama" and its B-side "Fat Girl") and recorded his first single, "The Coo", attracting the attention of King Records, which signed him to a record deal. Cochran became close friends with King labelmate James Brown, whose stage show and road band influenced his own performing style and inspired him to assemble his own soul revue, the C.C. Riders, which occasionally featured as many as 14 musicians plus two female backing vocalists, the Sheer Delights.

Although his single recordings for King (including "Goin' Back to Miami", a song which became a signature tune for the singer) were not commercially successful beyond local markets in the south, Cochran's energetic performances, rigorous touring schedule and appearances on television talk shows, as well as The Jackie Gleason Show helped to make the C.C. Riders a popular attraction. In the mid-1960s, Cochran made Las Vegas his base of operations and played residencies at several hotels, casinos and theatres. During this time, he met and befriended Elvis Presley, from whom he borrowed elements for his own Las Vegas period, adopting jump suits similar to his wardrobe.

Cochran recorded an album for Chess Records titled Wayne Cochran! in 1967, which featured the blue-eyed soul and rhythm and blues style he had perfected on the road with his revue, but backed by session musicians for most of the cuts instead of his touring band. This was followed by a return to King and two further LPs, Alive & Well & Living... In a Bitch of a World and the instrumental High & Ridin', both in 1970. These albums saw the C.C. Riders' guitarist and musical director Charles Brent take an important creative role, and featured a jazz-influenced sound comparable to the Chicago Transit Authority or Blood, Sweat & Tears. Cochran also recorded a "live" album (actually a "live in the studio" record) for King sometime between 1967 and 1969, but released in 2014 and included in an Ace Records compilation Goin' Back to Miami: The Soul Sides 1965-1970.[8]

Cochran recorded a final album, titled Cochran, for Epic Records in 1972, then toured and made television appearances. He retired from music to become an evangelist minister in Miami, Florida. He died on November 21, 2017, in Miramar, Florida,[9] from cancer at the age of 78.[10]

Legacy

Cochran is best known today for writing the song "Last Kiss", which he performed with the C.C. Riders.[5] Although it was not a success for him, contemporary covers by J. Frank Wilson and the Cavaliers in 1964, Wednesday in 1974, and a much later take by Pearl Jam became hits. It was the best-known hit of the Venezuelan musical group Los 007, formed in Caracas in 1965, that covered the song in Spanish, and spent 20 consecutive weeks in first place on the Venezuelan music charts in 1966. In Mexico, Polo and The Americans cover the song in Spanish. Cochran and his revue also influenced Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi's Blues Brothers musical venture; Cochran is referenced in the 1980 film The Blues Brothers and a cover of his song "Going Back to Miami" is featured on the live album Made in America.

Cochran appeared and sang in the 1970 movie C.C. and Company as himself. The movie trailer, featuring a scene with Cochran and his band The C.C.Riders performing the song "I Can't Turn You Loose", was later used in the 2019 Quentin Tarantino movie Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.

Discography

Cochran (in white cape) with the C.C Riders (male backup group) and the Sheer Delights (female backup group), 1977.

Albums

  • Wayne Cochran! (Chess, 1967; reissue: Sundazed, 2014) #167 Billboard 200 Albums[11]
  • Alive & Well and Living In...A Bitch of a World (King, 1970)
  • High and Ridin' (Bethlehem, 1970)
  • Cochran (Epic, 1972)

Compilations

  • Get Down With It! The White Knight of Soul 1959–72 (Raven, 2005)[5]
  • Love Strikes Again (Jukebox Entertainment, 2010)
  • Goin' Back to Miami: The Soul Sides 1965–1970 (Ace, 2014)

Singles

Year Title US Label
1959 The Coo Scottie
1961 Last Kiss Gala
1962 Cindy Marie Aire
1965 Harlem Shuffle [12] 127 Mercury
1966 Goin' Back to Miami Mercury
1967 Some-A' Your Sweet Love Chess