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Radio Days

Radio Days

  • Status: Released
  • 30-01-1987
  • Runtime: 89 min
  • Score: 7.036
  • Vote count: 621

The Narrator tells us how the radio influenced his childhood in the days before TV. In the New York City of the late 1930s to the New Year's Eve 1944, this coming-of-age tale mixes the narrator's experiences with contemporary anecdotes and urban legends of the radio stars.

Danny Aiello

Rocco

Jeff Daniels

Biff Baxter

Mia Farrow

Sally White

Seth Green

Joe

Robert Joy

Fred

Julie Kavner

Mother

Diane Keaton

New Year's Singer

Julie Kurnitz

Irene

Renée Lippin

Aunt Ceil

Kenneth Mars

Rabbi Baumel

Josh Mostel

Abe

Tony Roberts

"Silver Dollar" Emcee

Wallace Shawn

Masked Avenger

Michael Tucker

Father

David Warrilow

Roger

Dianne Wiest

Aunt Bea

Mike Starr

Burglar

Paul Herman

Burglar

Don Pardo

"Guess That Tune" Host

Martin Rosenblatt

Mr. Needleman

Helen Miller

Mrs. Needleman

Danielle Ferland

Child Star

Mick Murray

Avenger Crook

William Flanagan

Avenger Announcer

William Magerman

Grandpa

Leah Carrey

Grandma

Joy Newman

Cousin Ruthie

Hy Anzell

Mr. Waldbaum

Judith Malina

Mrs. Waldbaum

Fletcher Farrow Previn

Andrew

Oliver Block

Nick

Maurice Toueg

Dave

Sal Tuminello

Burt

Rebecca Nickels

Evelyn Goorwitz

Mindy Morgenstern

"Show & Tell" Teacher

David Mosberg

Arnold

Ross Morgenstern

Ross

Andrew B. Clark

Sidney Manulis

Lee Erwin

Roller Rink Organist

Roger Hammer

Richard

Terry Lee Swarts

Nightclub Customer

Margaret Thomson

Nightclub Customer

Tito Puente

Latin Bandleader

Denise Dumont

Latin Singer

Dimitri Vassilopoulos

Porfirio

Larry David

Communist Neighbor

Rebecca Schaeffer

Communist's Daughter

Belle Berger

Mrs. Silverman

Guy Le Bow

Bill Kern

Brian Mannain

Kirby Kyle

Stanley Burns

Ventriloquist

Todd Field

Crooner

Peter Lombard

Abercrombie Host

Martin Sherman

Mr. Abercrombie

Crystal Field

Abercrombie Couple

Maurice Shrog

Abercrombie Couple

Marc Colner

Whiz Kid

Roberta Bennett

Teacher with Carrot

Joel Eidelsberg

Mr. Zipsky

Peter Castellotti

Mr. Davis

Gina DeAngeles

Rocco's mother

Shelley Delaney

Chekhov Actress

Dwight Weist

Pearl Harbor Announcer

Ken Levinsky

USO Musician

Ray Marchica

USO Musician

J.R. Horne

Biff Announcer

Kuno Sponholtz

German

Henry Yuk

Japanese

Sydney A. Blake

Miss Gordon

Kitty Carlisle

Radio Singer

Henry Cowen

Principal

Philip Shultz

Whistler

Mercedes Ruehl

Ad Man

Bruce Jarchow

Ad Man

Greg Gerard

Songwriter

David Cale

Director

Ira Wheeler

Sponsor

Hannah Rabinowitz

Sponsor's Wife

Edward S. Kotkin

Diction Teacher

Ruby Payne

Diction Student

J.E. Beaucaire

Diction Student

Paul Berman

"Gay White Way" Announcer

Richard Portnow

Sy

Barbara Gallo

Dance Palace Musician

Jane Jarvis

Dance Palace Musician

Liz Vochecowizc

Dance Palace Musician

Ivan Kronenfeld

On-the-Spot Newsman

Frank O'Brien

Fireman

Yolanda Childress

Polly's Mother

Artie Butler

New Year's Bandleader

Gregg Almquist

Radio Voice (voice)

Jackson Beck

Radio Voice (voice)

Wendell Craig

Radio Voice (voice)

William H. Macy

Radio Voice (voice)

Ken Roberts

Radio Voice (voice)

Norman Rose

Radio Voice (voice)

Kenneth Welsh

Radio Voice (voice)

Woody Allen

Joe (Narrator) (voice) (uncredited)

David Bickford

Silver Dollar Assistant (uncredited)

Sandy Dell

Crying Woman (uncredited)

Marie Gabrielle

Young Sailor's Wife (uncredited)

Carson Grant

Sailor in Coney Island Bumper Car (uncredited)

Zach Grenier

Audience Member (uncredited)

Ron Leir

Radio Actor (uncredited)

J.P. McNeely

Sailor (uncredited)

Fred Melamed

Bradley (uncredited)

Ilana Rapp

Counter Girl (uncredited)

Ruth Rugoff

Rita (uncredited)

Hester Schell

Cafe Patron (uncredited)

kevin2019

"Radio Days" is packed with gentle and understated comedic flourishes combined with some genuinely arresting moments of tragedy and major life changing global events. However, you could argue Woody Allen is tastefully romanticising such things as the family unit being central to daily life too much. After all, were families ever this much chaotic fun? Was life ever lived this way? Was there ever this degree of togetherness? And if so, then how was it ever lost? And, more importantly, can it ever be regained? In any case, Allen weaves his delightfully entertaining narrative thread through all aspects of radio in his life and the results are absolutely charming and spellbinding and they showcase Allen at his best.

CinemaSerf

“Joe” (Seth Green) is reminiscing about his childhood in a New York where he lived with his mum and dad and her extended family in some basic and cramped accommodation - it’s a bit like the “Bucket” household from the world of Roald Dahl, replete with cabbage soup, too. This family, and their neighbours, live their lives according to a pattern of routines. From day to day and week to week, they gossip, eavesdrop, work, sleep and chatter but there is one thing that’s a constant. They all listen to the radio. Music, drama, news, comedy and quizzes. Each of them has their favourite as it facilitates their imaginations in a society where even 15c for a secret ring was beyond their economic means. Woody Allen quite engagingly crafts this drama to pair up the characters on the screen with aspects of the radio broadcasts that provided not just factual realities of life as WWII gradually expanded to include the USA but to the more fanciful lives of those stars whom they enviously saw on the big screen. As he looks back on this time, “Joe” finds his memories themselves have started to fade but that the mnemonics provided by his association with the radio at this formative time of his life still provide a template for his, admittedly somewhat rose-tinted, memories. It’s the usual assembly of Woody Allen cast here, but this time his writing carves them out quite quirkily unique roles, like an human jigsaw puzzle that looks improbable until you realise that thanks to the conduit of the wireless, they can all fit together - though it’s not always that tight a fit! Of course there’s the usual slice of Jewish neuroticism included, but here the diverse range of characters and the humour derived from the medium upon which we are reflecting really does either tug at the nostalgia strings you do remember, or maybe at ones you don’t but would like to. Dianne Wiest possibly takes the acting plaudits as the unlucky-in-love “Aunt Bea” but essentially there isn’t an individual star, more a community of family and friends that those of us who grew up in tenements anywhere in the world whilst the radio exercised it’s potent convening powers can associate with. Some fine tunes, too.