Uptown Saturday Night

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For the Camp Lo album, see Uptown Saturday Night (album)
Uptown Saturday Night
Directed by Sidney Poitier
Produced by Melville Tucker
Written by Richard Wesley
Starring Sidney Poitier
Bill Cosby
Harry Belafonte
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) July 26, 1974
Running time 104 min.
Language English
Budget $3,000,000 (approx.)
Followed by Let's Do It Again
IMDb profile

Uptown Saturday Night is a 1974 comedy-film written by Richard Wesley, and directed by Sidney Poitier. Poitier also stars in this film, along with Bill Cosby and Harry Belafonte.

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[edit] Synopsis

Steve Jackson (Sidney Poitier), an average blue-collar worker at a steel mill, has just begun a two-weeks-long vacation. He is encouraged—and eventually convinced—by his friend Wardell Franklin (Bill Cosby) to enjoy his vacation and to go to a party that Saturday night at Madam Zenobia's, an uptown nightclub.

While the two are at the party, the club is robbed. The masked bandits steal all of the patrons' loot, including Steve's wallet.

The following day, Steve is at home and reading his newspaper when he learns he has won the lottery. However, he realizes that the lottery ticket was in the wallet that was stolen from him, and Steve and Wardell spend the remainder of the film tracking down his wallet by consulting with crooked politicians, fake detectives, con-artists, and underworld crime bosses.

[edit] Cast

cameo appearances by:

  • Ketty Lester — Irma Franklin
  • Jophery C. Brown — Geechie Dan henchman
  • Gene McDaniels — Member of the Choir
  • Ray Parker Jr. — Ray
  • George Reynolds — Big Percy
  • Richard Warren — Driver

[edit] Trivia

Cosby and Poitier teamed up again for Let's Do It Again (1975) and A Piece of the Action (1977). Although their characters have different names in each film, the three films are considered to be a trilogy.

In 2002, it was announced that Will Smith and his production company, Overbrook Entertainment, had secured the rights to the trilogy for remakes to star Smith and to be distributed by Warner Bros.. Smith stated that he hoped to get Eddie Murphy, Martin Lawrence and other famous African-American stars to be in the films. [1][2]

Shortly after the film's release, NBC commissioned a pilot for a sitcom version of Uptown Saturday Night, starring Cleavon Little and Adam Wade, playing the roles played by Cosby and Poitier in the film. The pilot did not sell, though it was seen on NBC during the summer of 1976 as part of Comedy Theater, one of many showcases featuring unsold pilots.

An episode of Martin spoofed the club/robbery scene at Madame Zenobia's. "Jerome" owns a club called "Club Shiznit" that Tommy and Cole go to visit one night. As armed masked women enter the club and rob everyone "down to the underwear," one of them overhear Cole murmur to Tommy about being relieved that they did not discover the diamond earrings he was holding for Martin (who had planned to surprise Gina with them upon their return from a trip). The masked woman motions to Cole to hand the earrings over; Tommy tells her to just shoot him for running his big mouth.

[edit] External links