The Five of Me

The Five of Me is a 1981 made for television film about a man who is plagued with multiple personalities. It was directed by Paul Wendkos and produced by Jack Farren. It stars David Birney, Dee Wallace, Mitchell Ryan, John McLiam, James Whitmore Jr., Ben Piazza, Judith Chapman, Robert L. Gibson and Herb Armstrong.

The Five of Me
Written byLawrence B. Marcus
Screenplay byLawrence B. Marcus
Story byHenry Hawksworth
Ted Schwarz
Directed byPaul Wendkos
StarringDavid Birney
Dee Wallace
Mitchell Ryan
John McLiam
James Whitmore Jr.
Ben Piazza
Judith Chapman
Robert L. Gibson
Herb Armstrong
Music byFred Karlin
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
Production
Producer(s)Jack Farren
CinematographyJack Woolf
Editor(s)Dann Cahn
Running time104 minutes
Release
Original release1981

Story

The story is about Henry Hawksworth (played by David Birney) who is in a struggle with four other personalities within him.[1][2] Henry is shown as a child being threatened by his unbalanced father. The father (played by John McLiam is threatening to castrate his son. Later Henry returns from South Korea and is a hero for saving a buddy. While he was there, Henry was imprisoned and had developed another personality to cope with things. This personality was Dana.[3] Dana who is a family man with conservative values. It is this personality that falls in love with a woman called Ann (played by Dee Wallace). Another personality is the violent and sociopathic Johnny. Then there is creative and childish Peter. There is also the protective and unemotional Phil. The Johnny personality commits a crime and goes to court where the multiple personalities of Henry come to light.[4]

Background

The film is based on a real case of someone who suffered from multiple personality disorder.[5] The book on which the film is inspired by, The Five of Me was written by Henry Hawksworth with Ted Schwartz.[6][7]

During the filming of this production an accident occurred on February 21, 1981. Camera assistant Jack Tandberg was killed on the set when he struck by a driverless car.[8] This is also mentioned in Stuntwomen: The Untold Hollywood Story by Mollie Gregory where it suggests a lack of industry standards may have led to the deaths of three camera assistants between from 1980 to 1981. In addition to Tandberg's death on The Five of Me, the other two deaths mentioned occurred on The Dukes of Hazzard and Magnum P.I..[9]

Cast

[10][11]

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gollark: For one thing, is a module just going to be allowed somehow to draw on the region of the screen it's meant to be set up for?
gollark: Yes it is.
gollark: These "modules", they could communicate over some sort of unified IPC framework with some standard format or whatever, but probably each language/framework would end up having to implement its own method of rendering what gets sent over.
gollark: They can just send JSON-serialized messages or whatever, it's just slower than using one binary.

References

  1. Letterboxd - The Five of Me 1981 Directed by Paul Wendkos
  2. Turner Classic Movies - Five Of Me, The (1981), Brief Synopsis
  3. New York Times, Archives, 1981 - TV: 'FIVE OF ME,' MULTIPLE PERSONALITIES By JOHN J. O'CONNOR
  4. Letterboxd - The Five of Me 1981 Directed by Paul Wendkos
  5. Movie Fone - The Five of Me (1981)
  6. A Spiritual Hypothesis: An Inquiry into Abnormal and Paranormal Behavior, By Daniel Punzak - Chapter 6 Dissociative Identity Disorder
  7. TV Guide, Triangle Publications, 1981 - Page A-12
  8. Yahoo Entertainment, April 09, 2014 - Safety On Set: Camera Crew Outnumber Stunt Personnel 4-To-1 In On-Set Deaths - David Robb
  9. Stuntwomen: The Untold Hollywood Story by Mollie Gregory - Page 142
  10. IMDb - Full Cast & Crew
  11. Turner Classic Movies - Full Cast & Crew
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