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A Man Called Adam

  • 1966
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
807
YOUR RATING
Sammy Davis Jr. in A Man Called Adam (1966)
A Man Called Adam: You're Scary
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Watch A Man Called Adam: You're Scary
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DramaMusic

A famous jazz trumpeter finds himself unable to cope with the problems of everyday life.A famous jazz trumpeter finds himself unable to cope with the problems of everyday life.A famous jazz trumpeter finds himself unable to cope with the problems of everyday life.

  • Director
    • Leo Penn
  • Writers
    • Lester Pine
    • Tina Pine
  • Stars
    • Sammy Davis Jr.
    • Louis Armstrong
    • Ossie Davis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    807
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Leo Penn
    • Writers
      • Lester Pine
      • Tina Pine
    • Stars
      • Sammy Davis Jr.
      • Louis Armstrong
      • Ossie Davis
    • 13User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    A Man Called Adam: You're Scary
    Clip 2:00
    A Man Called Adam: You're Scary
    A Man Called Adam: Louis Armstrong (UK)
    Clip 3:50
    A Man Called Adam: Louis Armstrong (UK)
    A Man Called Adam: Louis Armstrong (UK)
    Clip 3:50
    A Man Called Adam: Louis Armstrong (UK)

    Photos48

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    Top cast39

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    Sammy Davis Jr.
    Sammy Davis Jr.
    • Adam Johnson
    Louis Armstrong
    Louis Armstrong
    • Willie Ferguson
    Ossie Davis
    Ossie Davis
    • Nelson Davis
    Cicely Tyson
    Cicely Tyson
    • Claudia Ferguson
    Frank Sinatra Jr.
    Frank Sinatra Jr.
    • Vincent
    Mel Tormé
    Mel Tormé
    • Guest Singer at Party
    • (as Mel Torme)
    Peter Lawford
    Peter Lawford
    • Manny
    Johnny Brown
    Johnny Brown
    • Blind Les
    George Rhodes
    • Leroy
    Michael Silva
    • George
    Kai Winding
    • Trombonist
    Ja'net DuBois
    Ja'net DuBois
    • Martha
    • (as Jeanette Du Bois)
    Michael Lipton
    • Bobby Gales
    Lola Falana
    Lola Falana
    • Theo
    Kenneth Tobey
    Kenneth Tobey
    • Club Owner
    Gerald S. O'Loughlin
    Gerald S. O'Loughlin
    • Red - the Sheriff
    Carl Lee
    • Minor Role
    Morris D. Erby
    • Minor Role
    • (as Morris Erby)
    • Director
      • Leo Penn
    • Writers
      • Lester Pine
      • Tina Pine
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.5807
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    Featured reviews

    9ksf-2

    really good. check it out!

    HOW have i never seen this before? and why is it rated so low? check out that cast list. Sammy Davis Junior as star horn player Adam Johnson. Louie Armstrong is "Willie". Ossie Davis is Davis. Cicely Tyson is the love interest. co-stars Frank Sinatra Junior, Mel Torme, Peter Lawford is his agent Manny. Lola Falana, Morgan Freeman. has a greater cast ever been in one film?? Adam has experienced so much loss, it comes out in his horn playing. he's wild, explosive. eccentric. and when they get into a hassle with the local coppers, he fights for his rights, and refuses to bow down. great stuff, if a little over the top. but to be fair, it was 1966, right in the heart of the fight for civil rights. Really Good! Directed by Leo Penn, father of Sean Penn. has his own interesting story. One of the last films of Louis Armstrong... he even sings a couple songs. Highly recommend this one!
    6SnoopyStyle

    trying a lot

    Adam Johnson (Sammy Davis Jr.) is a troubled self-destructive famous jazz musician. He drinks too much. He is too bitter after some personal tragedy. His best friend Nelson Davis (Ossie Davis) has brought over civil rights activist Claudia Ferguson (Cicely Tyson) and her grandfather Willie Ferguson (Louis Armstrong). At first, Adam is brutal with his guests which he regrets. Sometimes, he teaches and mentors Vincent (Frank Sinatra Jr.). His manager Manny (Peter Lawford) wants him to shut up and play.

    This is an interesting indie. At least, it looks indie. There is a mix of musicians and professional actors, both do well. It is a bit of a mess cinematically. They are definitely trying a lot especially Sammy. The music is great. More than anything, this movie needs to rein in the rambling story.
    6mossgrymk

    a man called adam

    Great late Kennedy/early LBJ urban look to this film. A lot of it is set inside The Great Hipster Jazz Club with lots of Jackie hair do's on the gals and narrow black ties and glasses on the guys (horn rims for the Ofays and shades for the Brothers). You expect to see Lei Roi Jones, before he became Amiri Baraka, flagging down a cocktail waitress and Capote holding forth to Jill St. John (or vice versa). And there are three very good musical interludes featuring Satch, Mel and Sammy, respectively. Also, it's good to see Cicely Tyson just before she hit it big as well as Satch playing a character at least somewhat removed from himself.

    Otherwise, this thing's a bore with endless, repetitive scenes of the title character either about to fall apart, falling apart or feeling guilty after falling apart, and Davis' performance, to put it at its kindest, is more energetic than nuanced. And Les and Tina Pine's dialogue is strictly from Squaresville, as they would have Adam say. C plus.

    PS...Peter Lawford was forty two when this movie was made and easily looks sixty two. Ah, the vagaries of The Pack!
    7bkoganbing

    Jazz is king

    For some reason this film has gone sadly neglected over the years when assessing Sammy Davis, Jr. The man sung and danced and acted with the best. His trumpet playing may have been dubbed, but Davis was as real a deal talent wise as we've ever had.

    A Man Called Adam casts Davis as a trumpet player who's been on a downward spiral for 10 years ever since he lost a wife and child in a car accident. Even dissipated and drunk as he is the talent is there and he still gets bookings. But the jazz clubs are disappearing as well as his concentration.

    When he gets himself involved with Cicely Tyson the only question has she come too late to be a salvation for him?

    Ossie Davis plays Tyson's uncle and guardian and the great Louis Armstrong is Davis's mentor. No doubt Sammy was learning from the best. Might have been nice to see some of Satchmo's own playing.

    I'd love to know how Davis managed to get Peter Lawford and Frank Sinatra, Jr. in the same film. Lawford and Sinatra Sr. had broken off all relations four years earlier. Still Davis of all the clan members kept up a friendship with Peter Lawford who plays a big booking agent. Sinatra, Jr. plays an up and coming jazz trumpeter who idolizes Davis and takes quite a bit of guff from him during the film.

    A Man Called Adam is a nicely acted film all around by its cast and it should be better known. Especially when assessing the whole career of Sammy Davis, Jr.
    5coon28

    A Must See Film

    This film, made in 1966, was a bold attempt at addressing the contemporary conflicts of race and identity as it affected an African American jazz musician during the turbulent civil rights era. Adam (Sammy Davis Jr.) is a celebrated yet self destructive jazz musician and womanizer. Possessing a mean temper with a short fuse, he also has a serious drinking problem. In the opening scenes we are introduced to Adam leading his band in a sensuous slow number to an appreciative audience at a jazz club. When a drunken audience member insists he play something up-tempo, the volatile Adam abruptly stops playing and nearly assaults his heckler before storming out of the club and hopping a plane back to New York without explanation. Arriving home drunk with a sexy stewardess whose name he can't remember (a very lovely Lola Falana in her first screen role, which amounts to a brief cheesecake walk-on) Adam inconveniently discovers his apartment has been loaned for the week-end by his best friend (played by Ossie Davis) to a respected, elderly jazz musician (Louis Armstrong) and his chaperon/grand-daughter, a young civil rights activist (Cicely Tyson). Honored by the presence of the senior musician and attracted to his grand- daughter's sharp wit, politic-ism, and natural beauty (unlike the other African American actresses in this film, Tyson wears her hair in a short afro and wears little to no make-up). To his best friend's dismay, Adam attempts to embark upon a serious relationship with the activist, and to meet her challenge to him to be "nothing less and nothing less" than what what he is, "a man. With the support of his no-nonsense girlfriend and his young protégé (Frank Sinatra Jr.) Adam's efforts to tame his drinking and his anger look promising until an unexpected confrontation with the police tips the scale. Neither the elder musician's (Armstrong) brand of courteous subservience nor Tyson's subscription to non- violent protest works for Adam, In an era where his art cannot shield him from the stigma and crisis of his race, Adam is a time-bomb waiting to happen. Davis' performance is riveting as is Tyson's. The issues presented in this film were raw at the time of its making, and Davis and Tyson present African American characters that were almost unprecedented in their dramatic intensity and three dimensionality--an exception would be Ivan Dixon and Abbey Lincoln's startling performances in "Nothin' But AMan", (1961). Rat-pack bad boy Peter Lawford joins the cast as Adam's powerful and vindictive agent who, after twice being humiliated by Adam (don't miss the scene in famed NY restaurant, 21), blackballs him, then forces him back to the humiliation of the segregated south. Also look for a brief yet strong performance from an uncredited Jan'et DuBois ("Willona" on 1970s TV show, "Good Times") as Adam's pride-less sometimes girlfriend, and Academy award winning actor Morgan Freeman an extra in a party scene featuring singer Mel Torme.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      About an hour into the movie you may notice Morgan Freeman as one of the party guest; his second appearance in a feature film.
    • Goofs
      Although the Sammy Davis character is referred to as a trumpet player the only instrument he plays in the film is a cornet.
    • Quotes

      Claudia Ferguson: [after their confrontation with two racist policemen] That's right. Two jerks came up here to do their job to find you, me and a white boy, which they weren't too thrilled about anyway, and you have to give them some lip. Save your heroism for something important.

      Adam Johnson: It was important. Don't you know that, Claudia? Take a piece of you here, a piece of you there, so there's nothing left... except yessah, boss!

    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Episode #20.174 (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      All That Jazz
      Music and Lyrics by Benny Carter and Al Stillman

      Played over the credits by trumpeter Nathaniel Adderly

      Sung at a party by Mel Tormé

      Reprised by Mel Tormé at the end of the film

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 17, 1967 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Mellan jazz och gryning
    • Filming locations
      • Danny's Hide-A-Way - 151 East 45th Street, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Trace-Mark Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 44 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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