Watch The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings! (VIDEO)
- K. Abel
- Apr 4, 2016
- 3 min read

The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings (1976) is a comedic sports film about a team of enterprising ex-Negro League baseball players in the era of racial segregation. Loosely based upon William Brashler's novel of the same name, it starred Billy Dee Williams, James Earl Jones and Richard Pryor. Directed by John Badham,[1] the movie was produced by Berry Gordy for Motown Productions and Rob Cohen for Universal Pictures, and released by Universal on July 16, 1976.
Full Movie Here
Synopsis
Tired of being treated like a slave by team owner Sallison Potter (Ted Ross), charismatic star pitcher Bingo Long (Billy Dee Williams) steals a bunch of Negro League players away from their teams, including catcher/slugger Leon Carter (James Earl Jones) and Charlie Snow (Richard Pryor), a player forever scheming to break into the segregated Major League Baseball of the 1930s by masquerading as first a Cuban ("Carlos Nevada"), then a Native American ("Chief Takahoma"). They take to the road, barnstorming through small Midwestern towns, playing the local teams to make ends meet. One of the opposing players, 'Esquire' Joe Calloway (Stan Shaw), is so good that they recruit him.
Bingo's team becomes so outlandishly entertaining and successful, it begins to cut into the attendance of the established Negro League teams. Finally, Bingo's nemesis Potter is forced to propose a winner-take-all game: if Bingo's team can beat a bunch of all-stars, it can join the league, but if it loses, the players will return to their old teams. Potter has two of his goons kidnap Leon prior to the game as insurance, but he escapes and is key to his side's victory.
Ironically, there is a major league scout in the audience. After the game, he offers Esquire Joe the chance to break the color barrier; with Bingo's blessing, he accepts. Leon glumly foresees the decline of the Negro League as more players follow Esquire Joe's lead, but Bingo, ever the optimist, cheers him up by describing the wild promotional stunts he intends to stage to bring in the paying customers.
Negro League References
Some characters and situations are loosely based upon real-life people and incidents. Badham grew up in Birmingham, Alabama and was familiar with the Birmingham Black Barons, who sharedRickwood Field with the white Birmingham Barons.[2]
Bingo Long is based on former-Black Baron Leroy "Satchel" Paige. Early in his career, Paige would call in his outfield while leading in the ninth inning against an amateur or semi-pro team and strike out the side. Bingo did a similar stunt in this movie. Leon Carter is a Josh Gibson-like power hitter, even playing the same position (catcher). "Esquire" Joe Callaway is an amalgam of another Black Baron,Willie Mays (in personality, talent, and fielding position) and Jackie Robinson (as being signed by a white team at the film's end).
The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings were loosely based on the Indianapolis Clowns and other barnstorming Negro baseball teams, who likewise engaged in Harlem Globetrotters-like clowning routines.
Cast[edit]
Billy Dee Williams as Bingo Long
James Earl Jones as Leon Carter
Richard Pryor as Charlie Snow, "Carlos Nevada" and "Chief Takahoma"
Stan Shaw as "Esquire Joe" Joseph Vanderbilt Calloway
Tony Burton as Issac, an All-Star
Rico Dawson as Willie Lee Shively, an All-Star
Sam "Birmingham" Brison as Louis Keystone, an All-Star
Jophery C. Brown as Emory "Champ" Chambers, an All-Star
Leon Wagner as Fat Sam Popper, an All-Star
John McCurry as Walter Murchman, an All-Star
DeWayne Jessie as Rainbow, the All-Stars' batboy. He later played singer Otis Day in Animal House.
Ted Ross as Sallison Potter, Bingo's nemesis and owner of the Ebony Aces
Mabel King as Bertha Dewitt, another Negro League team owner
Ken Foree as Honey, one of Potter's henchmen
Carl Gordon as Mack, another one of Potter's goons
(Reference Source @ Wikipedia)
Kommentare