Playas Ball
Playas Ball is a 2003 sports, comedy, drama, and romance movie that was written and directed by Jennifer Harper and produced by Dale Davis. It stars Allen Payne and Elise Neal. The film was released on October 1, 2003 by CodeBlack Entertainment.
Playas Ball | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jennifer Harper |
Produced by | Jeff Clanagan Kim Olgetree Ruth Carson |
Written by | Jennifer Harper |
Story by | Dale Davis Jennifer Harper |
Starring | Allen Payne Elise Neal Treach Chelsi Smith Jordana Spiro Anthony C. Hall Tasha Smith Tracey Cherelle Jones MC Lyte Gary "G-Thang" Johnson Jackie Long David Brown Matthew Hatchette |
Music by | Eddie "Debongo" Ricketts Bruce Sterling |
Cinematography | Robert Morris |
Edited by | David Flores Debra Moore |
Distributed by | CodeBlack Entertainment |
Release date |
|
Running time | 88 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
Allen Payne plays a basketball player who becomes involved in a sex scandal.[1]
Cast
- Allen Payne as Cedric Tinsley, a ball player trying to go from rags to riches
- Elise Neal as Summer Twitty, Cedric's publicist
- Anthony 'Treach' Criss as Ricardo Perez, Summer's boyfriend
- Chelsi Smith as Jill Hamlin, Cedric's girlfriend
- Jordana Spiro as Tonya Jenkins, mother of Cedric's purported child
- Antony C. Hall as Lloyd Harrison, Cedric's best friend
- Tasha Smith as Vonda, Cedric's sister
- Tracey Cherelle Jones as Natasha, Summer's cousin
- MC Lyte as Laquinta, Natasha's best friend
- Gary "G-Thang" Johnson as Hakim, a chef at Cedric's favorite restaurant
- Jackie Long as Georgie, another chef at Cedric's favorite restaurant
- David Brown as Mookie, Cedric's second best friend
- Matthew Hatchette as Nick, Cedric's third best friend
- Pamella D'Pella as Kennedy, the bartender
Cameos
- Judge Joe Brown as himself
- Malik Yoba as himself
- Paula Jai Parker as herself
- Derek Anderson as himself
- Scottie Pippen as himself
- Dale Davis as himself
External links
References
- "Playas Ball (2003)". Moviefone. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
- "Playas Ball (2003)". Moviefone. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.