When Every Day Was the Fourth of July

Director: Dan Curtis
Genre: Drama
Year: 1978
Country: United States of America
Language: English Language
Starring: Andrew Duggan, Louise Sorel, Geoffrey Lewis, Eric Shea, Louanne Sirota, Harris Yulin, Scott Brady, Joan Hackett, Dean Jones, Donald Moffat, Katy Kurtzman

When Every Day Was the Fourth of July is a 1978 NBC television movie about a Jewish-American family in 1937 Bridgeport, Connecticut. Narrated in first person flashback, the story follows a 12-year-old boy and his family who find themselves defending the town "misfit" after he's accused of murder. Written, produced and directed by Dan Curtis. Starring Dean Jones, Geoffrey Lewis, Chris Petersen, and Katy Kurtzman. Followed by the 1980 ABC television movie sequel The Long Days of Summer.

It's the summer of 1937 in Bridgeport, Connecticut and 12-year-old Daniel Cooper (Chris Petersen) along with his 10-year-old sister Sarah (Katy Kurtzman) are looking forward to summer vacation, most particularly, the annual 4th of July festivities. Sarah soon befriends the town's gentle misfit, Albert Cavanaugh, known by the town's children as "Snowman" (Geoffrey Lewis), a highly decorated and now brain-damaged World War I veteran, after she defends him from the town's resident bully, "Red" Doyle (Eric Shea). When Snowman finds himself accused of a terrible murder, Sarah, believing him to be innocent, convinces her successful attorney father, Ed Cooper (Dean Jones) to defend him. Amid courtroom

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(This is information generated from a Wikipedia article, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.)

When Every Day Was the Fourth of July is a 1978 drama film directed by Dan Curtis.


Internet Movie Database