Sept. 8, 2021

Ep. 13: Throwback! Ernie Hudson and Robin Shelby at APF 2013

Ep. 13: Throwback! Ernie Hudson and Robin Shelby at APF 2013

The Bama Geeks are recovering from Dragon Con 2021, so here's a special throwback to the 2013 Alabama Phoenix Festival live panel with Ernie Hudson ("Winston Zeddemore" from "Ghostbusters") and Robin Shelby ("Slimer" from "Ghostbusters 2" and "Mrs....

The Bama Geeks are recovering from Dragon Con 2021, so here's a special throwback to the 2013 Alabama Phoenix Festival live panel with Ernie Hudson ("Winston Zeddemore" from "Ghostbusters") and Robin Shelby ("Slimer" from "Ghostbusters 2" and "Mrs. Slimer" from "Ghostbusters: Answer The Call")! This was coincidentally Episode 13 of the Alabama Ghostbusters podcast.

Enjoy, and they'll be back next episode to fill you in on their Dragon Con adventures!

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Robin Shelby Profile Photo

Actor

Robin Shelby is best known for playing "Slimer" in "Ghostbusters II" and "Lady Slimer" in "Ghostbusters: Answer the Call."

Ernie Hudson Profile Photo

Actor

Ernie Hudson’s path to the stage began in Benton Harbor, Michigan, where he filled notebooks with short stories, poems and songs, already imagining his words coming alive under the lights. After a brief enlistment in the Marine Corps, he moved to Detroit and became the resident playwright at Concept East, the nation’s oldest Black theatre. He also enrolled at Wayne State University to hone his writing and acting skills and founded the Actors’ Ensemble Theatre, giving young Black writers and performers a space to create and direct their own work.

Hudson earned his B.A. from Wayne State and received a full scholarship to the Yale School of Drama’s M.F.A. program. While performing with Yale’s repertory company, he was cast in the Los Angeles production of Lonne Elder III’s Daddy Goodness. That opportunity led to a meeting with director Gordon Parks, who offered Hudson his first feature film role in Leadbelly (1976).

What followed was a year of bit parts and hard lessons about the industry—an experience that briefly pushed him back toward academia through a doctoral program at the University of Minnesota. He ultimately left the program, recognizing, as he put it, that “there are those who spend their lives studying it and those who spend their lives doing it.” He chose to keep doing the work.

Hudson returned to the stage in a starring role as Jack Jefferson in Theatre in the Round’s production of The Great White Hope, committing fully to the part—right down to shaving his head. A steady run of television roles followed, including appearances on Fanta… Read More