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Destins croisés

Original title: Twice in a Lifetime
  • TV Series
  • 1999–2001
  • TV-14
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
361
YOUR RATING
Corbin Bernsen, Patrick Duffy, and Al Waxman in Destins croisés (1999)
DramaFantasyHistory

Prematurely deceased people are given the opportunity to correct something that went wrong in their lives and thus change them for the better.Prematurely deceased people are given the opportunity to correct something that went wrong in their lives and thus change them for the better.Prematurely deceased people are given the opportunity to correct something that went wrong in their lives and thus change them for the better.

  • Creator
    • Steve Sohmer
  • Stars
    • Al Waxman
    • Gordie Brown
    • Paul Popowich
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    361
    YOUR RATING
    • Creator
      • Steve Sohmer
    • Stars
      • Al Waxman
      • Gordie Brown
      • Paul Popowich
    • 10User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 9 nominations total

    Episodes44

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Al Waxman
    Al Waxman
    • Judge Othniel…
    • 1999–2001
    Gordie Brown
    • Mr. Jones…
    • 1999–2000
    Paul Popowich
    Paul Popowich
    • Mr. Smith…
    • 2000–2001
    Kim Schraner
    Kim Schraner
    • Adult Renetta…
    • 1999–2001
    Alexandra Stapley
    • Young Jenny Parnell…
    • 1999–2000
    Steve Ferguson
    • Bartender…
    • 1999–2001
    Polly Bergen
    Polly Bergen
    • Judge Deborah
    • 1999
    Sandi Ross
    Sandi Ross
    • Hannah Steele…
    • 1999–2000
    Jayne Eastwood
    Jayne Eastwood
    • Emma Price…
    • 2000–2001
    Tracey Cook
    • Julie Bogart…
    • 2000
    Polly Shannon
    Polly Shannon
    • Vicki Sue…
    • 1999–2000
    Natalie Radford
    Natalie Radford
    • Young Eloise Hawke…
    • 1999–2000
    Janet Bailey
    Janet Bailey
    • Stephanie Bryant…
    • 1999–2000
    Fiona Reid
    Fiona Reid
    • Head Nurse Fike…
    • 2000
    Merwin Mondesir
    Merwin Mondesir
    • Henry Jamal…
    • 1999–2001
    Jeff Topping
    • Allan Hollander…
    • 2000–2001
    Janaya Stephens
    Janaya Stephens
    • Mrs. John Paul O'Brien…
    • 1999–2000
    Diahann Carroll
    Diahann Carroll
    • Jael
    • 1999
    • Creator
      • Steve Sohmer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    7.0361
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    Featured reviews

    R.Stone

    A MUST see show !

    This is one of the best Canadian shows you will see on TV ! This show has cast one of the most impressive, young & talented kids in Toronto, Danielle Bouffard. Danielle plays the role of Angel Bryson at age 5 in this wonderfully well written TV series. You will love her in this show as much as you all loved her in the role of Mary in the TV series 'Amazon'. You may also remember Danielle as Sophie in the TV series 'Traders' and Katie Miller in the TV series 'Blue Murder'.
    7bkoganbing

    Death of an Angel

    Living as close as I do to the Canadian border, I would get a lot of Canadian television, but traveling to Toronto or Hamilton was always a treat because for sure I would see an episode of Twice in a Lifetime.

    Our neighbors north of the border do some quality television and this was a favorite of mine. People die and they're brought before Judge Othniel of the Heavenly Tribunal and are given a second chance at living their lives again. If they take the deal, and they always do, they're brought back to a point in their lives where they can influence their younger selves on where they went wrong. And Judge Othniel sends an assistant, at first Gordie Brown and second Paul Popowich, to help out.

    In season two, Popowich replaced Brown, and I did like him and those episodes better. Popowich was a club kid in real life and in death he's making his afterlife count for more than his actual life did.

    But the series abruptly stopped with the death of Al Waxman from open heart surgery. Americans will remember him better from Cagney and Lacey as Lieutenant Samuels. Maybe they could have brought in an another angel, but I guess changing helpers and angels was too much.

    Yet the show apparently has great popularity in syndication, six years after the last episode was done. How do you explain the death of an angel though?

    My favorite episode is when Popowich is put into the body of a woman to aid a prospective heavenly admittee. That was very funny indeed.

    A sad loss this series ended abruptly as it did.
    jvo182

    help me!

    Hi. Yesterday I watched the "Twice In A Lifetime" episode with the guy Barry who was in a band when he was younger, and "the love of his life" over-dosed on drugs. He went back to save her life, it didn't work, so he used the last 30 minutes to go back and save her life. He did succeed. However, later on in his life, she eventually did OD. Anyways, I am looking for the song that was major in this episode. I really loved it, and wanted to know where I could get a copy of it. If anyone knows where I could, please email me. Please, and thanks
    10james_cocos-snowboots

    "You won't understand until you've walked a mile in my mocassins" But you're not an aboriginal/Asian people!

    Picture this: a lazy hangover Friday afternoon. No cable. 2:00 p.m., the notoriously worst time slot on television, until... Any television show that opens with a crusty mobile seating device bound woman stealing some innocent, exercising children's basketball, and the promise of an aged Al Waxman, instantly sucks me in. From the Lifetime-Harlequin T.V. movie style opening to the oh--so ironic plot about the crabby mobile seating device bound woman having the chance to reflect on her misguided anger so that she can ultimately find happiness despite her spinal cord injury, this show is an epiphany of brilliance. If you love awesome TV shows, you will lust after "Twice in a Lifetime".
    9ldorfman

    The Choice (episode #44) and Al Waxman (1935-2001)

    I've just finished watching what I believe was the last episode of "Twice in a Lifetime". At the end of what seems to be a regular episode (though "regular" may not be the right word, since each episode in this series is different than the other and unique), Judge Othneil's reflection appears in the dark skies. Othneil, played by Albert Waxman, repeats few sentences he had said during the episode: "Why do the good die young? That should have been asked countless times." Another quote from the episode follows immediately: Othneil is told "You were quite a warier" and he answers "I had my days". Then few words appear: "In loving memory ; Al Waxman ; 1935-2001". Well, 66 is considered young nowaday.

    I must tell you that I was quite astonished. I ran to the computer and entered IMDB where in Al Waxman's page I found out that he passed away during heart surgery. Now I was totally surprised - The episode was dealing with a person who has heart problems. The question is whether he should or should not pass ("again") a difficult open-heart surgery, when we know that the previous one did not succeed and left him with a permanent brain damage. At the end, during the actual surgery, it is seemed at first that the person who has undergone the operation has died. If it is true that stage actors' eternal wish is to die on stage during a play, this was quite an impressive way to say goodbye to an actor in a TV series, especially in one where he plays God's representative, dealing with life and death issues.

    Without Judge Othneil, there can be no "Twice in a Lifetime", so this is clearly the end of the show (even though the writers managed to switch Mr. Jones with Mr. Smith between the first and the second season, so they can always bring in another figure instead, using any lame excuse, the way they did it in two episodes in the first season). While writing, it was now reminded to me that this was the only episode when a person on the "second-life" believes Smith is actually an angel, and at the end, Mr. Smith almost admits he is (when we, the audience, know that becoming an angel is actually his true wish since episode 1 and Othinel has been telling Smith few times in the last episodes that he is improving). I guess things get new meanings in perspective.

    Now I have a question and if someone can answer it I would be really grateful: How could the screenwriters create such a great final episode? Had they first shoot one episode and then, when Waxman died, re-edited it? The editing of the repeating last sentences by Othneil was great, but for taking these two parts from the episode, they should have filmed him saying them at first; Have the producers planned to finish the show then, knowing that he may die soon?

    One last thing: this whole issue reminds me the way the Drama teacher from "Fame" left that series during the eighties. Since the actor knew he was going to die, it was arranged in one of the episodes that the class would say good-bye to their teacher who had retired. At the last scene, when all the students hugged him, they cried. The actors have said later on, that these were real tears, knowing their partners condition.

    Liron Dorfman, ISRAEL

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The character of Mr Smith played by Paul Popowich is more of a spiritual guide full of compassion than any other of the judges, just like a guardian angel should be-even for the dead.
    • Soundtracks
      Change
      (theme song, season 2)

      Written by Stephen Brackley, Glenn Morley

      Performed by Rique Franks, Terry Hatty, Wayne St. John, Sharon Lee Williams

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    FAQ19

    • How many seasons does Twice in a Lifetime have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 7, 2002 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Official site
      • PaxTV Cast bios, episode guide (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Twice in a Lifetime
    • Filming locations
      • Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    • Production company
      • Pebblehut Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

    Contribute to this page

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    Corbin Bernsen, Patrick Duffy, and Al Waxman in Destins croisés (1999)
    Top Gap
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