Part one (November 1, 1998) In 1958, a teenage
Otis Williams is running to meet his friend
Elbridge "Al" Bryant at a musical performance by
The Cadillacs. After the concert that inspired Otis to pursue a music career, Otis and Al go to a barber where they get the Tony Curtis and DA-style process. When Otis goes home for dinner, his stepfather is angry about the new hairstyle and pressures him to work at the assembly line instead of going into music, which Otis heatedly rejects. Six months later, Otis and Al along with two new band members sing on a street corner when they see another group of singers, the Voicemasters, across the street, and are impressed by one singer's
bass voice. The next day after school, Otis chases the bass singer named
Melvin Franklin before asking him to join his group, Otis Williams & the Siberians. Melvin agrees on the condition that his mother approves, which she later does with Otis' convincing. The group is singing after school one day when they notice a group of girls watching them. Upon seeing this, the group follows them while singing "
Earth Angel". The girls go their separate ways until one of them, Josephine, stays behind before Otis asks her out. The next Saturday, the group hears that they’re wanted at a radio station studio that’s revealed to be in the basement of a run-down apartment. Radio station owner Johnnie May Matthews declares herself their new manager and producer, and also changes their name to Otis Williams and the Distants. In April 1960, the group is waiting to perform at a party where they meet The Primes singers
Paul Williams and
Eddie Kendricks, The Primettes (who later became
The Supremes),
The Miracles lead singer
Smokey Robinson and
Motown Records founder and owner
Berry Gordy. The Primes and Primettes perform and the Distants are impressed by their sound. After they perform, Otis and Melvin go to see Berry Gordy, who gives them a business card. Johnnie shows up with a new car she bought using the group’s money while showing them plenty of extra money. Awestruck, they ask about when they get paid, which angers Johnnie and she immediately fires them before driving away. Al and two other members promptly quit the group. Shortly after, Melvin tells Otis that Eddie and Paul recently left their own group and are interested in joining them. Otis is reluctant, but ultimately accepts when Al rejoins the group. With this new line-up, they rename themselves the Elgins. Paul teaches them how to dance and becomes their unofficial
choreographer, while Eddie becomes their
falsetto singer. In March 1961, Otis goes to Motown Studios to meet Berry Gordy. Berry asks the group to come up with a better group name. After waiting outside the studio for hours coming up with a new name, a secretary named
Martha Reeves finds them outside and calls them in to meet Berry. He asks them for their name, to which Otis replies "The Temptations". Berry likes the name and agrees to hear them sing. After hearing them perform "
Oh Mother of Mine" (which would become their debut single for Motown) Berry enthusiastically signs them. The group is now in high spirits and make a pact to never leave the group. Otis arrives home to find out that Josephine is pregnant, and although he is shocked, he promises to take responsibility. Otis and Josephine were married shortly after and later gave birth to their son, Lamont. While the group made moderately successful records such as "
Paradise" and "
I Want a Love I Can See" as well as getting real choreography from
Cholly Atkins, they were known as "The hitless Temptations" during their first three years at Motown. The group start to doubt themselves with Al becoming more volatile. After performing at a New Year's Eve party, Al is immediately fired from the group for assaulting Paul. The remaining four go back on stage to perform the classic party song "
Shout".
Jimmy Ruffin and his younger brother
David Ruffin go onstage, singing along with the group. The group is impressed with the duo's singing, especially David's. After the party, all of them (except for Jimmy) go to Melvin's mother's house to eat. While they eat and talk, the four invite David to join, which he accepts. They make a toast to the future success of The Temptations. In January 1964, the group goes to Hitsville to record "
The Way You Do the Things You Do". Shortly after the song hits the charts, the group goes on tour with various other Motown artists, such as
The Vandellas and
Marvin Gaye. In November 1964, Smokey writes them another song called "
My Girl". The song debuts early the next year and becomes a massive success, reaching number one on the charts. The group enjoys their newfound success and wealth, spending money on themselves and their loved ones. By early 1966, however, David becomes arrogant and attempts to take sole credit for the group's success. He also begins using drugs and starts showing up late for rehearsals and meetings, if at all. Soon after recording "
Ain't Too Proud to Beg", Otis and Melvin pay David a visit, warning him to clean up his act or else be fired. Berry then introduces the group to their new manager Shelly Berger. Shelly plans to expand the Temptations' fanbase to the mainstream white audience. After some reluctance and consideration, they agree and are put on a month-long tour with
The Supremes. The tour is successful and gets them to the
Copacabana, although David considers his friend Flynn to be his new manager instead of Shelly. Flynn informs the group that David wants to change their name to "David Ruffin & The Temptations" or else he will not perform, which they reject. David shows up anyway to perform "
I'm Losing You" before leaving in a separate limo. After the show, all of the others but Eddie vote to kick him out. David rushes to Hitsville in his limo. While the four watch from a window, Shelly meets David outside and hands him a note informing him of their decision. David immediately gets angry and yells at them through the window before driving off, after which Melvin rhetorically asks "So now what"?
Part two (November 2, 1998) Later in 1968, the Temptations hire their friend
Dennis Edwards as a replacement for David. It is around this time that the group starts recording
psychedelic soul songs such as "
Cloud Nine". During a concert performance, the group is about to sing "Ain't Too Proud to Beg" when David goes onstage to take the microphone away from Dennis before singing. The others go along with this to
save face but then get security guards to escort David out. By 1969, Paul develops a debilitating drinking problem and Melvin is diagnosed with
rheumatoid arthritis in his legs, yet both continue performing. Otis and Josephine also get a divorce. As Paul's condition gets progressively worse, the others begin to consider whether Paul should retire temporarily. Eddie is against this. In November 1970, Eddie visits David, who begins to turn him against Otis and Melvin while giving him his first shot of cocaine. After Paul becomes well enough to sing again, The Temptations record a song called "
Just My Imagination". With Eddie leaving the group and Paul being too sick to tour, the group replaces them with Richard Street. Later, Otis and his son Lamont visit Paul at his house. Paul asks Otis to rejoin the group while he nearly falls demonstrating his dancing skills. Otis tells him that he'll be back when he gets better. In June 1972,
Norman Whitfield writes the song "
Papa Was a Rolling Stone". In a montage set to the song, Paul is seen struggling with his addiction while fighting with his wife before he drives around town to commit
suicide in a parking lot. Eddie reunites with the others at the funeral, with Melvin telling him that they will always be family. By 1977, the Temptations have moved from
Detroit to
Los Angeles and have been hit with a dry spell in their career. The group, now with Otis and Melvin as the only remaining original members, fires Shelly before leaving Motown to record an album for
Atlantic Records. Eddie is still making hit songs while David is also under a dry spell after having made hit songs as a solo artist. One day, while Melvin is helping a woman with her grocery bags, a thief gets in his car and tries to start it. When Melvin tries to stop him, the thief shoots him in both of his legs before kicking him out and driving off in his car. In the hospital, Melvin tells Otis to go on tour without him to make some much needed money. After the tour, Otis goes back to Detroit with Lamont to visit his mother, who tells him that she has cancer. In 1980, Melvin's legs are still recovering and the group leaves Atlantic Records. Eddie's success is starting to fade and he is reduced to playing in small nightclubs. While performing one night, Eddie spots David in the audience, brings him on stage and they sing together. After everyone leaves the club, Eddie and David share a drink at the bar and agree to start their own faction of The Temptations with Dennis Edwards, who was fired from the original group in 1978. Otis and Melvin move back to Detroit to rejoin Motown as well as rehire Shelly. Motown becomes interested in setting up a reunion tour between both sets of The Temptations. By 1982, the tour is officially underway and both sets of Temptations come together to rehearse and become reacquainted. While on tour, Josephine calls and informs Otis that Lamont died in a construction accident. After Lamont's funeral, Otis' grief gets the better of him and David's drug addiction starts to trigger his destructive nature. In 1989, The Temptations are inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. At the ceremony, Otis and Melvin are reunited with David, Eddie, and Dennis. Despite their past squabbles and rivalries, for one moment, they are all friends again as they accept their honor and remember Paul. In June 1991, a dead body is found in front of a hospital. After a week in the morgue, the body is finally identified as that of David Ruffin, dead of an apparent drug overdose. Eddie dies soon after of lung cancer in October 1992. In February 1995, Otis and Melvin, the latter now in a wheelchair, visit Melvin's mother. While preparing to eat dinner, Melvin, despite being in a wheelchair, volunteers to get short ribs from the kitchen. While he's gone, Melvin's mother thanks Otis for taking care of Melvin and keeping The Temptations together through all the good and bad times. The two then call for Melvin, but he doesn't respond. They go into the kitchen and find him unresponsive. Many people show up at the funeral, including Smokey Robinson, who sings his song "Really Gonna Miss You". The film ends with the "classic five" Temptations (Otis, Melvin, Eddie, Paul, and David) in their youth, singing "My Girl" on a stage. At the end of the song, they take a bow, with Otis saying in a voice-over "Temptations, forever." ==Afterwards==