Playwrights '56
Ethel Waters and Lillian Gish in the presentation of The Sound and the Fury , 1955
Playwrights '56 , a.k.a. The Playwright Hour , is a 60-minute live American dramatic anthology series produced by Fred Coe [ 1] for Showtime Productions. Twenty episodes aired[citation needed ] on NBC from October 4, 1955, to June 19, 1956. It shared a Thursday time slot with Armstrong Circle Theatre .[ 1]
Stars included Mary Astor , Ralph Bellamy , Joan Blondell , George Chandler , Robert Culp , Paul Douglas , Tom Ewell , Norman Fell , Nina Foch , John Forsythe , Lillian Gish , Alice Ghostley , Lee Grant , James Gregory , Louis Jean Heydt , Steven Hill , Vivi Janiss , Henry Jones , E. G. Marshall , John McGiver , Steve McQueen , Dina Merrill , Jack Mullaney , Paul Newman , Phyllis Kirk , Edmond O'Brien , J. Pat O'Malley , Nehemiah Persoff , Tom Poston , Peter Mark Richman , Janice Rule , Kim Stanley , Warren Stevens , Karl Swenson , Franchot Tone , Ethel Waters , James Whitmore , Estelle Winwood , Jane Wyatt , and Dick York .
Among its notable writers were Horton Foote , Gore Vidal , Tad Mosel , Arnold Schulman , and A. E. Hotchner . Directors included Arthur Penn , later renowned for Bonnie and Clyde , and Delbert Mann , the 1955 Academy Award winner for directing Marty .
The program was sponsored by Pontiac automobiles.[ 2] When it was canceled, an article in the trade publication Billboard cited cost as a factor, noting that it "ran about $30,000 a week more than its more successful counterpart".[ 3] Most of the episodes originated from WRCA-TV [ 4] in Brooklyn, New York,[ 5] with the rest coming from KRCA-TV's [ 4] Hollywood studios.[ 5] After the program's June 19, 1956, broadcast, it was replaced by The Kaiser Aluminum Hour .[ 6]
Along with Producers' Showcase , Playwrights '56 shared the 1956 prime-time Emmy for Best Art Direction -Live Series.[ 7]
Partial List of Episodes of Playwrights '56
Date
Title
Star(s)
October 4, 1955
The Answer
Nina Foch, Paul Douglas, Albert Dekker [ 4] : B
October 18, 1955
The Battler
Dewey Martin , Phyllis Kirk, Paul Newman[ 8]
November 8, 1955
Snow Job
Joan Blondell, James Gregory, Meg Bundy[ 9]
November 22, 1955
Daisy, Daisy
Tom Ewell, Jane Wyatt[ 10]
December 6, 1955
The Sound and the Fury
Lillian Gish, Ethel Waters, Janice Rule, and Franchot Tone.[ 11]
December 20, 1955
The Waiting Place
Kim Stanley, Louis Jean Heydt, Louise Platt [ 12]
January 3, 1956
The Day the Trains Stopped Running
Joseph Sweeney , Elizabeth Patterson , Mary Welch [ 13]
January 17, 1956
Lost
Steven Hill[ 1]
January 31, 1956
This Business of Murder
James Whitmore[ 14]
February 14, 1956
Return to Cassion
John Forsythe, Kurt Kasznar , Dina Merrill[ 15]
February 28, 1956
Flight
Kim Stanley[ 1]
March 27, 1956
The Undiscovered Country
Cyril Ritchard , Nina Foch[ 16]
May 22, 1956
Keyhole
E. G. Marshall, Lee Grant, Henry McNaughton[ 17]
May 8, 1956
You Sometimes Get Rich
Larry Blyden , Georgiann Johnson[ 18]
June 19, 1956
Honor (final broadcast)[ 6]
Dick York, Ralph Bellamy, Leo G. Carroll , Carol Goodner [ 19]
References
^ a b c d McNeil, Alex (1996). Total Television (4th ed.). New York, New York: Penguin Books USA, Inc. p. 665. ISBN 0-14-02-4916-8 .
^ Adams, Val (March 23, 1956). "Sponsor to drop 'Playwrights '56' " . The New York Times . p. 53. ProQuest 113497637 . Retrieved March 5, 2021 – via ProQuest .
^ "Show Deaths Total 41; Some Flop, Others Just Fade Out" . Billboard . September 22, 1956. p. 2. Retrieved March 5, 2021 .
^ a b c "Tuesday (4)" (PDF) . Ross Reports on Television . October 3, 1955. p. 3. Retrieved March 6, 2021 .
^ a b Holland, Jack (January 13, 1956). "Playwrights '56 ... a Big Gamble?" (PDF) . TV-Radio Life . 32 (22): 47. Retrieved March 5, 2021 .
^ a b "Tuesday (5)" (PDF) . Ross Reports on Television . July 1, 1956. p. 58. Retrieved March 6, 2021 .
^ "Playwrights '56 and Producers's Showcase" . Television Academy . Archived from the original on March 6, 2021. Retrieved March 6, 2021 .
^ " 'Playwrights '56' to offer 'Battler' " . The New York Times . October 8, 1955. p. 37. ProQuest 113190059 . Retrieved March 5, 2021 – via ProQuest .
^ "Tuesday November 8" (PDF) . Ross Reports on Television . November 4, 1955. p. B. Retrieved March 6, 2021 .
^ Gould, Jack (November 23, 1955). "TV: 'Playwrights 56' " . The New York Times . p. 49. ProQuest 113386449 . Retrieved March 5, 2021 – via ProQuest .
^ Preis, Angela (December 4, 1955). "Something for Everyone Lined Up on Television" . The Courier-Journal . Kentucky, Louisville. p. 78. Retrieved March 4, 2021 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Tuesday December 20 (Cont'd)" (PDF) . Ross Reports on Television . December 18, 1955. p. C. Retrieved March 6, 2021 .
^ "Tuesday January 3" . Ross Reports on Television . January 1, 1956. p. C. Retrieved March 6, 2021 .
^ Shanley, J. P. (February 1, 1956). "TV: Overcome by Smoke" . The New York Times . p. 63. ProQuest 113933150 . Retrieved March 5, 2021 – via ProQuest .
^ "Tuesday February 14 (Cont'd)" (PDF) . Ross Reports on Television . February 12, 1956. p. C. Retrieved March 6, 2021 .
^ Gould, Jack (March 28, 1956). "Television: Misanthropy" . The New York Times . p. 63. ProQuest 113479300 . Retrieved March 5, 2021 – via ProQuest .
^ "Tuesday, May 22" (PDF) . Ross Reports on Television . May 20, 1956. p. B. Retrieved March 6, 2021 .
^ Gould, Jack (May 9, 1956). "TV: Give-Away Satire" . The New York Times . p. 67. ProQuest 113853936 . Retrieved March 5, 2021 – via ProQuest .
^ "TV: Drama of Civil War" . The New York Times . June 20, 1956. p. 63. ProQuest 113800306 . Retrieved March 5, 2021 – via ProQuest .
External links