September 27, 1955 (1955-09-27) – April 24, 1956 (1956-04-24)
Casablanca is an hour-long American television series, in the genre of spying and intrigue during the Cold War, which was broadcast on ABC between September 27, 1955 and April 24, 1956 as part of the wheel seriesWarner Bros. Presents.[1][2][3] The third of 20 filmed shows produced for ABC, between 1955 and 1963, by Warner Bros. Television, under the supervision of executive producer William T. Orr, Casablanca is also the only one among those shows to be structured in the form of a non-U.S.-based Cold-War-intrigue storyline, while 14 of the 20 productions were western and detective/adventure series.[4][5]
The television series stars Charles McGraw as Rick Blaine,[6] the character played in the film by Bogart. After the 7-episode Kings Row, it was the second-least-successful among Orr's twenty ABC series, canceled after the production of only ten episodes.[7] Director John Peyser has attributed the failure to studio head Jack L. Warner's refusal to finalize the hiring of charismatic rising star Anthony Quinn to play Rick and settling instead on McGraw, an actor Peyser said "couldn't act his way out of a hat".[1]
Although the standard length for episodes of hour-long filmed series was 53 or 54 minutes, the first 23 episodes of Warner Bros. Presents, including 8 of the 10 installments of Casablanca, were timed to run 48 minutes, thus enabling Warner Bros Television to append 6-minute segments, hosted by Gig Young,[8][9] promoting upcoming Warners films and chatting with stars under contract to the studio.[10]
More than a decade later, Warner Bros Television chose its Best Picture nominees for 1943, Casablanca (in addition to the winner, Warners had a second nominee, Watch on the Rhine), and 1942, Kings Row (the studio had one other nominee, Yankee Doodle Dandy), as television's initial two series to be directly derived from theatrical films. King's Row starred Jack Kelly in Robert Cummings' role in the theatrical film and Robert Horton playing Ronald Reagan's part; Kelly and Horton later played leading roles in the television series Maverick and Wagon Train respectively for five seasons beginning two years later in 1957. The third rotating element of Warner Brothers Presents, Cheyenne, the first of seven westerns produced for ABC, was a non-directly-derivative concept (Warners 1947 western, Cheyenne has no connection to the series) which also made history as TV's first hour-long western and also the first western series made for adults, rather than children, who had been watching such half-hour series as The Lone Ranger and The Cisco Kid since the earliest years of full-schedule TV programming. Analogous to the abbreviated time allotted for 8 of Casablanca's 10 installments, the 48-minute episode length was also applicable to 8 of Cheyenne's 15 installments and all 7 installments of Kings Row.[14][15]
Casablanca, the series
One of the most iconic films in Hollywood history, Casablanca perfectly caught the present-day (1942) wartime spirit of the age, but the TV series set, as it was, during the latter-day (1955) present of the Cold War, with its spies and intrigue, could not compete.[16] Its stories were molded into the style of standard TV drama of the era, omitting any mention of themes which would have been considered inappropriate for an early-evening audience.
Series characters in 1955 and in the 1983 revival
The three top-billed roles in the 1942 film are played by Humphrey Bogart as Rick Blaine, Ingrid Bergman as Ilsa Lund and Paul Henreid as Victor Laszlo. In the series, the last name of Rick, portrayed by Charles McGraw, is Jason, while Ilsa and Victor do not appear as characters. The debut episode, "Who Holds Tomorrow?", showcases single-installment guest star Anita Ekberg playing a version of Ilsa, named Trina, but the storyline's reminiscence of Rick and Trina's past relationship veers into spies, killers and Cold War intrigue.[17]
Billed fourth through seventh in the film's credits are Claude Rains as Captain Louis Renault, Conrad Veidt as Major Strasser, Sydney Greenstreet as Ferrari and Peter Lorre as Ugarte. The TV series retains the French police chief who bears a slightly different surname, Captain Renaud, played by Marcel Dalio (who was unbilled as Emil, Rick's gambling table croupier in 1942). The Nazi major, who had been fatally shot by Rick at the end of the film, was eliminated as a character, but Ferrari, the Fat Man with the powerful connections, was now portrayed by heavily built Dan Seymour (who was unbilled as Abdul the doorman at Rick's in 1942). Like Strasser, Ugarte, who had been reported as killed near the end of the film, is not in the series. Among those further down the film's cast list, S. K. Sakall (credited in a number of his later roles as S. Z. "Cuddles" Sakall) as Carl, Dooley Wilson as Sam and Leonid Kinskey as Sasha are reflected in the series' three supporting regulars — Ludwig Stossel (who had an unbilled part as the refugee Mr. Leuchtag in 1942) portrays the Sakall-styled maître d', Ludwig, Clarence Muse is at the piano as Sam and Michael Fox provides slight comedy relief as Sasha the bartender.[18]
Twenty-seven years after the final first-run episode of Casablanca was broadcast in April 1956, Warner Bros. Television produced another TV series titled Casablanca which premiered on April 10, 1983. The role of Rick, whose surname was returned to its original form, Blaine, was won by David Soul who gained TV stardom as one of the stars of the popular 1975–79 police detective series Starsky & Hutch. His turn as Rick, however, lasted only five episodes.
The setting of the 1983 series returned to the film's period of early World War II, with its action described as taking place over a year earlier than the events depicted in the film. All the personalities depicted in the 1955 series were the same, except for the return of Major Strasser and his aide Lieutenant Heinz. The French police captain's name also returned to its film form, Renault, and the bartender's name was now spelled "Sacha".
Episodes
No
Title
Directed by
Written by
Original air date
1
"Who Holds Tomorrow?"
John Peyser
David P. Harmon
September 27, 1955 (1955-09-27)
To be determined[19] Guest cast: Anita Ekberg as Trina, Alberto Morin as Portino
Rick becomes aware of plotting by Soviet spies; the wife (Maureen O'Sullivan) of an American newspaper reporter (William Hopper) captured behind the Iron Curtain is reunited with her husband.
A man who opposed the Vichy government in Casablanca had been betrayed and his father asks for Rick's help in finding who was responsible. In the promotional segment, Gig Young commemorates the 30th anniversary of the John Barrymore vehicle, Don Juan, Warner Bros. first film with recorded sound. Guest cast: Lester Matthews as Colonel Masters, Karin Booth as Sylvia, Jean De Briac as General Dupres, Lisa Daniels as Vicki, Jon Shepodd as Larry, Morris Ankrum as Lou
The enticingly named international spy Ghitana Eros uses her beauty and erotic wiles to entrap innocent tourist Allardyce Newton. Guest cast: Elliott Reid as Allardyce Newton, Rossana Rory as Ghitana Eros
A man who is fatally stabbed in the alley alongside Rick's place reveals with his last breath that a plan is afoot to assassinate the diplomats gathering that night for a peace conference. Guest cast: Eduard Franz as Ben Hassan, Rena Clark as Rhoda, Corey Allen as Abdel
Trying to impress a beautiful international playgirl, retired bullfighter Francisco ignores the advice of his friend Rick and determines that he must return to the ring. Guest cast: Mari Blanchard as Elsa Norden, James Mitchell as Francisco, Roberta Haynes as Maria, Hayden Rorke as Henderson, Ric Roman as Rossano
To be determined Guest cast: Olive Sturgess as Susette, Peter van Eyck as Chadec, Carl Milletaire as Guillot, Laurie Mitchell as Gaby, Ann Codee as Miss Stohli
Sources
Anderson, Christopher. Hollywood TV: The Studio System in the Fifties. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1994.
Balio, Tino, editor. Hollywood in the Age of Television. Boston: Unwin, Hyman, 1990.
Woolley, Lynn; Malsbary, Robert W. and Strange, Robert G., Jr. Warner Brothers Television: Every Show of the Fifties and Sixties, Episode by Episode. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland, 1985.