An adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel about a talented young man from a poor background who strives to win the unattainable rich girl. Set on Long Island, the wealthy Daisy Buchanan falls in love with Jay Gatsby, an Army captain. While Gatsby fights in the war, Daisy is pressured by her family to marry Tom Buchanan, a man of their social set. Five years pass, and Gatsby now owns a huge estate on Long Island. Daisy's cousin, Nick Carraway, rents Gatsby's gate house for the summer. Gatsby hosts lavish parties and seeks to reconnect with Daisy.[1][2]
Cast
The following performers received screen credit for their performances:[2]
Rod Serling hosted the show, and Dick Joyce was the announcer.[2]
Production
Martin Manulis was the producer, and Franklin Schaffner directed. David Shaw wrote the teleplay as an adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel.[2] The production was broadcast live on June 26, 1958, from Television City in Los Angeles.[2][1] It was part of the second season of Playhouse 90, an anthology television series that was voted "the greatest television series of all time" in a 1970 poll of television editors.[3]
The program's sponsors were Ban roll-on deodorant, Ipana toothpaste, Kleenex, Camel cigarettes, and Pillsbury.[2]
Reception
UPI television critic William Ewald called it "a muddler". He found that it "had very little to do with Scott Fitzgerald's story." Although the plot and the relationships of the major characters were "pretty true", it lacked Fitzgerald's bite in depiction of wealth and drained the irony from the story. Ewald wrote that the television adaptation was "not bad in its own way -- it had a swift, logical plot, the sets had the sumptuous smell of Long Island in the 1920s, and Robert Ryan and Jeanne Crain... turned in jobs that suited the script."[4] One headline for Ewald's review proclaimed: "TV 'Gatsby' Fraud, Not Fitzgerald's 'Great Gatsby'".[5] Another said: "Great Gatsby' Neither 'Great' Nor 'Gatsby'".[4]