The ' Lete Television Pr()G [Ams

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The ' Lete Television Pr()G [Ams EEK' $ 'C ' LETE TELEVISION PR()G [AMS THE .......... ........... .. ........... The Showcase . ............. ................................. ........................................., •:.:.:.:.:-:.:.:.:-:.:-:.:-:.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:.::::::::::::::::::::::.:.:.:.:-:-:-:-:.:-:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:.:::::::::::: ............. Editorials ß":':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':'i'i'!'?!?!'!'i'!'!'!'i .......................... ..................................... Column Comment Editor Speaks Complete Short Story ..... ...:.:.:....:......................................................... ........ .................... ..................................................................... ............................-.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.... ........ .............................................................. ................................................... ..... .................. ................................................................ ..................................................................... ..................... ========================== TV Shows This Week : .•.•[•[:•:•{::[1•::::•::;•[•[•::::•::;•::•[•::•::•[[•$•j•2•::•{•::•j.•:•[•::::::::[::[::::::•[•:::::•::•::•::•::•::•::•::•::•::::::•::•::•::•::•::•::::::•::•::•:::::{•::::::::•::•::•[::•::•:•.•:[-•::.:•.[•:•:::•:•:•:•:•.•:-.::..:..:...::.:•:.::.....:." ;.......... .½.-......,•:.•.,...'..:,•:i..-.:....i•e•..'...:•::.•<..::•:.?..t•..:;-.,....-.•, -.. ":•-'•...•-:•::•½:;-::-:-•:==============================================================================================================================================================================..................:-:............................... '-.-'.:•:.•::•?..'-':t .........:-::-:.:.'-....................... :........ =========================== .................................... ....... ß..... ß.....•::::•-¾:..':...'•..-:. -. ;...•. ..- ..... ß ß....... .-..' ...-'...........:.:.:.....:.:::....•.:.. '"""":"•i.'-::..•{.......................................... .'::•.•.::•.'•-•-¾................................ ß . '-.--. Doing If The Easy Way JULY 14, 1957 VOL. XX!X, No. 28 i _. MorePower for NewJersey! ....-...-.-.......-...- ............ Electricity keeps workin6 for ............... .........-.....-.._-.-.-...-.-.... ..........-_..-.-...-.-.-.-.-.-.... .......-.-.......-.......-...-.-...- you 24 hours a day... and . ß .:.:.:.:.:-:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:-:-:.:-: Public Servicekeeps on the job ß iiii!!!iii!iiiiii!!ii. ' ".'. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ....................... ==================================== -i:i:!:i:i:i:i:!:i:!:i:i:!:i:!:!:i:i:i ........................._............... night and day to seeto it that ß :i:i:fi:i:fi:i:fi:............ ß you have dependableservice at your fingertips! What's more, ß Z'i':'Z':<'Z'. " electricitydoes so much... oost, :::::::::::::::::::::::::::. .o little! ::::::::::::::::::::::: :.:.:.:.:.:.:.:... PUBLIC•SERVICE HERO--Dr. Cecil W. ,Clark, only doctor in ,hurricane-wrecked Cam- cron, La•, rests. lie worked •tround The clock •tfter the big storm hit to take ca,re Iof injured. His .nvife •and child are safe. Three of his children are missing and presumed lost. THE IDEAL PLACE TO DINE AND WINE . ....z tl •,,tl.•. ' "i __ ß . "'LIAN'AHERICA • : el. BROILED IOBSTE• - -- DAILf !.'ROGS' I,EGb - •irT SHELL CIIAu• - BLUEFISH - TROUT - HALIBUT - SALMON - SHIIIMI'S- SCALLOI'•- OYSTEMS - CLAM - COD F]•!! - S•VO[{D FISH - DAILY DINNERS 168 BELMONTAVE [Cot. Burbank).HALEDON - . - •mberf 5-988S ....,, .. WHITEand SHAUGER, Inc. I ß for ,, I I . FU R N IT UR E ":-'-:'•::•,,,'i*''? :.;;:':i:::" J -, LivingRoom BedRoom DiningRoom RUGSAND CARPETS A SPECIALTY ß 9 -" qUALITY and LOWPRI½..• •.! .•,..•.[" FINISHINGTOUCH'Putting the •inal touches to theYWCA "Green Thumb" program, .Mrs. H. D. '.Thomas, former park commissioner,. .4• -- 39Years Serving thePublic -- ::':"'-";'" :•'-"'"•-•':"•[•' shows grounds supervisor Paul Nemeth the location for the last 435STRAIGHT ST. MU. 4.7880 ..•'A.TE_.P•S•_O•,_•.N.J. tree plan,ts as Ma's. •rteven I•. Koenig of She YWCA house-new build- 240MARK!• ST. (Ca, rroH Plaza Hotel Bld:g'-i •.-'::.--*L.:..-•:'1Vi•=•:79•i:,] ing committeelooks •.•.•. ß :. .. Published-Weekly by THE CHI•ONICLE COMPANY 170-172 Butler Street . Paterson, New 3ersey LAmbert 5-2741 .:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.- VINCENT S. PAIJI•II,I,O, Mnaaging ]Miter ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Britered as Iooond Clm msttor Ausust 24, lg•8, at 'the Pos• Office st Psterson, N.J., under the set of id•rch 3, 1879. JuLY 14, 19• - ¾ol.xxIx, No. •$ Single Copy 5 Cents .--'-.- 22 $3.00 • Yesr By Mail , CONTENTS FEATURES GET:• A%VAR!)•l)oroth) D _Block rei-•-ixes th ]•11rSllt• ,,•holar•hlp axx•rded !)) the West Pat 'r.,•}11 '-T '• dhmer t the )c 'ock Complete Short Story'_ .......................... 14 llo .,•'. ß I to ri-ht ax ' •.lr' olin D'St'an, pat pr'•id it; AI . ocrn.r, clmirman of. chool commit ; Dorolh) T) Block; Isyor A!fn•l Bauman; and • Te• !_•r•hL DEPARTMENTS ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Books 'n Stuff .: '.1 : ';:i:!:i:i:i:i:i:i: Opportunities Unlimited __ Editorials '. / The EditorSpeaks .................... -- / Column of Commen{ ............... ......-.-... The Showcase _. 10 :i!{i;ii::;i{ii:.?:iii!!i?:iiiili?::;ii;ii::?:!::?:i::•:-' !•;.}iii}ili .;::%ii::::-::...:•;-...:.•:• Complete Television Program for the Week ___11, 12, 13 COVER PICTURE: .It's ea• if you know how. With the summer time at !rand ninny .. 'vaca•oners are treated *.o ninny spectscular sights •nd events. ß An outstanding thrill to nmay vacationers, psrtieul•rly those "• ' ho are sports-minded, is to see ,something out of the ordinary ',; ß'. accomplished. Here og• our cover picture a water ski-jumping " e.hamp, Connie Der, is laidrig to the airways •s she tunes up for (left) of Ea,,t P; te•on, rtx"iv-s , n•ratul lions nnd { future championshipevents. May we. suggest, while away on t ilic t, o 'hievem,n in 1! wmi from Bri . Gert.-I!. L. _•' vacation, to try it. .. ,, '" field, comma.ndero th . :•. Army B ,•_, omm'rid. C•I• ß lain Th()n ' n,. n of Mr. lid •lr.•. Thon .t •. Thonison,88 ......_ 4;_ '•- •Irc•wo• )r,, w•.' • lmi,nd • for chi' of •e Maint 'i•• B•nch 8i ha!' Dixision. .aI - -" •m 'nte•! th Am3 in 1942. -.. I"I•"-CHRONICL•E ß . .::? •, _ % -,. - , •... ß ........ g trains, •He h•s •hat he call: commuting •eord. In fact, h•s rain leaves ly, conductorsthink he's homeY• ......... •atn out C o• ?•/////•//// enough to sour anyon, l•ents the d runtled newsman. Recently a group og Ne• •rk disc j•keys •mplained a•ut ha•ng • •sh for the AM train from S•mford Co•. Hottelet,•Off• at,the• late risersf• he: "I'm <the ;rly bir• I e•llen e a•yone to mn•h my •'The CBS Morning New in each ins•nee ne•, • •en Monday • 5-8:00Friday AM,(CBS EDTTele•- for .Eastern Time Zon Sta ion; 8:45-9:00 • EDT for •th Eastern and Central stations :45,10:00 AM, EDT for •entral Zone outlets). The is dire•d by Bob .•rkel .• "l•l•]SCILLA"--Desert sand and dirt boll up •mder the fireball of atom bomb detonated from a balloon 700 leet above •the desert the •ktomic Test Site near Denver..The device, niclmamed produceda giant fireball .•vith•n iridescentring shown near the which officials say is a common o•uren•e. OU COLUMBI• ,UNIVERSITY--Alvin Kass, ,of 445 East Thir- tieth St., delivering the Salut•torium address at the Colurn. F' IL SHe OREs bi• C•.11egeClass Day.exercises last Week. Mr. Kay, who is RiEgDL 21, addressed550 fellow gl•lUa•S and about500 spectators at the ceremony, whichß precededColumbi• U•iversity's 203d Commencement,. The CHRONICLE "Undercurrent" Premieres Boo s'.Stuff Early this year, James Michael Curley, 82-year-old patriarch of Boston politics, underwent an emergency operation for a stom- ach ulcer. Among more than 15,000 pieces of mail he received in the two weeks following the operation, there was one letter he will always cherish. It was addressed simply: "To the Mayor of the Poor in the hospital that he built, Massachusetts." As sinner or saint, P•obin Hood or Santa Claus, depending on your view, James Michael Curley dominated Boston for more than half a . century. In his autobiog- raphy//..•I'd Do It Again," which Prentice-Hall will pu,blish on May 13, he reports that his con- science is clear. "I would do the "Undercurrent," a weekly summer replacement for "The Lineup" every Friday, premieres same things all over, had I the -on the CBS Television Network July 19. Shown here (left to right) are Robert Sterling, $. John first portion of my life to relive," .Launer and Tom Tully in.a scene from the first program entitled "The Clay Pigeon." says. Curley. Sponsors are: Procter & Gamble Co. and Brown & Williamson Tobacco Coro. "The same things" are astound- ing. Mayor of. Boston for 16 years, a Member of Congress for eight years, and Governor of Massachusetts, Curley has been labeled "the most 'controversial political personality during the first half of the present century." First elected to the Boston Common Council in 1899, Curley spent 56 years in the political arena. His campaign never lacked excitement. In 1903, for example, Curley and his brother Tom ran for re-election from the Boston city jail, where they served 60- day terms for taking Civil Serv- ice examinations for two friends. Both were re-elected' Tom .to the State Senate, and "Handsome Jim" to the Board of Aldermen. Through the years Curley has been attacked
Recommended publications
  • Finlandia Lions Great Lakes Christian Crusaders
    Finlandia Lions # Name HT YR POS Hometown - Last School 1 Bailey Froberg 5-5 JR G L’Anse, Mich. – Gogebic College 2 Molly Berg* 5-3 SR G Hancock, Mich. – Hancock HS 3 Toria Nagy* 5-5 SO G Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. – Sault Area HS 4 Harlee Froberg* 5-11 SO G Houghton, Mich. – Houghton HS 11 Katie Loman* 5-8 SO G Ishpeming, Mich. – Ishpeming HS 12 Martina Jahfetson 5-5 FR G Baraga, Mich. – Baraga HS 13 Casana Ryynanen 5-10 FR F Houghton, Mich. – Houghton HS 20 Taylor Pertile* 5-5 SR G Hancock, Mich. – Hancock HS 22 Mariah Austin* 5-8 SO G Negaunee, Mich. - Lakeland 24 Carsyn Osterman 5-7 SO G/F Baraga, Mich. – Baraga HS 25 Mia Glenn* 5-10 SR F Las Vegas, Nev. – Valley HS 44 Katie Lundeen* 5-10 SO F Maple, Wis. – Northwestern HS Head Coach: Mariah LaPointe-Dunham Assistant Coach: Allen Dehority, Brandi Hainault Great Lakes Christian Crusaders # Name Pos. YR HT Hometown - Last School 1 Careya Pace G FR 5-2 Akron, OH / East HS 3 Randi Fitzgerald G FR 5-4 Detroit, Mich. / Warren Fitzgerald 4 Valerie Kopper G SR 5-3 San Carlos, Costa Rica / Costa Rica Institute of Tech. 12 Mystic Striker G SO 5-7 Fort Belknap Indian Reservation, Mont./ Harlem HS 32 Linnell Buegar G FR Monrovia, Liberia 44 Tilly Guild F SO 5-10 Grand Ledge, Mich. - Grand Ledge HS Head Coach: Richard Westerlund Finlandia vs. Great Lakes Christian THE MATCH-UP: Finlandia will take on Great PASS THE BALL: Molly Berg is moving her way Lakes Christian.
    [Show full text]
  • Howard Cosell Retires: a Tribute - Baseball, Seattle, and Japan
    University of Central Florida STARS On Sport and Society Public History 2-5-1992 Howard Cosell Retires: A Tribute - Baseball, Seattle, and Japan Richard C. Crepeau University of Central Florida, [email protected] Part of the Cultural History Commons, Journalism Studies Commons, Other History Commons, Sports Management Commons, and the Sports Studies Commons Find similar works at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/onsportandsociety University of Central Florida Libraries http://library.ucf.edu This Commentary is brought to you for free and open access by the Public History at STARS. It has been accepted for inclusion in On Sport and Society by an authorized administrator of STARS. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Crepeau, Richard C., "Howard Cosell Retires: A Tribute - Baseball, Seattle, and Japan" (1992). On Sport and Society. 314. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/onsportandsociety/314 SPORT AND SOCIETY FOR ARETE February 5, 1992 At the end of January Howard Cosell retired from broadcasting. For the most part talking heads come and go without making a major impact, but the retirement of Howard Cosell marks the end of career that transformed sports broadcasting and left a mark on American society. In recent years it has become the vogue to mock and satirize Cosell, and in some ways he had become a caricature of his own persona. But Howard Cosell transformed radio sports, television sports, and the general approach to sports by writers, commentators and fans. Trained as a lawyer Howard began his broadcasting career in New York doing a show for kids on baseball.
    [Show full text]
  • Anthology Drama: the Case of CBS Les Séries Anthologiques Durant L’Âge D’Or De La Télévision Américaine : Le Style Visuel De La CBS Jonah Horwitz
    Document generated on 09/26/2021 8:52 a.m. Cinémas Revue d'études cinématographiques Journal of Film Studies Visual Style in the “Golden Age” Anthology Drama: The Case of CBS Les séries anthologiques durant l’âge d’or de la télévision américaine : le style visuel de la CBS Jonah Horwitz Fictions télévisuelles : approches esthétiques Article abstract Volume 23, Number 2-3, Spring 2013 Despite the centrality of a “Golden Age” of live anthology drama to most histories of American television, the aesthetics of this format are widely URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1015184ar misunderstood. The anthology drama has been assumed by scholars to be DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1015184ar consonant with a critical discourse that valued realism, intimacy and an unremarkable, self-effacing, functional style—or perhaps even an “anti-style.” See table of contents A close analysis of non-canonical episodes of anthology drama, however, reveals a distinctive style based on long takes, mobile framing and staging in depth. One variation of this style, associated with the CBS network, flaunted a virtuosic use of ensemble staging, moving camera and attention-grabbing Publisher(s) pictorial effects. The author examines several episodes in detail, demonstrating Cinémas how the techniques associated with the CBS style can serve expressive and decorative functions. The sources of this style include the technological limitations of live-television production, networks’ broader aesthetic goals, the ISSN seminal producer Worthington Miner and contemporaneous American 1181-6945 (print) cinematic styles. 1705-6500 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article Horwitz, J. (2013). Visual Style in the “Golden Age” Anthology Drama: The Case of CBS.
    [Show full text]
  • Brief for Respondents
    No. 10-1293 In the Morris Tyler Moot Court of Appeals at Yale FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, ET AL., PETITIONERS v. FOX TELEVISION STATIONS, INC., ET AL., RESPONDENTS FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION AND UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, PETITIONERS v. ABC, INC., ET AL., RESPONDENTS ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT BRIEF FOR THE RESPONDENTS LEWIS BOLLARD JONATHAN SIEGEL Counsel for Respondents The Yale Law School 127 Wall Street New Haven, CT 06511 (203) 432–4992 QUESTIONS PRESENTED The FCC forbids the broadcasting of indecent speech, defined “as material that, in context, depicts or describes sexual or excretory activities or organs in terms patently offensive as measured by contemporary community standards for the broadcast medium.” J.A. 49. The questions presented are: 1. Whether the FCC’s definition of indecency violates the Fifth Amendment because it is impermissibly vague. 2. Whether the FCC’s ban on indecency violates the First Amendment because it is not narrowly tailored and because it does not require scienter for liability. i PARTIES TO THE PROCEEDINGS Petitioners are the Federal Communications Commission and the United States of America. Respondents who were petitioners in the court of appeals in Fox Television Stations, Inc. v. FCC are: Fox Television Stations, Inc., CBS Broadcasting Inc., WLS Television, Inc., KTRK Television, Inc., KMBC Hearst-Argyle Television, Inc., and ABC Inc. Respondents who were intervenors in the court of appeals in Fox Television Stations, Inc. v. FCC are: NBC Universal, Inc., NBC Telemundo License Co., NBC Television Affiliates, FBC Television Affiliates Association, CBS Television Network Affiliates, Center for the Creative Community, Inc., doing business as Center for Creative Voices in Media, Inc., and ABC Television Affiliates Association.
    [Show full text]
  • National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet
    NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018 (8-86) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number ——— Page ——— SUPPLEMENTARY LISTING RECORD NRIS Reference Number: 99000550 Date Listed: 5/14/99 Hollywood Cemetery Los Angeles CA Property Name County State N/A Multiple Name This property is listed in the National Register of Historic Places in accordance with the attached nomination documentation subject to the following exceptions, exclusions, or amendments, notwithstanding the National Park Service certification included in the nomination documentation. —,——.—————-j /Lx7—————————————— 7 ^ / Signature/^ofvche Keeper Date of Action Amended Items in Nomination: Name of Property: The Historic Name of the property should be: Hollywood Cemetery. [This reflects the name of the resource during its primary period of significance; the name Hollywood Memorial Park Cemetery is moved to the Common Name.] This information was confirmed with M. Lortie of the CA SHPO. DISTRIBUTION: National Register property file Nominating Authority (without nomination attachment) NFS Form 10-900 (Rev. 10-90) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES REGISTRATION FORM This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete each item by marking "x" in the appropriate box or by entering the information requested. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction Abc Sports and Network Sports Television
    Introduction abc sports and network sports television in september 1994, Sports Illustrated published a list of the forty most infl uential sports fi gures in the forty years since the magazine’s launch. Its top two selections—Muhammad Ali and Michael Jordan—were no great surprise. At the height of their respective careers, Ali and Jordan were argu- ably the most recognizable people on Earth. Sports Illustrated’s third-ranked selection—the American Broadcasting Company’s sports television master- mind Roone Arledge—was comparatively obscure. Arledge never fronted for global ad campaigns, had a shoe line, or divided a nation with his politics. But the magazine might have underestimated the infl uence of this producer and executive. During Arledge’s thirty-eight-year stint at the network, ABC built and codifi ed the media infrastructure that made possible global sport celebri- ties of Ali and Jordan’s unprecedented magnitude. ABC Sports is behind some of network sports television’s most signifi cant practices, personalities, and moments. It created the weekend anthology Wide World of Sports, transformed professional football into a prime-time spectacle with Monday Night Football, and fashioned the Olympics into a mega media event. It helped to turn Ali, the sportscaster Howard Cosell, and the daredevil Evel Knievel into stars and captured now-iconic instances that include Tommie Smith and John Carlos’s raised-fi st protest at the 1968 Olympics, the terrorist attacks at the 1972 Munich Games, Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs’s 1973 “Battle of the Sexes” tennis match, the US hockey team’s 1980 “Miracle on Ice” victory over the Soviet Union, and the 1999 Women’s World Cup fi nal.
    [Show full text]
  • Consuming-Kids-Transcript.Pdf
    1 MEDIA EDUCATION F O U N D A T I O N 60 Masonic St. Northampton, MA 01060 | TEL 800.897.0089 | [email protected] | www.mediaed.org Consuming Kids The Commercialization of Childhood Transcript INTRODUCTION The consumer embryo begins to develop during the first year of existence. Children begin their consumer journey in infancy. And they certainly deserve consideration as consumers at that time. – James U. McNeal | Pioneering Youth Marketer [TITLE SCREEN] Consuming Kids: The Commercialization of Childhood NARRATOR: Not since the end of World War II, at the height of the baby boom, have there been so many kids in our midst. There are now more than 52 million kids under 12 in all in the United States – the biggest burst in the U.S. youth population in half a century. And for American business, these kids have come to represent the ultimate prize: an unprecedented, powerful and elusive new demographic to be cut up and captured at all costs. There is no doubt that marketers have their sights on kids because of their increasing buying power – the amount of money they now spend on everything from clothes to music to electronics, totaling some 40 billion dollars every year. But perhaps the bigger reason for marketers’ interest in kids may be the amount of adult spending that American kids under 12 now directly influence – an astronomical 700 billion dollars a year, roughly the equivalent of the combined economies of the world’s 115 poorest countries. DAVID WALSH: One economic impact of children is the money that they themselves spend – the money that they get from their parents or grandparents, the money that they get as allowance; when they get older, the money that they earn themselves.
    [Show full text]
  • New York to Hollywood: Advertising, Narrative Formats, and Changing Televisual Space in the 1950'S
    Bard College Bard Digital Commons Senior Projects Spring 2017 Bard Undergraduate Senior Projects Spring 2017 New York to Hollywood: Advertising, Narrative Formats, and Changing Televisual Space in the 1950's Peter McCormack Bard College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.bard.edu/senproj_s2017 Part of the United States History Commons, and the Visual Studies Commons This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Recommended Citation McCormack, Peter, "New York to Hollywood: Advertising, Narrative Formats, and Changing Televisual Space in the 1950's" (2017). Senior Projects Spring 2017. 148. https://digitalcommons.bard.edu/senproj_s2017/148 This Open Access work is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been provided to you by Bard College's Stevenson Library with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this work in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights- holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. For more information, please contact [email protected]. From New York to Hollywood: Advertising, Narrative Formats, and Changing Televisual Space in the 1950’s Senior Project Submitted to The Division of Social Studies of Bard College by Peter McCormack Annandale-on-Hudson, New York May 2017 ii From New York to Hollywood iii Acknowledgements I would like to thank my parents first and foremost. I don’t think I’ve ever taken the time to bore them with the intimate details of this project.
    [Show full text]
  • Don Murray Unsung Hero
    DON MURRAY UNSUNG HERO Donald Patrick Murray was born in Hollywood in 1929 to a 20th-Century Fox dance director and a former Ziegfeld girl. He moved to New York when he was three years old and became an exceptional student-athlete at East Rockaway High School in Nassau County. Don played football and ran track, where he earned the nickname “Don Deer.” After graduation in 1947, Don declined several scholarship opportunities at universities in favor of enrolling in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. (To this day, Don retains a slight “Long Island” accent, but his three years at AADA helped him effectively shed this at will, and he easily mastered a series of speech patterns in his subsequent acting roles.) When the Korean War broke out, Don filed for “conscientious objector” status, and spent two years in alternative service at refugee camps in Germany and Italy. (Don would later star in a self-penned screenplay for Playhouse 90 entitled For I Have Loved Strangers based on these experiences.) Before his European adventures, however, Don had turned heads in his first substantial part in the Broadway production of Tennessee Williams’ The Rose Tattoo. He also made strides on early television, appearing on several highly-regarded programs, including The Kraft Theater and the psychological mystery series Danger. Don then landed a role in the Broadway revival of Thornton Wilder’s The Skin of Our Teeth, playing Henry Antrobus, a character who demonstrated a pronounced change in temperament. (During the play’s celebrated first run in 1942-43, Henry was played by Montgomery Clift.) Don’s performance caught the eye of theatre and film director Joshua Logan, who quickly decided that Don was the perfect choice to play the raw, reckless Beauregard “Bo” Decker in his film version of William Inge’s hit play, Bus Stop.
    [Show full text]
  • XXXI:4) Robert Montgomery, LADY in the LAKE (1947, 105 Min)
    September 22, 2015 (XXXI:4) Robert Montgomery, LADY IN THE LAKE (1947, 105 min) (The version of this handout on the website has color images and hot urls.) Directed by Robert Montgomery Written by Steve Fisher (screenplay) based on the novel by Raymond Chandler Produced by George Haight Music by David Snell and Maurice Goldman (uncredited) Cinematography by Paul Vogel Film Editing by Gene Ruggiero Art Direction by E. Preston Ames and Cedric Gibbons Special Effects by A. Arnold Gillespie Robert Montgomery ... Phillip Marlowe Audrey Totter ... Adrienne Fromsett Lloyd Nolan ... Lt. DeGarmot Tom Tully ... Capt. Kane Leon Ames ... Derace Kingsby Jayne Meadows ... Mildred Havelend Pink Horse, 1947 Lady in the Lake, 1945 They Were Expendable, Dick Simmons ... Chris Lavery 1941 Here Comes Mr. Jordan, 1939 Fast and Loose, 1938 Three Morris Ankrum ... Eugene Grayson Loves Has Nancy, 1937 Ever Since Eve, 1937 Night Must Fall, Lila Leeds ... Receptionist 1936 Petticoat Fever, 1935 Biography of a Bachelor Girl, 1934 William Roberts ... Artist Riptide, 1933 Night Flight, 1932 Faithless, 1931 The Man in Kathleen Lockhart ... Mrs. Grayson Possession, 1931 Shipmates, 1930 War Nurse, 1930 Our Blushing Ellay Mort ... Chrystal Kingsby Brides, 1930 The Big House, 1929 Their Own Desire, 1929 Three Eddie Acuff ... Ed, the Coroner (uncredited) Live Ghosts, 1929 The Single Standard. Robert Montgomery (director, actor) (b. May 21, 1904 in Steve Fisher (writer, screenplay) (b. August 29, 1912 in Marine Fishkill Landing, New York—d. September 27, 1981, age 77, in City, Michigan—d. March 27, age 67, in Canoga Park, California) Washington Heights, New York) was nominated for two Academy wrote for 98 various stories for film and television including Awards, once in 1942 for Best Actor in a Leading Role for Here Fantasy Island (TV Series, 11 episodes from 1978 - 1981), 1978 Comes Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Printable Schedule
    Schedule for 9/29/21 to 10/6/21 (Central Time) WEDNESDAY 9/29/21 TIME TITLE GENRE 4:30am Fractured Flickers (1963) Comedy Featuring: Hans Conried, Gypsy Rose Lee THURSDAY 9/30/21 TIME TITLE GENRE 5:00am Backlash (1947) Film-Noir Featuring: Jean Rogers, Richard Travis, Larry J. Blake, John Eldredge, Leonard Strong, Douglas Fowley 6:25am House of Strangers (1949) Film-Noir Featuring: Edward G. Robinson, Susan Hayward, Richard Conte, Luther Adler, Paul Valentine, Efrem Zimbalist Jr. 8:35am Born to Kill (1947) Film-Noir Featuring: Claire Trevor, Lawrence Tierney 10:35am The Power of the Whistler (1945) Film-Noir Featuring: Richard Dix, Janis Carter 12:00pm The Burglar (1957) Film-Noir Featuring: Dan Duryea, Jayne Mansfield, Martha Vickers 2:05pm The Lady from Shanghai (1947) Film-Noir Featuring: Orson Welles, Rita Hayworth, Everett Sloane, Carl Frank, Ted de Corsia 4:00pm Bodyguard (1948) Film-Noir Featuring: Lawrence Tierney, Priscilla Lane 5:20pm Walk the Dark Street (1956) Film-Noir Featuring: Chuck Connors, Don Ross 7:00pm Gun Crazy (1950) Film-Noir Featuring: John Dall, Peggy Cummins 8:55pm The Clay Pigeon (1949) Film-Noir Featuring: Barbara Hale 10:15pm Daisy Kenyon (1947) Romance Featuring: Joan Crawford, Henry Fonda, Dana Andrews, Ruth Warrick, Martha Stewart 12:25am This Woman Is Dangerous (1952) Film-Noir Featuring: Joan Crawford, Dennis Morgan 2:30am Impact (1949) Film-Noir Featuring: Brian Donlevy, Raines Ella FRIDAY 10/1/21 TIME TITLE GENRE 5:00am Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931) Thriller Featuring: Fredric March, Miriam Hopkins
    [Show full text]
  • ARCHIE COMICS Random House Adult Blue Omni, Summer 2012
    ARCHIE COMICS Random House Adult Blue Omni, Summer 2012 Archie Comics Archie Meets KISS Summary: A highly unexpected pairing leads to a very Alex Segura, Dan Parent fun title that everyone’s talking about. Designed for both 9781936975044 KISS’s and Archie’s legions of fans and backed by Pub Date: 5/1/12 (US, Can.), On Sale Date: 5/1 massive publicity including promotion involving KISS $12.99/$14.99 Can. cofounders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, Archie 112 pages expects this title to be a breakout success. Paperback / softback / Trade paperback (US) Comics & Graphic Novels / Fantasy From the the company that’s sold over 1 billion comic books Ctn Qty: 0 and the band that’s sold over 100 million albums and DVDs 0.8lb Wt comes this monumental crossover hit! Immortal rock icons 363g Wt KISS join forces ... Author Bio: Alex Segura is a comic book writer, novelist and musician. Alex has worked in comics for over a decade. Before coming to Archie, Alex served as Publicity Manager at DC Comics. Alex has also worked at Wizard Magazine, The Miami Herald, Newsarama.com and various other outlets and websites. Author Residence: New York, NY Random House Adult Blue Omni, Summer 2012 Archie Comics Archie Meets KISS: Collector's Edition Summary: A highly unexpected pairing leads to a very Alex Segura, Dan Parent, Gene Simmons fun title that everyone’s talking about. Designed for both 9781936975143 KISS’s and Archie’s legions of fans and backed by Pub Date: 5/1/12 (US, Can.), On Sale Date: 5/1 massive publicity including promotion involving KISS $29.99/$34.00 Can.
    [Show full text]