Philco Television Playhouse

Philco Television Playhouse

Broadcast initially from New York City and later from Los Angeles as well, anthology dramas presented a new "play," with a new cast, each week. When the major American radio networks—CBS, NBC, and ABC—expanded into television, they carried over many popular formats of radio programming, including the anthology drama. NBC's Kraft Television Theatre was the first anthology drama on television and was quickly followed by several others, such as NBC's Philco-Goodyear Television Playhouse and CBS's Westinghouse Studio One. As television networks began to shift to filmed serial drama, the live anthologies declined in number. But the anthology drama remained a prestige genre until the end of the decade, with the networks concentrating budgets and publicity on a few, lavish shows like CBS's Playhouse 90. As Hollywood film studios began making fewer movies in the 1950s, anthology drama became a way for established film stars and character actors to stay in the public eye. Familiar faces like Ralph Bellamy, Miriam Hopkins, Jose Ferrer, and Lillian Gish drift through many anthology episodes, in cameos or as top-billed attractions. Other Hollywood stars, such as Ronald Reagan, lent their Hollywood reputations to television by hosting anthology series. But much of the talent both in front of and behind the camera in these series were just beginning their careers. Directors like Arthur Penn, John Frankenheimer, and Sidney Lumet, who would go on to pave the way for the New Hollywood with their venturesome feature films of the 1960s, all got their start in live anthology drama. Actors such as Paul Newman, Eva Marie Saint, James Dean, Grace Kelly, and Jack Lemmon were all regulars on such shows years before they became major box-office draws. These directors and actors drew on their training in the contemporary New York theater, and many Americans received their first exposure to modern styles of theatrical realism and "method acting" via anthology drama. (Wisconsin Center For Film & Theater Research)





















Comments

Popular posts from this blog

D.W. Griffith – An American Life (By Richard Schickel – 1984)

Lillian Gish and Jeanne Moreau – Vanity Fair 1983

LEADING LADIES – 1976 (Electa Clark) PDF Download