Saturday 25 May 2024

William Shatner 1958 "The Man Who Didn't Fly"



The Man Who Didn't Fly: Directed by Michael Dreyfuss. With William Shatner, Patricia Bosworth, Walter Brooke, Jonathan Harris.


Also known asKraft Mystery Theatre
GenreAnthology drama
Narrated byEd Herlihy (1947-55)
Charles Stark (1955)
Theme music composerNorman Cloutier
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons11
No. of episodes650
Production
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time48–52 minutes
Production companiesJ. Walter Thompson Agency
Talent Associates
Original release
NetworkNBC
ReleaseMay 7, 1947 –
October 1, 1958

Kraft Television Theatre is an American anthology drama television series running from 1947 to 1958. It began May 7, 1947 on NBC, airing at 7:30pm on Wednesday evenings until December of that year. It first promoted MacLaren's Imperial Cheese, which was advertised nowhere else.[1] In January 1948, it moved to 9pm on Wednesdays, continuing in that timeslot until 1958. Initially produced by the J. Walter Thompsonadvertising agency, the live hour-long series offered television plays with new stories and new characters each week,[2] in addition to adaptations of such classics as A Christmas Carol and Alice in Wonderland. The program was broadcast live from Studio 8-H at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, currently the home of Saturday Night Live.

Beginning October 1953, ABC added a separate series (also titled Kraft Television Theatre), created to promote Kraft's new Cheez Whiz product. This series ran for sixteen months, telecast on Thursday evenings at 9:30pm, until January 1955. After Kraft cancelled the second show, the second show changed its sponsor to become Pond's Theatre on ABC-TV from March 1955, while the original Kraft Theatre continued on NBC-TV.

Background[edit]

A prestige show for NBC, it launched the careers of more than a few actors, directors and playwrights, including future Emmy-winning and Academy Award-nominated actress Hope Lange.[3]

Actors on the series included James DeanJanet De GoreColleen DewhurstAnne FrancisLee GrantHelen HayesJack LemmonGrace KellyJack KlugmanCloris Leachman, Sam Levene, Patrick McVeyMichael HigginsFelicia Montealegre BernsteinJohn NewlandPaul NewmanLeslie NielsenAnthony PerkinsJudson Pratt, silent film icon Esther RalstonLee RemickGeorge C. ScottRod SteigerJoan Tompkins (her first television role), Grace Carney and Joanne Woodward. Announcers for the show were Ed Herlihy (1947–1955) and Charles Stark (1955).[citation needed] In 1958, young performers Martin Huston and Zina Bethune appeared in "This Property Is Condemned", based on a Tennessee Williams play, the last show of Kraft Television Theatre.

Directors for the series included Sidney LumetRobert AltmanGeorge Roy HillFielder Cook, and John Boulting, and the many contributing writers included Rod SerlingWilliam Templeton and JP Miller. Serling won an Emmy for scripting Patterns (January 12, 1955), the best remembered episode of the series. The drama had such an impact that it made television history by staging a second live encore performance three weeks later and was developed as a feature film, also titled Patterns.

In April 1958, Kraft sold the rights to David Susskind's Talent Associates, which revamped the series as Kraft Mystery Theatre. Under that title, it continued until September 1958. However, this eventually evolved into the 1963 filmed series Kraft Suspense Theatre, which concentrated exclusively on original dramas written for television, not on adaptations.

Between 1947 and 1958, the Kraft Television Theatre presented more than 650 comedies and dramas.[2] The series finished #14 in the Nielsen ratings for the 1950–1951 season, #23 for 1951-1952 and #21 for 1953–1954.[4]

Episode status[edit]

Excerpts from several 1947 episodes and part of a reel of 1947 television clips are held by the Library of Congress.[5]In addition, the Library of Congress holds a large number of complete episodes, including five from 1948.[6] The American Heritage Center has a number of scripts from various episodes for the years 1947, 1948, and 1949 in the Edmund C. Rice papers. These scripts, though authored by various people, were edited by Rice.[7]

Episodes[edit]

Partial List of Episodes of Kraft Television Theatre
DateEpisodeActor(s)
June 25, 1947"I Like it Here"Stefan Schnabel, Alice Yourman, Sterling Oliver, Betty BeuhlerArthur FranzMel Brandt, Leopold Badia[8]
February 15, 1950"The Silent Room"Tommy Nello, Neva PattersonJesse White, Dorothy Storm, Bruno Wick, Gene Fuller [9]
February 6, 1952"Follow the Dream"Vivian Ferrar, Royal Beal[10]
October 8, 1952"The New Tenant"Blanche Yurke, Alan Bunce, Katherine Meskill[11]
October 15, 1952"A Kiss for Cinderella"Melville Cooper, Mary Stearn, Leslie Nielsen, Rita Vale, Nancy Marchand, Susan Halloran, Patti McCormack, Gaye Huston, Betty LowRex O'Malley[12]
October 22, 1952"A Long Night In Forty Mile"John BaragreyHildy Parks, Fred Stewart, Alan Shayne, Carol Wheeler, Dan Morgan, Joe Maross, Curtis Cooksey, Jack Arthur, Stuart Mackintosh[13]
October 29, 1952"Divine Drudge"Felicia MonteleagreHarry TownesRobert PasteneMike Kellin, Timothy Lynn Kearse, Noel Leslie, Geoffrey Lumb, Cynthia Latham, William Brower[14]
November 5, 1952"Melody Jones"Janet Lally, Patsy Bruder, Patti O'Neill, John McGovern, Peggy Allenby, Katherine Meskill, Jimmy Sommer, Jackie Colloris, Bob Casey, Robert McQuade, Steve Harris.[15]
November 12, 1952"Hilda McKahy"Haila Stoddard, Shepperd Strudwick, Thomas Coley, Pat Breslin, Leta Bonynge[16]
November 19, 1952"The Quiet Wedding"Alan Holmes, Petrena Lowthian, Edith Meiser, Pamela Simpson, Leslie Paul, Anthony Kemble Cooper, Carol Veazie, Anita Bolster, Carolyn Grier, Catherine Doucet, Guy Spaull, David Orrick[17]
October 14, 1953"Keep Our Honor Bright"Michael Higgins, Joan Potter, Larry Fletcher, James DeanAddison RichardsPeter Fernandez, John Dutra, Don Dubbins, Jim Hickman, Cricket Skilling, George Roy Hill
January 12, 1955"Patterns"Everett SloaneRichard KileyEd BegleyJune DaytonJoanna RoosElizabeth MontgomeryElizabeth Wilson, Jack Arthur, Victoria Ward, Sybil Baker, Shirley Standlee, Theodore NewtonJack LiveseyRonnie Welsh, Tom Charles, Ron Harper, Victor Harrison, Helen Ludlom, Joseph MacCauley, Al Morgen, Douglas Rutherford, Chuck Wallace
February 9, 1955"Patterns" (repeated)Everett SloaneRichard KileyEd BegleyJune DaytonJoanna RoosElizabeth MontgomeryElizabeth Wilson, Jack Arthur, Victoria Ward, Sybil Baker, Shirley Standlee, Theodore NewtonJack LiveseyRonnie Welsh, Tom Charles, Ron Harper, Victor Harrison, Helen Ludlom, Joseph MacCauley, Al Morgen, Douglas Rutherford, Chuck Wallace
September 19, 1956"Out to Kill"James Whitmore.[18]

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