Kings Row | |
---|---|
Also known as | Warner Bros. Presents |
Genre | medical drama |
Starring | Jack Kelly Nan Leslie Robert Horton |
Theme music composer | Max Steiner (end theme) |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 7 |
Production | |
Executive producer | William T. Orr |
Producer | Roy Huggins |
Production location | California |
Running time | 60 mins. |
Production company | Warner Bros. Television |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | September 13, 1955 – January 17, 1956 |
Kings Row is an hour-long American television period drama starring Jack Kelly, Nan Leslie and Robert Horton which was broadcast on ABC between September 13, 1955 and January 17, 1956 as part of the wheel series Warner Bros. Presents . [1] [2] It was the first of 20 filmed shows produced for ABC between 1955 and 1963 by Warner Bros Television, under the supervision of executive producer William T. Orr, Kings Row is also the only straight drama among those shows, whereas Westerns and detective/adventure series comprised 14 of the 20 productions. [3] [4]
The series' protagonist is psychiatrist Parris Mitchell, who has recently set up his practice in a small town of the Midwestern United States. He is met with mistrust and prejudice.
Based on the 1940 novel by Henry Bellamann and its film version, Kings Row , which was nominated for three Oscars, including Best Picture, at the 15th Academy Awards in March 1943, the TV version starred Jack Kelly, [5] Nan Leslie and Robert Horton, portraying the characters played in the film by Robert Cummings, Ann Sheridan and Ronald Reagan, respectively. It turned out to be the least successful among Orr's twenty ABC series, having been canceled after the production of only seven episodes. [6]
Although the standard length for episodes of hour-long filmed series had subsequently become established at 53 or 54 minutes, the first 23 episodes of Warner Bros. Presents, including all 7 installments of Kings Row, were timed to run 48 minutes, thus enabling Warner Bros Television to run 6-minute segments, hosted by Gig Young, [7] [8] [9] promoting upcoming Warners films and chatting with stars under contract to the studio. [10]
German-American novelist Henry Bellamann (birth name Heinrich Hauer Bellamann), [11] whose heritage made him a social outcast in the small Missouri city of Fulton where he was born and raised, channeled the bitter memories of his youth into the bestselling novel, Kings Row, [12] [13] copyrighted in 1940 and published in 1941 by Simon and Schuster. [14] The rights to the novel, which chronicles moral decay in a fictional midwestern town at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, were immediately purchased by Warner Bros., [15] which put the film version into production between August and October 1941, with the New York City premiere receiving publicity on February 2, 1942. In addition to the Oscar nomination for Best Picture, the film also earned a Best Director nomination for Sam Wood and Best Cinematographer, Black-and-White nomination for James Wong Howe.
More than a decade later, Warner Bros Television chose its Best Picture nominees for 1942, Kings Row (the studio had one other nominee, Yankee Doodle Dandy ) and 1943, Casablanca (in addition to the winner, Warners had a second nominee, Watch on the Rhine ), as television's initial two series to be directly derived from theatrical films. The third rotating element of Warner Bros. 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 Kings Row, 8 of Casablanca's 10 installments and 8 of Cheyenne's 15 installments were also 48 minutes in length. [16]
Social historian Otto Friedrich, in his 1986 book, City of Nets: A Portrait of Hollywood in the 1940s, describes the town which, at the beginning of the 1942 film, characterizes itself on a billboard in these words: "Kings Row 1890 — A Good Town — A Good Clean Town — A Good Town to Live In and a good place to Raise Your Children", as a "roiling inferno of fraud, corruption, treachery, hypocrisy, class warfare, and ill-suppressed sex of all varieties: adultery, sadism, homosexuality, incest." [17]
The elements which made the 1942 film difficult to be accepted by Hollywood's Production Code Authority were nowhere in evidence as the TV version went into production. [18] The stories were molded into the style of standard TV drama of the period, omitting any mention of themes which would have been considered inappropriate for an early-evening audience. Actor Paul Stewart, assigned to direct the first episode, told columnist Bob Thomas that "the company will rehearse five days and shoot five days for the 48-minute dramas". "Everything is done in the authentic 1905 era", he remarked, "Some of the stuff is fabulous. I'd estimate we have $30,000 worth of furnishings here. Then we have an exterior set on the back lot of a Midwestern town". [19]
Parris Mitchell, portrayed by Jack Kelly, is the central personality who interacts with the conflicts in each episode's storylines, while Randy (Nan Leslie) and Drake (Robert Horton) are positioned as important supporting characters. Other characters from the book, including Dr. Henry Gordon, portrayed by Robert Burton, and Dr. Alexander Tower, portrayed by former second-tier film star Victor Jory, shorn of any unacceptably negative traits that their characters have in the novel and in the film, appear intermittently in the series. Tower becomes the central focus of the storyline in episode 5, "Introduction to Erica". [20] Lillian Bronson, as Parris' grandmother, is retained as a semi-regular in the series.
Two years later, Jack Kelly would begin the role of Bart Maverick, brother to James Garner's Bret Maverick, in the television series Maverick for Warner Bros. and ABC, a part he continued for five seasons on the show. Also in 1957, Robert Horton would play the lead role of wagon train scout "Flint McCullough" in the television series Wagon Train starring Ward Bond and, after Bond's abrupt death, John McIntire. Both Kelly and Horton began their respective new series in 1957, concurrently playing their parts for five seasons before departing from the roles for which they were both most closely identified for the rest of their careers.
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Guest cast | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Lady in Fear" | Paul Stewart | Jameson Brewer | Russell Johnson...Mark, Peggy Webber...Eloise, George Chandler...Carstairs, Myrna Fahey...Renee, Jack Macy...Skeffington | September 13, 1955 | |
Parris Mitchell (Jack Kelly) spent years in Vienna studying to become a psychiatrist. Returning to his hometown of Kings Row to set up a practice, he finds the place mistrustful and prejudiced. His attempts to help Eloise resolve problems with her husband Mark (Russell Johnson) meet with resistance. [21] In the promotional segment, host Gig Young interviews Alan Ladd and June Allyson about the upcoming release of their Warners film The McConnell Story . | ||||||
2 | "Two of a Kind" | Richard L. Bare | Charles Lang | Wallace Ford...Uncle Ezra, Peter Votrian...Tim | October 4, 1955 | |
Dr. Mitchell tries to help thirteen-year-old Tim Browton (Peter Votrian) who has been branded a juvenile delinquent. The tall tales spun by glib old man Ezra Sligo (Wallace Ford) help Tim to overcome traumatic memories and become convinced that the elderly talker is an old-time hero. [22] In the promotional segment, Gig Young talks to John Wayne and Lauren Bacall on the set of their new Warners film Blood Alley . | ||||||
3 | "Ellie (a/k/a Possessive Love)" | Paul Stewart | Richard Morris; story by Roy Huggins | Joy Page...Ellie, Kathryn Givney...Millicent Banning | October 25, 1955 | |
Dr. Mitchell's patient, Ellie (Joy Page), suffers emotional problems as a result of lifelong domination by her mother Millicent (Kathryn Givney)
In the promotional segment, Gig Young talks to Jack Palance and Shelley Winters on the set of their new Warners film I Died a Thousand Times . | ||||||
4 | "Mail Order Bride" | Unknown | Unknown | Lee Patrick...Mrs. Johnson, Rhys Williams...Kevin Monaghan | November 15, 1955 | |
The widowed father (Rhys Williams) of Randy (series regular Nan Leslie) has entered into a lonelyhearts correspondence with a seemingly younger woman (Lee Patrick) and decides to send for her, along with his offer of marriage. Upon her arrival, however, she exhibits signs of being a confidence woman. [23] In the promotional segment, Gig Young interviews Jack Palance on the set of his Warners film I Died a Thousand Times . | ||||||
5 | "Introduction to Erica" | Paul Stewart | Kenneth Higgins | Maria Palmer...Erica Schiller, John Alderson......Mike Polich, Isa Ashdown...Child, Nadine Ashdown...Child | December 6, 1955 | |
Rigidly old-fashioned Doctor Tower (Victor Jory) receives, as a guest from Germany, a beautiful young widow (Maria Palmer) who proposes marriage. She soon becomes unhappy, however, when gossiping townspeople start spreading rumors regarding her relationship with the doctor. [24] In the promotional segment, Gig Young interviews Liberace on the set of his Warners film Sincerely Yours . | ||||||
6 | "Wedding Gift" | Unknown | Unknown | Dennis Hopper...Ted Monaghan, Natalie Wood...Renee Gyllinson | December 27, 1955 | |
After his discharge from the military, Tod Monaghan (Dennis Hopper) becomes unhappy due to perception that his fiancée Renee Gyllinson (Natalie Wood) is running his life. | ||||||
7 | "Carnival" | Unknown | Unknown | Dennis Hopper...Ted Monaghan, Natalie Wood...Renee Gyllinson, Sydney Chaplin...Tiger Hudson, Maggie Mahoney...Louise Thornton, Claire Kelly...Little Egypt | January 17, 1955 | |
A glib carnival announcer is planning a relationship with one of King Row's socially connected women. His dancer girlfriend at the carnival plans revenge. |
Kings Row is a 1942 film starring Ann Sheridan, Robert Cummings, Ronald Reagan and Betty Field that tells a story of young people growing up in a small American town at the turn of the twentieth century. The picture was directed by Sam Wood. The film was adapted by Casey Robinson from a best-selling 1940 novel of the same name by Henry Bellamann. The musical score was composed by Erich Wolfgang Korngold, and the cinematographer was James Wong Howe. The supporting cast features Charles Coburn, Claude Rains, Judith Anderson and Maria Ouspenskaya.
A wheel series, wheel show, wheel format or umbrella series is a television series in which two or more regular programs are rotated in the same time slot. Sometimes the wheel series is given its own umbrella title and promoted as a single unit instead of promoting its separate components.
Richard McCord Long, also known as Dick Long, was an American actor best known for his leading roles in three ABC television series, The Big Valley, Nanny and the Professor, and Bourbon Street Beat. He was also a series regular on ABC's 77 Sunset Strip during the 1961–1962 season.
Warner Bros. Television Studios, operating under the name Warner Bros. Television, is an American television production and distribution studio and the flagship studio of the Warner Bros. Television Group division of Warner Bros., a flagship studio of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD). Launched on March 21, 1955 by William T. Orr, it serves as a television production arm of DC Comics productions by DC Studios and, alongside Paramount Global's CBS Studios, The CW, the latter that launched in 2006 and WBD has a 12.5% ownership stake. It also serves as the distribution arm of WBD units HBO, Cartoon Network and Adult Swim.
Robert Montgomery Presents is an American drama television series which was produced by NBC from January 30, 1950, until June 24, 1957. The live show had several sponsors during its eight-year run, and the title was altered to feature the sponsor, usually Lucky Strike cigarettes, for example, Robert Montgomery Presents Your Lucky Strike Theater, ....The Johnson's Wax Program, and so on.
Norman Eugene "Clint" Walker was an American actor. He played cowboy Cheyenne Bodie in the ABC/Warner Bros. western series Cheyenne from 1955 to 1963.
John Lawrence Russell was an American film and television actor, most noted for his starring role as Marshal Dan Troop in the ABC Western television series Lawman from 1958 to 1962 and his lead role as international adventurer Tim Kelly in the syndicated TV series Soldiers of Fortune from 1955 to 1957.
Sugarfoot is an American Western television series that aired for 69 episodes on ABC from 1957-1961 on Tuesday nights on a "shared" slot basis – rotating with Cheyenne ; Cheyenne and Bronco ; and Bronco. The Warner Bros. production stars Will Hutchins as Tom Brewster, an Easterner who comes to the Oklahoma Territory to become a lawyer. Brewster was a correspondence-school student whose apparent lack of cowboy skills earned him the nickname "Sugarfoot", a designation even below that of a tenderfoot.
The Dakotas is an ABC/Warner Bros. Western television series starring Larry Ward and featuring Jack Elam, Chad Everett, and Michael Greene, broadcast during 1963. The short-lived program is considered a spin-off of Clint Walker's Cheyenne.
John Augustus Kelly Jr. was an American film and television actor most noted for the role of Bart Maverick in the television series Maverick, which ran on ABC from 1957 to 1962.
Robert Louis Colbert is an American actor best known for his leading role as Dr. Doug Phillips on the ABC television series The Time Tunnel and his two appearances as Brent Maverick, a third Maverick brother in the ABC/Warner Brothers western Maverick.
Cheyenne is an American Western television series of 108 black-and-white episodes broadcast on ABC from 1955 to 1962. The show was the first hour-long Western, and was the first hour-long dramatic series of any kind, with continuing characters, to last more than one season. It was also the first series to be made by a major Hollywood film studio which did not derive from its established film properties, and the first of a long chain of Warner Bros. original series produced by William T. Orr.
Ray Elgin Teal was an American actor. His most famous role was as Sheriff Roy Coffee on the television series Bonanza (1959–1972), which was only one of dozens of sheriffs on television and in movies that he played during his long and prolific career stretching from 1937 to 1970. He appeared in pictures such as Western Jamboree (1938) with Gene Autry, The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) with Fredric March and Myrna Loy, The Black Arrow (1948), Billy Wilder's Ace in the Hole (1951) and Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) with Spencer Tracy and Burt Lancaster.
Dennis Morgan was an American actor-singer. He used the acting pseudonym Richard Stanley before adopting the name under which he gained his greatest fame.
Mead Howard "Robert" Horton Jr. was an American actor and singer. He is known for playing Flint McCullough in Wagon Train (1957–1962).
Pierre Lynn de Lappe, also known as Peter Brown, was an American actor. He portrayed Deputy Johnny McKay opposite John Russell as Marshal Dan Troop in the 1958 to 1962 ABC-Warner Brothers western television series Lawman and Texas Ranger Chad Cooper on NBC's Laredo from 1965 to 1967.
The 1955–56 network television schedule for the four major English language commercial broadcast networks in the United States. The schedule covers primetime hours from September 1955 through March 1956. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series cancelled after the 1954–55 season.
Warner Bros. Presents is the umbrella title for three series that were telecast as part of the 1955–56 season on ABC: Cheyenne, a new Western series that originated on Presents, and two based on classic Warner Bros motion picture properties, becoming Casablanca and Kings Row. The series ran from September 13, 1955, until September 4, 1956, or September 11, 1956.
Conflict is a 1956 to 1957 American ABC television series that was a successor to the earlier Warner Bros. Presents. Although Conflict assumed the same time slot as its predecessor, the two do not share the same format. Where Warner Bros. Presents had been a wheel series, Conflict was fully an anthological series. However, since Cheyenne and Conflict alternated the Tuesday 7:30 P.M. time slot, the net effect was that of a proper wheel series—even though Cheyenne and Conflict were not under the same umbrella title.
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 series Warner Bros. Presents. 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.