The Neon Ceiling is a 1971 American television film starring Gig Young and Lee Grant that aired on NBC Monday Night at the Movies . It was written by Carol Sobieski and directed by Frank Pierson. The film score was composed by Billy Goldenberg.
An unhappy housewife takes her precocious teenage daughter and leaves their suburban home in the middle of the night, stopping at a lonely diner in the California desert when her 1960 Ford Galaxie runs into car trouble. She runs up against, and eventually befriends, the diner's owner, a gruff, beer-drinking mechanic and artist whose life's work are the neon sculptures he creates and attaches to the ceiling.
Lee Grant was set to appear in a TV film of The Price with George C. Scott when Universal sent her the script[ which? ]. "The moment I read that script I was hooked and couldn't let it go", she said. "It's a real departure from what is normally seen on TV." [1]
The Los Angeles Times called it "an extraordinary experience... a work of art." [2]
Year | Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1971 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Single Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role | Gig Young | Nominated | [3] |
Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role | Lee Grant [lower-alpha 1] | Won | |||
Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography for Entertainment Programming – For a Special or Feature Length Program Made for Television | Edward Rosson | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Achievement in Film Editing for Entertainment Programming – For a Special or Feature Length Program Made for Television | Robert F. Shugrue | Nominated |
How the West Was Won is a 1962 American epic Western film directed by Henry Hathaway, John Ford and George Marshall, produced by Bernard Smith, written by James R. Webb, and narrated by Spencer Tracy. Originally filmed in true three-lens Cinerama with the according three-panel panorama projected onto an enormous curved screen, the film features an ensemble cast formed by many cinema icons and newcomers, including Carroll Baker, Lee J. Cobb, Henry Fonda, Carolyn Jones, Karl Malden, Gregory Peck, George Peppard, Robert Preston, Debbie Reynolds, James Stewart, Eli Wallach, John Wayne and Richard Widmark. The supporting cast features Brigid Bazlen, Walter Brennan, David Brian, Andy Devine, Raymond Massey, Agnes Moorehead, Henry (Harry) Morgan, Thelma Ritter, Mickey Shaughnessy and Russ Tamblyn.
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