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Producers' Showcase

Producers' Showcase is an American anthology television series that was telecast live during the 1950s in compatible color by NBC. With top talent, the 90-minute episodes, covering a wide variety of genres, aired under the title every fourth Monday at 8 pm ET for three seasons, beginning October 18, 1954. The final episode, the last of 37, was broadcast May 27, 1957.

Producers' Showcase
GenreAnthology
Directed byKirk Browning
Vincent J. Donehue
Clark Jones
Anatole Litvak
Delbert Mann
Arthur Penn
Otto Preminger
Alex Segal
William Wyler
ComposersSammy Cahn and
Jimmy Van Heusen
Moose Charlap
Harry Sosnik
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes37
Production
Executive producersFred Coe
Alvin Cooperman
ProducersJohn Bloch
Fred Coe
Alvin Cooperman
Sol Hurok
Edwin Lester
Anatole Litvak
Fred Rickey
Alex Segal
Henry Solomon
Herbert Sussan
Robert Whitehead
Running time90 mins.
Production companyShowcase Productions
Original release
NetworkNBC
ReleaseOctober 18, 1954 (1954-10-18) –
May 27, 1957 (1957-05-27)

Showcase Productions, Inc., packaged and produced the series, which received seven Emmy Awards, including the 1956 award for Best Dramatic Series.

Production edit

In 1953, stage producer Leland Hayward had the idea to create a 90-minute TV series, a series of color spectaculars to be broadcast monthly on NBC. Hayward was represented by Saul Jaffe of the Madison Avenue law firm Jaffe & Jaffe; Henry Jaffe, the firm's senior partner, was national counsel for the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, an organization he helped found. When illness forced Hayward to withdraw from the project, NBC partnered with Showcase Productions, an independent production company created by Henry and Saul Jaffe to produce the series. Producers' Showcase went on the air October 18, 1954.[citation needed]

The ambitious series presented a total of 37 live color programs, which included original musicals or plays, restaging of Broadway productions, great concert artists, and tribute programs. Producers' Showcase presented the first international show with live remote locations (Wide Wide World), and the first full-length Broadway production on color television (Peter Pan).

"Producers' Showcase has undoubtedly been a tremendous prestige presentation by the network with elaborate and worthy cultural productions," The New York Times published in 1957, the series' final year.[1]

Producers' Showcase received seven Emmy Awards, including the 1956 award for Best Dramatic Series.[citation needed]

Premiere episode edit

Director Otto Preminger was invited to produce and direct Tonight at 8.30, a trio of one-act plays by Noël Coward, for the series premiere. Red Peppers, Still Life, and Shadow Play were three of 10 plays comprising a cycle the playwright had written to be performed on stage over the course of three evenings, and under this umbrella title they were presented on Producers' Showcase. The cast included Ginger Rogers, Trevor Howard, Gig Young, Ilka Chase, and Gloria Vanderbilt. Preminger had no experience in television, but he welcomed the opportunity to work in the medium.[2]

From the beginning, the director obviously was in trouble. He believed a television production was no different from a film and lit the sets and placed the cameras accordingly. He failed to understand that during the actual live broadcast, he would be working with a monitor, pushing buttons to signal which camera should be operating. Rogers in particular was nervous about her performance, and Preminger spent a considerable amount of time with her, but basically ignored the rest of the cast. Supporting player Larkin Ford later recalled he felt Preminger had no sense of Coward's work or how it should be played.[2]

As the production entered its third week of rehearsals, a complete run-through still had not been accomplished. Three days prior to the broadcast, executive producer Fred Coe decided to take action. He privately fired Preminger and then simply told the cast and crew, "Mr. Preminger will not be with us. I will be with you through the presentation." Although they felt sorry a man of Preminger's stature had been dismissed for incompetence, they were relieved he was gone. When the show aired, Preminger introduced each act in a filmed segment, and he received sole credit as producer and director. It proved to be his first and last television venture.[2]

 
Mary Martin as Peter Pan

Peter Pan edit

One of the most memorable productions of the first season was telecast on March 7, 1955. Peter Pan, a recreation of the 1954 Broadway musical with all its original cast members, including Mary Martin as Peter Pan and Cyril Ritchard as Captain Hook, was so highly acclaimed by critics and well received by viewers, drawing the largest ratings for a single television program up to that time, that the program was restaged live with nearly the same cast in January 1956. A 1960 NBC revival of the production, first broadcast as a Christmas season special, was videotaped in color and later released on home video. By the time the 1960 version was made, the children had outgrown their roles and had to be replaced, but nearly all of the adult cast remained the same as those of the two earlier productions.

This production also marked the first time that any version of Peter Pan had been performed on television.

Notable appearances edit

Additional productions edit

Wide Wide World edit

Producers' Showcase served as the springboard for the live documentary series Wide Wide World. Conceived by network head Pat Weaver and hosted by Dave Garroway, the show was introduced on Showcase on June 27, 1955. The premiere episode, featuring entertainment from the United States, Canada, and Mexico, was the first international North American telecast in the history of the medium. It received a regular Sunday afternoon time slot the following October.

Episodes edit

These 37 episodes comprise the Producers' Showcase library:[4]

# Date Title Director Selected Cast
1 Oct. 18, 1954 Tonight at 8.30 Otto Preminger Ginger Rogers, Martyn Green, Trevor Howard
2 Nov. 15, 1954 State of the Union Arthur Penn Joseph Cotten, Margaret Sullavan
3 Dec. 13, 1954 Dateline Alan Handley John Daly (host)
4 Jan. 7, 1955 Call to Freedom Alexander Scourby (narrator), Martha Mödl
5 Jan. 10, 1955 Yellow Jack Delbert Mann Broderick Crawford as Walter Reed
6 Feb. 7, 1955 The Women Vincent J. Donehue Ruth Hussey, Shelley Winters
7 March 7, 1955 Peter Pan Clark Jones Mary Martin, Cyril Ritchard
8 April 4, 1955 Reunion in Vienna Vincent J. Donehue Greer Garson, Brian Aherne
9 April 4, 1955 The King and Mrs. Candle Arthur Penn Cyril Ritchard, Joan Greenwood
10 May 2, 1955 Darkness at Noon Delbert Mann Lee J. Cobb
11 May 30, 1955 The Petrified Forest Delbert Mann Humphrey Bogart, Henry Fonda, Lauren Bacall
12 June 27, 1955 Wide Wide World Dick Schneider Dave Garroway (host)
13 July 25, 1955 The Fourposter Clark Jones Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy
14 Sept. 11, 1955 The Skin of Our Teeth Vincent J. Donehue Mary Martin, Helen Hayes
15 Sept. 19, 1955 Our Town Delbert Mann Paul Newman, Eva Marie Saint, Frank Sinatra
16 Oct. 17, 1955 Cyrano de Bergerac Kirk Browning José Ferrer, Claire Bloom
17 Nov. 15, 1955 Dateline II Alan Handley John Wayne, Peggy Lee
18 Dec. 14, 1955 The Sleeping Beauty Clark Jones Margot Fonteyn, Michael Somes
19 Jan. 3, 1956 Peter Pan Clark Jones Mary Martin, Cyril Ritchard
20 Jan. 30, 1956 Festival of Music Kirk Browning Charles Laughton (host)
21 Feb. 28, 1956 Bloomer Girl Alex Segal Barbara Cook, Keith Andes
22 March 5, 1956 Caesar and Cleopatra Kirk Browning Cedric Hardwicke, Claire Bloom
23 April 2, 1956 The Barretts of Wimpole Street Vincent J. Donehue Katharine Cornell, Anthony Quayle
24 April 30, 1956 Dodsworth Alex Segal Fredric March, Claire Trevor
25 June 25, 1956 Happy Birthday Alex Segal Betty Field, Barry Nelson
26 July 23, 1956 Rosalinda Bob Banner Cyril Ritchard, Jean Fenn
27 Sept. 17, 1956 The Lord Don't Play Favorites Clark Jones Louis Armstrong, Buster Keaton, Kay Starr
28 Oct. 15, 1956 The Letter William Wyler Siobhán McKenna, John Mills
29 Nov. 12, 1956 Jack and the Beanstalk Clark Jones Billy Gilbert, Joel Grey
30 Dec. 10, 1956 Festival of Music II Kirk Browning José Ferrer (host)
31 Feb. 3, 1957 Ruggles of Red Gap Clark Jones Garry Moore (host), Michael Redgrave
32 Feb. 4, 1957 Mayerling Anatole Litvak Audrey Hepburn, Mel Ferrer
33 March 4, 1957 Romeo and Juliet Clark Jones Claire Bloom, John Neville
34 April 1, 1957 The Great Sebastians Franklin J. Schaffner Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne
35 April 29, 1957 Cinderella Clark Jones Margot Fonteyn, Michael Somes
36 May 11, 1957 Mr. Broadway Sidney Lumet Mickey Rooney as George M. Cohan
37 May 27, 1957 Festival of Magic Charles S. Dubin Ernie Kovacs (host)

Reception edit

Producers' Showcase averaged a 36.5 percent audience share.[5] Sixty-five million viewers watched the first presentation of Peter Pan,[6] garnering a 68.3 audience share that made it the highest-rated episode in the series. The restaged Peter Pan earned a 54.9 share; and The Petrified Forest earned a 50.6 share.[5] The series had this level of success even though its last third aired opposite I Love Lucy, the highest or second-highest rated series on television during the three seasons Producers' Showcase was broadcast.

Awards edit

Presenters' Showcase received the following awards and nominations from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.[7]

Primetime Emmy Awards
Year Category Recipient Outcome
1956 Best Actress – Single Role Mary Martin, Peter Pan Won
Best Art Direction – Live Series Otis Riggs Won
Best Dramatic Series Producers' Showcase Won
Best Musical Contribution Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen, "Love and Marriage" (song), Our Town Won
Best Producer – Live Series Fred Coe Won
Best Single Program of the Year Peter Pan Won
Best Actor – Single Performance José Ferrer, Cyrano de Bergerac Nominated
Best Actor in a Supporting Role Cyril Ritchard, Peter Pan Nominated
Best Actress – Single Role Eva Marie Saint, Our Town Nominated
Best Actress – Single Role Jessica Tandy, The Fourposter Nominated
Best Choreographer Jerome Robbins, Peter Pan Nominated
Best Director – Live Series Clark Jones, Peter Pan Nominated
Best Director – Live Series Delbert Mann, Our Town Nominated
Best Musical Contribution Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen, Our Town Nominated
Best Musical Contribution Nelson Riddle, Our Town Nominated
Best Single Program of the Year The Sleeping Beauty Nominated
Best Television Adaptation David Shaw, Our Town Nominated
1957 Best Single Performance by an Actress Claire Trevor, Dodsworth Won
Best Live Camera Work Producers' Showcase Nominated
Best Single Performance by an Actor Fredric March, Dodsworth Nominated

Home media edit

Video Artists International [1] has formed joint ventures with Showcase Productions, Inc. for the release of a number of Producers' Showcase programs, as well as Showcase programs from other "Golden Age of Television" series, complete with their commercial announcements, on DVD: Festival of Music (#4244), Festival of Music II (#4245), The Sleeping Beauty (#4295) and Cinderella (#4296). Although these episodes were broadcast live and in color, the kinescope process by which they were preserved is black-and-white.

References edit

  1. ^ Shepard, Richard F., "The Jaffes — Versatile TV Team"; The New York Times, February 3, 1957. , Showcase Productions, Inc.; archived 2012-06-07 from the original at the Internet Archive. Retrieved 2013-06-14.
  2. ^ a b c Hirsch, Foster, Otto Preminger: The Man Who Would Be King. New York: Alfred A. Knopf 2007. ISBN 978-0-375-41373-5, pp. 227-229
  3. ^ Weiner, Ed; Editors of TV Guide (1992). The TV Guide TV Book: 40 Years of the All-Time Greatest Television Facts, Fads, Hits, and History. New York: Harper Collins. p. 118. ISBN 0-06-096914-8. {{cite book}}: |author2= has generic name (help)
  4. ^ , Showcase Productions, Inc.; archived 2012-06-07 from the original at the Internet Archive. Retrieved 2013-06-13.
  5. ^ a b , Showcase Productions, Inc.; archived 2012-06-07 from the original at the Internet Archive. Retrieved 2013-06-13.
  6. ^ Shales, Tom, "The Timeless Magic of 'Peter Pan'"; The Washington Post, March 16, 1989
  7. ^ Official Primetime Emmy Awards Search; accessed October 17, 2011

External links edit

producers, showcase, american, anthology, television, series, that, telecast, live, during, 1950s, compatible, color, with, talent, minute, episodes, covering, wide, variety, genres, aired, under, title, every, fourth, monday, three, seasons, beginning, octobe. Producers Showcase is an American anthology television series that was telecast live during the 1950s in compatible color by NBC With top talent the 90 minute episodes covering a wide variety of genres aired under the title every fourth Monday at 8 pm ET for three seasons beginning October 18 1954 The final episode the last of 37 was broadcast May 27 1957 Producers ShowcaseGenreAnthologyDirected byKirk BrowningVincent J DonehueClark JonesAnatole LitvakDelbert MannArthur PennOtto PremingerAlex SegalWilliam WylerComposersSammy Cahn and Jimmy Van HeusenMoose CharlapHarry SosnikCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons3No of episodes37ProductionExecutive producersFred CoeAlvin CoopermanProducersJohn BlochFred CoeAlvin CoopermanSol HurokEdwin LesterAnatole LitvakFred RickeyAlex SegalHenry SolomonHerbert SussanRobert WhiteheadRunning time90 mins Production companyShowcase ProductionsOriginal releaseNetworkNBCReleaseOctober 18 1954 1954 10 18 May 27 1957 1957 05 27 Showcase Productions Inc packaged and produced the series which received seven Emmy Awards including the 1956 award for Best Dramatic Series Contents 1 Production 1 1 Premiere episode 1 2 Peter Pan 1 3 Notable appearances 1 4 Additional productions 1 5 Wide Wide World 2 Episodes 3 Reception 3 1 Awards 4 Home media 5 References 6 External linksProduction editIn 1953 stage producer Leland Hayward had the idea to create a 90 minute TV series a series of color spectaculars to be broadcast monthly on NBC Hayward was represented by Saul Jaffe of the Madison Avenue law firm Jaffe amp Jaffe Henry Jaffe the firm s senior partner was national counsel for the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists an organization he helped found When illness forced Hayward to withdraw from the project NBC partnered with Showcase Productions an independent production company created by Henry and Saul Jaffe to produce the series Producers Showcase went on the air October 18 1954 citation needed The ambitious series presented a total of 37 live color programs which included original musicals or plays restaging of Broadway productions great concert artists and tribute programs Producers Showcase presented the first international show with live remote locations Wide Wide World and the first full length Broadway production on color television Peter Pan Producers Showcase has undoubtedly been a tremendous prestige presentation by the network with elaborate and worthy cultural productions The New York Times published in 1957 the series final year 1 Producers Showcase received seven Emmy Awards including the 1956 award for Best Dramatic Series citation needed Premiere episode edit Director Otto Preminger was invited to produce and direct Tonight at 8 30 a trio of one act plays by Noel Coward for the series premiere Red Peppers Still Life and Shadow Play were three of 10 plays comprising a cycle the playwright had written to be performed on stage over the course of three evenings and under this umbrella title they were presented on Producers Showcase The cast included Ginger Rogers Trevor Howard Gig Young Ilka Chase and Gloria Vanderbilt Preminger had no experience in television but he welcomed the opportunity to work in the medium 2 From the beginning the director obviously was in trouble He believed a television production was no different from a film and lit the sets and placed the cameras accordingly He failed to understand that during the actual live broadcast he would be working with a monitor pushing buttons to signal which camera should be operating Rogers in particular was nervous about her performance and Preminger spent a considerable amount of time with her but basically ignored the rest of the cast Supporting player Larkin Ford later recalled he felt Preminger had no sense of Coward s work or how it should be played 2 As the production entered its third week of rehearsals a complete run through still had not been accomplished Three days prior to the broadcast executive producer Fred Coe decided to take action He privately fired Preminger and then simply told the cast and crew Mr Preminger will not be with us I will be with you through the presentation Although they felt sorry a man of Preminger s stature had been dismissed for incompetence they were relieved he was gone When the show aired Preminger introduced each act in a filmed segment and he received sole credit as producer and director It proved to be his first and last television venture 2 nbsp Mary Martin as Peter PanPeter Pan edit One of the most memorable productions of the first season was telecast on March 7 1955 Peter Pan a recreation of the 1954 Broadway musical with all its original cast members including Mary Martin as Peter Pan and Cyril Ritchard as Captain Hook was so highly acclaimed by critics and well received by viewers drawing the largest ratings for a single television program up to that time that the program was restaged live with nearly the same cast in January 1956 A 1960 NBC revival of the production first broadcast as a Christmas season special was videotaped in color and later released on home video By the time the 1960 version was made the children had outgrown their roles and had to be replaced but nearly all of the adult cast remained the same as those of the two earlier productions This production also marked the first time that any version of Peter Pan had been performed on television Notable appearances edit nbsp Lauren Bacall Humphrey Bogart and Henry Fonda rehearsing The Petrified Forest 1955 nbsp William Holden in Dateline II 1955 nbsp Mary Martin in Peter Pan 1956 nbsp Katharine Cornell in The Barretts of Wimpole Street 1956 nbsp Louis Armstrong in The Lord Don t Play Favorites 1956 nbsp Mel Ferrer and Audrey Hepburn in Mayerling 1957 nbsp Raymond Massey Diana Wynyard seated Judith Evelyn Mel Ferrer and Audrey Hepburn in Mayerling 1957 nbsp John Neville and Claire Bloom in Romeo and Juliet 1957 nbsp Margot Fonteyn in Cinderella 1957 nbsp Mickey Rooney in Mr Broadway 1957 Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall made their television debuts in a production of The Petrified Forest that also starred Henry Fonda Jack Warden and Jack Klugman Bogart reprised the role of Duke Mantee which he performed in the original 1935 Broadway production and the 1936 film Fonda portrayed Leslie Howard s original role and Bacall played the Bette Davis part Director William Wyler made his television debut with The Letter starring Siobhan McKenna John Mills Michael Rennie and Anna May Wong Wyler also directed the 1940 feature film Director Anatole Litvak made his television debut with Mayerling starring Audrey Hepburn and Mel Ferrer Litvak also directed the 1936 feature film A musical adaptation of Thornton Wilder s Our Town starring Frank Sinatra Eva Marie Saint and Paul Newman a last minute replacement for James Dean 3 Sinatra who plays a warbling version of the stage manager and clocks the most screen time scored a major chart hit with the original song Love and Marriage which received an Emmy Award The songs were written by Jimmy van Heusen and Sammy Cahn in the first of their many collaborations In her television debut although she was now too old for the role Katharine Cornell recreated her original stage role as Elizabeth Barrett Browning in The Barretts of Wimpole Street with Anthony Quayle as Robert Browning Husband and wife Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy reprised the roles they had played in the Broadway production of The Fourposter Ruth Hussey Paulette Goddard and Mary Boland were cast in the acerbic comedy The Women Hussey and Goddard played different characters in the 1939 MGM film Boland reprised her role as the Countess deLave Additional productions edit The ballets The Sleeping Beauty by Tchaikovsky and Cinderella by Prokofiev both with Margot Fonteyn and Michael Somes marked the first time these two ballets had ever been broadcast on television A staging of Sidney Howard s 1934 adaptation of the 1929 Sinclair Lewis novel Dodsworth starring Fredric March Claire Trevor and Geraldine Fitzgerald The Skin of Our Teeth with Helen Hayes and Mary Martin Cyrano de Bergerac with Jose Ferrer recreating his award winning stage and film role Claire Bloom and Christopher Plummer a future Cyrano himself The Great Sebastians directed by Franklin J Schaffner with Lynn Fontanne Alfred Lunt and Alan Furlan was set in 1948 in Communist controlled Prague Czechoslovakia A mind reading act is commanded by the authorities to entertain at a private party They discover what the authorities really want is for them to use their powers to expose spies and traitors to the regime Realizing the kind of trouble they are in for they decide to escape using their best stage tricks Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet with Claire Bloom John Neville and Paul Rogers Festival of Music two 90 minute programs were devoted to classical music featuring such performers as Jan Peerce Arthur Rubinstein Roberta Peters Andres Segovia Jussi Bjorling tenor Thomas Hayward Boris Christoff Isaac Stern Leonard Warren Zinka Milanov Rise Stevens and Renata Tebaldi Most of these classical artists except for Roberta Peters who had appeared on George Jessel s show and Leonard Warren who had sung Iago in the historic 1948 first complete telecast of Verdi s Otello were appearing on commercial American network television for the first time The programs were hosted respectively by Charles Laughton and Jose Ferrer The final episode Festival of Magic featured Ernie Kovacs playing host to magicians from the United States England South Africa Ireland India France and China Wide Wide World edit Producers Showcase served as the springboard for the live documentary series Wide Wide World Conceived by network head Pat Weaver and hosted by Dave Garroway the show was introduced on Showcase on June 27 1955 The premiere episode featuring entertainment from the United States Canada and Mexico was the first international North American telecast in the history of the medium It received a regular Sunday afternoon time slot the following October Episodes editThese 37 episodes comprise the Producers Showcase library 4 Date Title Director Selected Cast1 Oct 18 1954 Tonight at 8 30 Otto Preminger Ginger Rogers Martyn Green Trevor Howard2 Nov 15 1954 State of the Union Arthur Penn Joseph Cotten Margaret Sullavan3 Dec 13 1954 Dateline Alan Handley John Daly host 4 Jan 7 1955 Call to Freedom Alexander Scourby narrator Martha Modl5 Jan 10 1955 Yellow Jack Delbert Mann Broderick Crawford as Walter Reed6 Feb 7 1955 The Women Vincent J Donehue Ruth Hussey Shelley Winters7 March 7 1955 Peter Pan Clark Jones Mary Martin Cyril Ritchard8 April 4 1955 Reunion in Vienna Vincent J Donehue Greer Garson Brian Aherne9 April 4 1955 The King and Mrs Candle Arthur Penn Cyril Ritchard Joan Greenwood10 May 2 1955 Darkness at Noon Delbert Mann Lee J Cobb11 May 30 1955 The Petrified Forest Delbert Mann Humphrey Bogart Henry Fonda Lauren Bacall12 June 27 1955 Wide Wide World Dick Schneider Dave Garroway host 13 July 25 1955 The Fourposter Clark Jones Hume Cronyn Jessica Tandy14 Sept 11 1955 The Skin of Our Teeth Vincent J Donehue Mary Martin Helen Hayes15 Sept 19 1955 Our Town Delbert Mann Paul Newman Eva Marie Saint Frank Sinatra16 Oct 17 1955 Cyrano de Bergerac Kirk Browning Jose Ferrer Claire Bloom17 Nov 15 1955 Dateline II Alan Handley John Wayne Peggy Lee18 Dec 14 1955 The Sleeping Beauty Clark Jones Margot Fonteyn Michael Somes19 Jan 3 1956 Peter Pan Clark Jones Mary Martin Cyril Ritchard20 Jan 30 1956 Festival of Music Kirk Browning Charles Laughton host 21 Feb 28 1956 Bloomer Girl Alex Segal Barbara Cook Keith Andes22 March 5 1956 Caesar and Cleopatra Kirk Browning Cedric Hardwicke Claire Bloom23 April 2 1956 The Barretts of Wimpole Street Vincent J Donehue Katharine Cornell Anthony Quayle24 April 30 1956 Dodsworth Alex Segal Fredric March Claire Trevor25 June 25 1956 Happy Birthday Alex Segal Betty Field Barry Nelson26 July 23 1956 Rosalinda Bob Banner Cyril Ritchard Jean Fenn27 Sept 17 1956 The Lord Don t Play Favorites Clark Jones Louis Armstrong Buster Keaton Kay Starr28 Oct 15 1956 The Letter William Wyler Siobhan McKenna John Mills29 Nov 12 1956 Jack and the Beanstalk Clark Jones Billy Gilbert Joel Grey30 Dec 10 1956 Festival of Music II Kirk Browning Jose Ferrer host 31 Feb 3 1957 Ruggles of Red Gap Clark Jones Garry Moore host Michael Redgrave32 Feb 4 1957 Mayerling Anatole Litvak Audrey Hepburn Mel Ferrer33 March 4 1957 Romeo and Juliet Clark Jones Claire Bloom John Neville34 April 1 1957 The Great Sebastians Franklin J Schaffner Alfred Lunt Lynn Fontanne35 April 29 1957 Cinderella Clark Jones Margot Fonteyn Michael Somes36 May 11 1957 Mr Broadway Sidney Lumet Mickey Rooney as George M Cohan37 May 27 1957 Festival of Magic Charles S Dubin Ernie Kovacs host Reception editProducers Showcase averaged a 36 5 percent audience share 5 Sixty five million viewers watched the first presentation of Peter Pan 6 garnering a 68 3 audience share that made it the highest rated episode in the series The restaged Peter Pan earned a 54 9 share and The Petrified Forest earned a 50 6 share 5 The series had this level of success even though its last third aired opposite I Love Lucy the highest or second highest rated series on television during the three seasons Producers Showcase was broadcast Awards edit Presenters Showcase received the following awards and nominations from the Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences 7 Primetime Emmy Awards Year Category Recipient Outcome1956 Best Actress Single Role Mary Martin Peter Pan WonBest Art Direction Live Series Otis Riggs WonBest Dramatic Series Producers Showcase WonBest Musical Contribution Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen Love and Marriage song Our Town WonBest Producer Live Series Fred Coe WonBest Single Program of the Year Peter Pan WonBest Actor Single Performance Jose Ferrer Cyrano de Bergerac NominatedBest Actor in a Supporting Role Cyril Ritchard Peter Pan NominatedBest Actress Single Role Eva Marie Saint Our Town NominatedBest Actress Single Role Jessica Tandy The Fourposter NominatedBest Choreographer Jerome Robbins Peter Pan NominatedBest Director Live Series Clark Jones Peter Pan NominatedBest Director Live Series Delbert Mann Our Town NominatedBest Musical Contribution Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen Our Town NominatedBest Musical Contribution Nelson Riddle Our Town NominatedBest Single Program of the Year The Sleeping Beauty NominatedBest Television Adaptation David Shaw Our Town Nominated1957 Best Single Performance by an Actress Claire Trevor Dodsworth WonBest Live Camera Work Producers Showcase NominatedBest Single Performance by an Actor Fredric March Dodsworth NominatedHome media editVideo Artists International 1 has formed joint ventures with Showcase Productions Inc for the release of a number of Producers Showcase programs as well as Showcase programs from other Golden Age of Television series complete with their commercial announcements on DVD Festival of Music 4244 Festival of Music II 4245 The Sleeping Beauty 4295 and Cinderella 4296 Although these episodes were broadcast live and in color the kinescope process by which they were preserved is black and white References edit Shepard Richard F The Jaffes Versatile TV Team The New York Times February 3 1957 Overview Showcase Productions Inc archived 2012 06 07 from the original at the Internet Archive Retrieved 2013 06 14 a b c Hirsch Foster Otto Preminger The Man Who Would Be King New York Alfred A Knopf 2007 ISBN 978 0 375 41373 5 pp 227 229 Weiner Ed Editors of TV Guide 1992 The TV Guide TV Book 40 Years of the All Time Greatest Television Facts Fads Hits and History New York Harper Collins p 118 ISBN 0 06 096914 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author2 has generic name help Producers Showcase library Showcase Productions Inc archived 2012 06 07 from the original at the Internet Archive Retrieved 2013 06 13 a b Production value Showcase Productions Inc archived 2012 06 07 from the original at the Internet Archive Retrieved 2013 06 13 Shales Tom The Timeless Magic of Peter Pan The Washington Post March 16 1989 Official Primetime Emmy Awards Search accessed October 17 2011External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Producers Showcase Producers Showcase at IMDb nbsp Producers Showcase The Petrified Forest at the Internet Archive Showcase Productions Inc Producers Showcase at CVTA Producers Showcase at The Interviews An Oral History of Television Kirk Browning Charles Dubin Jack Klugman Delbert Mann Tad Mosel Arthur Penn and Ellen M Violett Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Producers 27 Showcase amp oldid 1203055624, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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