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The episode was initially meant to air as an episode of Dr. Kildare, but was instead reworked to cut out Chamberlain and Massey's parts and remove all Kildare and Gillespie references before airing on October 3, 1962, as the debut episode of The Eleventh Hour TV series, entitled "Ann Costigan: A Duel on a Field of White".
Dr. Kildare is a helpless bystander as a brilliant but plain woman (Colleen Dewhurst) is faced with cancer surgery. She's afraid that her worried husband ( Tom Bosley ), whom she married based more on a fear of being alone than for love, will reject her.
1963: The Eleventh Hour (TV Series) (Season 1 Episode 22: "Five Moments Out of Time") as Claudeen Lebowski; 1963: Going My Way (TV Series) (Season 1 Episode 30: "A Tough Act to Follow") as Kathryn Fontaine; 1963: The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (TV Series) (Season 2 Episode 10: "Good-Bye, George") as Lana Layne / Rosemary 'Peaches' Cassidy
Yellowjackets Season 2, Episode 1 Recap Showtime / Kailey Schwerman Spoilers below. It’s been over a year since we were last stranded in the Canadian wilderness with the teenagers of Showtime ...
Dr. James Kildare is a fictional American medical doctor, originally created in the 1930s by the author Frederick Schiller Faust under the pen name Max Brand.Shortly after the character's first appearance in a magazine story, Paramount Pictures used the story and character as the basis for the 1937 film Internes Can't Take Money, starring Joel McCrea as Jimmie Kildare.
Return to Cranford is the two-part second series of a British television series directed by Simon Curtis.The teleplay by Heidi Thomas was based on material from two novellas and a short story by Elizabeth Gaskell published between 1849 and 1863: Cranford, The Moorland Cottage and The Cage at Cranford.
Young Dr. Kildare is a syndicated medical drama television series which originally ran from September 21, 1972, for a total of 24 episodes. It was a remake of the Richard Chamberlain series Dr. Kildare which in turn was based on fictional doctor characters originally created by author Max Brand in the 1930s and previously used by MGM in a popular film series and radio drama.
He was also seen in episodes of Play of the Week, Route 66, Alcoa Premiere, Dr. Kildare, The Untouchables (in an episode guest starring Lee Marvin), The Doctors and the Nurses, “Wagon Train” Death Valley Days (twice), [21] Wide Country, and Combat! as a clever German sergeant. [22] He guest-starred on Ben Casey and Kraft Suspense Theatre. [23]