Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Kraft Suspense Theatre is an American television anthology series that was produced and broadcast from 1963 to 1965 on NBC. [1] Sponsored by Kraft Foods, it was seen three weeks out of every four and was pre-empted for Perry Como's Kraft Music Hall specials once monthly. Como's production company, Roncom Films, also produced Kraft Suspense ...
Nightmare in Chicago is a 1964 suspense thriller crime television film produced and directed by Robert Altman, based on the novel Death on the Turnpike by William P. McGivern. [1] It was originally filmed as an episode of the NBC series Kraft Suspense Theatre titled "Once Upon a Savage Night" before being expanded into the TV movie.
[2] [3] [4] The film was originally broadcast on television as "The Case Against Paul Ryker", a 1963 two-part episode of Kraft Suspense Theatre. [5] It was released as a feature film in 1968 to capitalize on Marvin's popularity from The Dirty Dozen. Its second run paired it as a double feature with Counterpoint (1968) starring Charlton Heston.
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 9:30 p.m., until ...
Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre: June: Season 1 Episode 9: "It's Mental Work" Breaking Point: Shelley Osborne Peters: Season 1 Episode 14: "Heart of Marble, Body of Shame" The Alfred Hitchcock Hour: Louise Henderson: Season 1 Episode 23: "The Lonely Hours" Kraft Suspense Theatre: Janet Cord: Season 1 Episode 6: "One Step Down" 1964 The ...
They soon teamed on episodes of Kraft Suspense Theater and Chrysler Theater. Rayfiel had uncredited rewrites ("script doctoring") on Pollack's feature films starting in 1965 with The Slender Thread; their collaboration continued over the next few decades. Even when Pollack did not enlist Rayfiel's talents as a writer, he still expected the self ...
'Wicked,' soaring onscreen, has returned to the Hollywood Pantages Theatre. This production reveals what the movie gets right, as well as weaknesses neither version can overcome. 'Wicked,' back at ...
A review by Hal Erickson at AllMovie.com notes that "Frederick O'Neal, a leading light of African American theatre, is superb as a loquacious African UN delegate", and that "Neil Hamilton, onetime silent screen star and future Commissioner Gordon on TV's Batman, is surprisingly sinister as a pompous right-wing fanatic".