Schlitz Playhouse Crown Theatre "Rim of Violence" S3E19 Scott Brady Martin Milner Marcia Patrick
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- čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
- A young policeman's daily contact with ugliness and heartbreak shakes his faith in humanity.
Originally billed as "Playhouse of the Stars" this long running anthology series was originally presented live from New York City. Irene Dunne was briefly the hostess in 1952, and the show frequently used Broadway performers in classic stories.
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Excellent episode. Thanks from India for sharing
Excellent..! Great to see Scott Brady in lead role… always liked him..
Thanks for posting..!!
Thank you so much for posting this. RIP Martin Milner.
Interesting to see him in these early programs...
@@VintageFilmChannel , yes and he was in a ton of them. Would love to see more. I’m a huge fan of his.
Excellent role for the underrated Scott Brady.
Originally telecast on January 8, 1954. The "SCHLITZ PLAYHOUSE OF STARS" series was so successful, several "packages" of episodes were subsequently syndicated under different titles {so as not to conflict with first-run episodes telecast on CBS through 1959}. "CROWN THEATRE" was one of them (another "package" was "HERALD PLAYHOUSE").
I thought I’d seen everything Shotgun Slade played in. Excellent surprise!✅
'Stop the world, I want to get off' - that line was later the title of a Broadway play.
People used to dress so nice...I'm in my 60s, so I remember those days. I dressed nicely too, til recently. I too wear leggings, etc. But I remember dressing, every day. If a friend dropped by they would ask me where I was going. I wasn't planning on leaving the house, I just liked to look nice, every day. Now I see grown women out in public in pajamas. In the middle of the day. The average appearance of most has gone from "casual" to just plain sloppy. Not a care...😞
14:10. "Apologies to the dogs."
He owed them an apology. -Because he was rude enough to compare the vicious, degenerate humans that he encounters on the street with the noble, loving species, dog. Dogs are superior to humans. So when we call a nasty human a dog, we cast an indirect insult at dogs.
A young Malloy, before He became a Cop Himself and got a partner named Reed!