@article{436811, note = {Booklet featuring an essay by curator Ron Simon and his extensive liner notes on each program.}, author = {Chayefsky, Paddy, and Coe, Fred, and Mann, Delbert, and Serling, Rod, and Cook, Fielder, and Levin, Ira, and Segal, Alex, and Costigan, James, and Petrie, Daniel. and Schulman, Arnold. and Nelson, Ralph, and Manulis, Martin, and Frankenheimer, John, and Miller, J. P. and Steiger, Rod, and Marchand, Nancy, and Minciotti, Esther, and Ciolli, Augusta, and Mantell, Joe, and Palmer, Betsy. and Philips, Lee, and San Marco, Rossana. and Persoff, Nehemiah, and Caine, Howard. and Gordon, Don, and Roos, Joanna, and Arthur, Jack. and Ward, Victoria, and Montgomery, Elizabeth, and Baker, Sybil. and Standlee, Shirley. and Sloane, Everett, and Kiley, Richard. and Dayton, June. and Wilson, Elizabeth, and Newton, Theodore, and Begley, Ed, and Livesey, Jack, and Welsh, Ronnie. and Griffith, Andy, and Clark, Harry, and Emhardt, Robert, and LeRoy, Eddie. and Clark, Alexander, and Storch, Arthur, and Hastings, Bob, and Smith, G. Albert, and Harris, Julie, and Woods, Donald, and Stoddard, Haila. and Higgins, Michael, and Fletcher, Lawrence, and Congdon, James. and Newman, Paul, and Salmi, Albert. and Bond, Rudy, and Babcock, Barbara, and Gulager, Clu. and Johnson, Arch, and Johnson, Georgann. and McGovern, John, and Peppard, George. and Remsen, Bert, and Palance, Jack, and Wynn, Keenan, and Hunter, Kim, and Wynn, Ed, and Rooney, Mickey. and O'Brien, Edmond, and Tormé, Mel, and Bissell, Whit, and Donovan, King. and Ryder, Eddie. and Wynant, H. M. and Ross, Mike. and Robertson, Cliff, and Laurie, Piper, and Bickford, Charles, and Atterbury, Malcolm, and Elliott, Dick, and Gibson, Mimi. and Hayden, Sterling, and Lawrence, Marc, and Wentworth, Martha, and Hyman, Mac, and Harris, Mark, and Lehman, Ernest,}, url = {http://library.usi.edu/record/436811}, title = {The golden age of television [videorecording] /}, publisher = {Criterion Collection,}, abstract = {The hugely popular live American television plays of the 1950s have become the stuff of legend. Combining elements of theater, radio, and filmmaking, they were produced at a moment when TV technology was growing more mobile and art was being made accessible to a newly suburban postwar demographic. These astonishingly choreographed, brilliantly acted, and socially progressive "teleplays" constituted an artistic high for the medium, bringing Broadway-quality drama to all of America.}, recid = {436811}, pages = {3 videodiscs (478 min.) :}, address = {[United States] :}, year = {2009}, }