Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn anthology series starring Richard Boone as host and starred in about 50% of the shows. Each regular had parts in almost every episode and starred in at least one episode.An anthology series starring Richard Boone as host and starred in about 50% of the shows. Each regular had parts in almost every episode and starred in at least one episode.An anthology series starring Richard Boone as host and starred in about 50% of the shows. Each regular had parts in almost every episode and starred in at least one episode.
- Indicado para 5 Primetime Emmys
- 1 vitória e 9 indicações no total
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I recall seeing this in reruns in the mid 80's on a local (Detroit) UHF station (Channel 62)...Didn't the opening voice over say "These are the actors...and this is the play", or something along those lines? A great show that was way ahead of it's time.I also remember the Robert Blake parts that were mentioned. Sadly, Boone pretty much disappeared after this grand, failed experiment, only to surface occasionally in the odd movie role.I first encountered him on the old "Hec Ramsay" television series in the mid seventies, which was the last role he was identified with. It would have been very interesting if he had NOT turned down the McGarrett role in what eventually became Hawaii Five-O...
I can add little to the well-made comments of the ex-Georgian (now safely in Mass.) regarding THE RICHARD BOONE SHOW. It was indeed unique on television in the 1960s and beyond.
The producers probably thought the name would attract viewers, but obviously not enough. I would like to think this rotating cast of characters and situations was "ahead of its time," but perhaps there was no such time. Series, a.k.a. "prime time" television watchers apparently did not like the insecurity of no characters or settings to which they could become attached. Always there was something new, even unique, c.f. the afore-mentioned episode by Odets. THE RICHARD BOONE SHOW was not in keeping with Ray Bradbury's notion of "television family" -- which the host's expositions from the Green Room could not replace. To be best of my recollection, Richard Boone disappeared from television with this noble experiment.
The producers probably thought the name would attract viewers, but obviously not enough. I would like to think this rotating cast of characters and situations was "ahead of its time," but perhaps there was no such time. Series, a.k.a. "prime time" television watchers apparently did not like the insecurity of no characters or settings to which they could become attached. Always there was something new, even unique, c.f. the afore-mentioned episode by Odets. THE RICHARD BOONE SHOW was not in keeping with Ray Bradbury's notion of "television family" -- which the host's expositions from the Green Room could not replace. To be best of my recollection, Richard Boone disappeared from television with this noble experiment.
This show is fondly remembered by those of us who saw it, but not as precisely as might be. One reviewer remembers John McIntyre on it, which he was not, and speaks of the various roles of "Bobby Benson," by which I think he means Robert Blake, as there's no Bobby Benson in the cast list. Another person remembers it being an alternative to "The Fugitive," but my family and I saw every episode of both of those shows, so they couldn't have been on opposite each other. Nevertheless, this was as great a show as everyone says. The rotating cast members distinguished themselves before, during and especially afterward in many memorable roles on stage, screen, television, radio and recording. Boone himself, alas, had little chance to fulfill the versatility he showed in the various plays, being mostly typecast in villain roles for the rest of his career. The Richard Boone Show itself quickly joined the list of excellent TV programs that simply never caught the fancy of the general audience. There's never been another show like it.
This TV series was never aired in France. But the French audiences missed something fantastic. This is definitely not a crime show, but an excellent drama one. Here, the particularity is that you have always the same actors playing in most of the episodes. And, in every story, independent tales, they all played different characters. In one show, for instance, Richard Boone played the lead, and in another one, you hardly recognized him in a supporting character. Please read all my comments, for each episode, I have commented them all. For most of them, I really enjoyed. And I realize that Richard Boone was really a terrific actor, a true one. Maybe best than he was in big screen films, where the majors always take him for only heavies characters. The best I wish you is to get one day this outstanding TV show. One last thing, in this series, you have Guy Stockwell too; remember him as Chuck Heston's brother in WARLORD. He was not a great actor, yes, but I appreciated him here, in all those episodes.
1963-64 featured two unique bits of prime-time series programming: George C. Scott's social work series on CBS, EAST SIDE WEST SIDE, with its vivid bi-racial stories (several strong enough they were never shown in Georgia, where I watched), and Richard Boone's one-hour series of original dramas, each one acted by the show's in-house cast of players. Boone, John McIntyre (WAGON TRAIN) and Henry Morgan (DRAGNET)were well known, Robert Blake was about to be-- the rest of the company were just as often featured (Bethel Leslie and Jeanette Nolan were particularly strong). They took the repertory ideal very seriously-- Clifford Odets wrote the premiere script, and their most noticed hour was written by Horton Foote ("All the Comforts of Home"). The quality of these shows was less remarkable than Scott's show, which I am convinced would still look good today. But Boone's experiment made a strong case for the idea that this was what actors should be doing, to enlarge their skills. Wherever Laura Devon, Lloyd Bochner, and Warren Stevens are today, they should be satisfied to have been part of this project.
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- CuriosidadesOne of the few dramatic shows produced by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions.
- Citações
Richard Boone - Host: [opening introduction] Good evening. We are the players in this theater and we welcome you, our audience.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosThe closing credit roll for each episode lists alphabetically all 11 principal performers even if the person does not appear in a segment.
- ConexõesFeatured in Bloopermania (1987)
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- How many seasons does The Richard Boone Show have?Fornecido pela Alexa
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- El teatro de Richard Boone
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- Tempo de duração1 hora
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- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was The Richard Boone Show (1963) officially released in Canada in English?
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