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...sheen of art that live weekly dramas once gave TV is fast rubbing off. Due to die by fall are Studio One, Climax!, Kraft Theater and Matinee Theater. There was one particularly noisy survivor-a stubby, pugnacious man named David Susskind, 37. Producer Susskind has 25 live drama spectaculars lined up for next season, including seven for Du Pont, seven for Rexall, two for Sheaffer Pen. This is nearly twice as many as any other packager; and, with his bi-weekly Armstrong Circle Theater, Susskind next year may well be producing a good third of the major live-drama output...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Bring 'Em Back Alive | 6/2/1958 | See Source »

...Nothing beats the sheer excitement of live TV," glowed Susskind in the darkness of NBC's vast Brooklyn sound stage one long, tense afternoon last week. Around him rolled the final rehearsals of Kraft Theater's Part 2 of All the King's Men, Novelist Robert Penn Warren's case history of a Huey Longish red-neck politician's rise and fall. Skidding between 14 sets under the glaring lights, fretting actors stumbled over camera cables. Before banks of baffling screens and switches in the darkened control room hunched wild-haired Director Sydney Lumet ("Places...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Bring 'Em Back Alive | 6/2/1958 | See Source »

Near Lumet, Susskind, scribbled notes on weak spots ("Need more sex chemistry between Ann and Willie . . . Can't see the gun in the assassination scene"). The hours dissolved in one, two, three rehearsals. Lines were furiously added and subtracted, camera shots sharpened. "Suddenly it's 9 o'clock," says Susskind, "and you can't go home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Bring 'Em Back Alive | 6/2/1958 | See Source »

...Susskind took over the dying days of the sagging Kraft Theater in a frank attempt to prove what a live weekly show could be, hit a high point with All the King's Men. His other six plays had been enterprising, if not consistently successful. All met zero response from sponsors with next season on their minds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Bring 'Em Back Alive | 6/2/1958 | See Source »

...Staring in Disbelief." Such sponsor neglect incenses Susskind, a toy bulldog of a man who hardly minds biting the hand that hesitates to feed him. At every chance, he sneers at the "ocean of mediocrity" brought on by "panic buying" of quiz games and westerns. He insists that advertisers are deluded, says that viewers "are staring in stark disbelief and disinterest, and I hazard the guess that their pocketbooks are zipped...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Bring 'Em Back Alive | 6/2/1958 | See Source »

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