GE True
GE True | |
---|---|
Jan Shepard in "Gertie the Great", a GE True episode about a mallard duck in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, which captivates the community | |
Also known as | ''General Electric True'' |
Genre | Anthology |
Written by |
Harold Jack Bloom Otis Carney John Kneubuhl Lou Morheim Dean Riesner Michael Zagor |
Directed by |
William Conrad Robert M. Leeds Jack Webb |
Presented by | Jack Webb |
Narrated by | Jack Webb |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 33 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Jack Webb |
Producer(s) | Michael Meshekoff |
Cinematography |
Daniel L. Fapp Bert Glennon Carl E. Guthrie Harold E. Stine |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 25 minutes |
Production company(s) | Mark VII Limited |
Distributor | Warner Bros. Television |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Picture format | Black-and-white |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | September 30, 1962 – May 26, 1963 |
GE True (also known as General Electric True) is a 33-episode American anthology series sponsored by General Electric. Telecast on CBS, the series presented stories previously published in True magazine. Articles from the magazine were adapted to television by Gene Roddenberry and other screenwriters.
Jack Webb produced and hosted the thirty-three episodes during his stint as head of Warner Brothers Television through his Mark VII Limited Company. The series aired from September 30, 1962 until May 26, 1963, with repeats through September 1963.
Program overview
The show had a unique opening: A huge "True" sign, apparently five stories tall, darkened, was seen in deep shadows. Jack Webb announced, "This is True!" Strong symphonic music included timpani rhythms, followed by the majestic opening theme. The True sign became brightly lit as Webb walked alongside the illuminated sign in an off-stage direction. A classic quotation from such figures as Daniel Webster then appeared.
In an overview of the 1962 television season, Time noted:
- Jack ("dum-de-dum-dum") Webb is back. This time he is retelling stories from the files of True magazine. The first one was set on a hospital ship off Okinawa, where a doctor (played by William Conrad) operated on a marine who had a live and sensitive shell in his body capable of blowing a six-foot hole in a steel deck. It was a hell of a moment, but Webb sank it. "At 1830 hours exactly," he intoned, "the operation began on a human bomb dead center in the circle of death." He hosts the program in an echo-chambered voice, while he stands beside the word TRUE, spelled out in block letters 22 feet high, or roughly ten times as tall as Jack Webb.[1]
GE True aired at 9:30 p.m. Sundays, following the last season of the former ABC sitcom, The Real McCoys, starring Walter Brennan and Richard Crenna, renamed on the CBS schedule as The McCoys. GE True aired a half-hour later than a predecessor series, General Electric Theater, hosted by Ronald W. Reagan, which at had aired at 9 p.m. from 1953 to 1962.
Several episodes were directed by William Conrad, Marshal Matt Dillon on radio's Gunsmoke and later the star of the CBS crime drama, Cannon. Like its preceding program, The McCoys, GE True faced opposition from the highly rated NBC western series, Bonanza.
Reruns of the series were subsequently syndicated under the title True.
Selected episodes
In "Open Season" (January 6, 1963), James Best portrays the courageous Wisconsin game warden Ernie Swift who faces the reprisal of the mob after he tickets gangster Frank MacErlane (David McLean) for illegal fishing.[2]
In "Defendant: Clarence Darrow" (January 13, 1963), Clarence Darrow (Tol Avery), the Chicago lawyer who later clashed with William Jennings Bryan in regard to the theory of evolution, is accused in 1912 of having attempted to bribe a juror. Darrow argues passionately over legal procedures with his own lawyer, Earl Rogers (Robert Vaughn).[2]
In the episode "Firebug" (January 27, 1963), Victor Buono plays Charles Colvin, a barber in Los Angeles, California, who is by night a pyromaniac. The United States Forest Service believes that one arsonist is causing a series of fires. The episode also stars Keith Andes and Arch Johnson.[2]
In "The Moonshiners" (February 24, 1963), Walter Kopek (Gene Evans), an agent of the United States Treasury Department assumes an undercover role to halt a bootlegging operation in Florida, run by the mobster Bill Munger (Robert Emhardt). James Griffith is cast in this episode as Stan Woolman.[2]
In the three-part episode "Security Risk", George Ellsworth, played by Charles Aidman, an official with the United States Embassy in Warsaw, Poland in 1960, is blackmailed through a romantic affair with a young woman named Erica (Erika Peters) into passing secret information to the communists at the height of the Cold War. He confessed his guilt despite the protection of diplomatic immunity. Karl Swenson and Parley Baer also appear in this episode.[2]
In "A Pattern for Espionage", United States Army Colonel Harvey Madison (Rex Reason), is approached by a former Russian comrade-in-arms to spy for the communists. Instead, he covertly cooperates with the Federal Bureau of Investigation to uncover a spy ring operated by the former Soviet Union. Anthony Eisley and Gregory Walcott also appear in this episode.[2]
In "The Tenth Mona Lisa" (1963), Italian farmer Vincenzo Perugia (Vito Scotti) in 1911 steals the Mona Lisa from the Louvre Museum in Paris but is apprehended by a French detective when he attempts to unload the painting on an art dealer.[2]
In the two-part 1963 episode "Heydrich", two Czech sergeants assassinate the Nazi hangman Reinhard Heydrich; Chancellor of the Third Reich Adolf Hitler takes revenge on an entire village in his search for the sergeants.[2]
In "Five Tickets to Hell", the series finale, John Quigley (Bing Russell), a Chicago mobster travels to Chihuahua, Mexico, where he robs the mint of $500,000 and kills seven men in the commission of the crime. Police Lieutenant Juan Garcia (Carlos Romero) tracks down Quigley and his three accomplices. Barbara Luna appears in this episode as Cotita.[2]
Guest stars
In addition to the aforementioned, others who guest starred on GE True included:
Episodes
Episode # | Episode title | Original airdate |
---|---|---|
1-1 | "Circle of Death" | September 30, 1962 |
1-2 | "V-Victor 5" | October 7, 1962 |
1-3 | "Harris Vs. Castro" | October 14, 1962 |
1-4 | "Code Name: Christopher (Part 1)" | October 21, 1962 |
1-5 | "Code Name: Christopher (Part 2)" | October 28, 1962 |
1-6 | "The Handmade Private" | November 4, 1962 |
1-7 | "The Last Day" | November 11, 1962 |
1-8 | "Man With a Suitcase" | November 18, 1962 |
1-9 | "Mile Long Shot To Kill" | November 25, 1962 |
1-10 | "Cheating Cheaters" | December 2, 1962 |
1-11 | "UXB (Unexploded Bomb)" | December 9, 1962 |
1-12 | "The Wrong Nickel" | December 16, 1962 |
1-13 | "The Amateurs" | December 30, 1962 |
1-14 | "Open Season" | January 6, 1963 |
1-15 | "Defendant: Clarence Darrow" | January 13, 1963 |
1-16 | "O.S.I." | January 20, 1963 |
1-17 | "Firebug" | January 27, 1963 |
1-18 | "Little Richard" | February 3, 1963 |
1-19 | "Escape (Part 1)" | February 10, 1963 |
1-20 | "Escape (Part 2)" | February 17, 1963 |
1-21 | "The Moonshiners" | February 24, 1963 |
1-22 | "Security Risk" | March 3, 1963 |
1-23 | "The Black Robed Ghost" | March 10, 1963 |
1-24 | "Ordeal" | March 17, 1963 |
1-25 | "Pattern for Espionage" | March 24, 1963 |
1-26 | "The Tenth Mona Lisa" | March 31, 1963 |
1-27 | "Gertie The Great" | April 14, 1963 |
1-28 | "Black Market" | April 21, 1963 |
1-29 | "Nitro" | April 28, 1963 |
1-30 | "Heydrich (Part 1)" | May 5, 1963 |
1-31 | "Heydrich (Part 2)" | May 12, 1963 |
1-32 | "Commando" | May 19, 1963 |
1-33 | "Five Tickets to Hell" | May 26, 1963 |
See also
References
External links
- GE True at the Internet Movie Database
- GE True at TV.com