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Sunday Showcase

Sunday Showcase

1959TV Series⏱️ 1h 0m
BiographyComedyDramaMusicRomance
⭐ 4.3
IMDB Rating
174 votes

A show featuring various specials, some of which were comedy, and others which were serious dramas by famous authors.

Director
N/A
Writers
N/A
Stars
Robert Emhardt, Bob Hope, Allen Nourse
Release Date
September 20, 1959
Language
English
Country
United States
πŸ† 1
Wins
🎯 6
Nominations
πŸ“½οΈ View on IMDB

🎭 Top Cast

Robert Emhardt
Robert Emhardt
as Governor Fuller
Bob Hope
Bob Hope
as Self
πŸ‘€
Allen Nourse
as Venable
E.G. Marshall
E.G. Marshall
as William Thompson
Milton Selzer
Milton Selzer
as Julian Blumberg
πŸ‘€
Harry Davis
as Worker #3
John C. Becher
John C. Becher
as Chief Stewart
Ben Grauer
Ben Grauer
as Narrator
Royal Beal
Royal Beal
as Walter Ripley
πŸ‘€
Stuart Germain
as Judge Webster Thayer

🎬 Technical Specs

Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1
Sound
Mono
Color
Color
Production
National Broadcasting Company (NBC)

🏷️ Keywords

1950s1960ssundayday in titletwo word title

🎯 Categories

BiographyComedyDramaMusicRomance

πŸ’‘ Did You Know?

Around 1956, Eddie Fisher and his agent Lew Wasserman were discussing roles for Fisher's acting debut. A project being discussed at the time was "What Makes Sammy Run?" by Budd Schulberg and Stuart Schulberg. Fisher wanted to play aggressive Producer Sammy Glick, "the ultimate Jewish hustler. I knew a lot of real Sammy Glicks, and I felt confident that was a character I could play." Lew Wasserman decided that the character was too much of a classic negative Jewish stereotype, and that it would be bad for Fisher to play it. So Fisher went in the complete opposite direction (in retrospect, perhaps too far) with then-wife Debbie Reynolds in the squeaky clean comedy that Fisher hated, Bundle of Joy (1956), a film made to capitalize on the birth of their daughter, future "Princess Leia" Carrie Fisher. The Schulberg project "What Makes Sammy Run?" was eventually produced in two parts for this show, episodes #1.2 and #1.3.

πŸ“– Synopsis

A show featuring various specials, some of which were comedy, and others which were serious dramas by famous authors.