The NBC Monday Movie
The NBC Monday Movie | |
---|---|
Also known as |
''NBC Monday Night at the Movies NBC Wednesday Night at the Movies The NBC Tuesday Night Movie'' |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Running time | 120 mins. (approx) |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | February 4, 1963 - present |
The NBC Monday Movie was a television anthology series of films that debuted on February 4, 1963 (in the middle of the 1962-63 season), and ran off on NBC. It was referred to as NBC Monday Night at the Movies prior to the mid-1980s. The show moved to Wednesday nights in 1964 as NBC Wednesday Night at the Movies, and in 1965, the program moved to Tuesdays, under the title The NBC Tuesday Night Movie. The name would henceforth change depending on what night of the week the program was telecast. By 1968, there was once again a weekly NBC Monday Night Movie on the air.[1]
Background
The idea for the show came about when advertisers opted out of two hour-long shows the network ran on Monday nights for the 1962-1963 season, It's A Man's World and Saints and Sinners. Presumably, both shows were cancelled due to low audience numbers. Having experienced some success with NBC Saturday Night at the Movies, the network decided to acquire more feature films as a stop-gap measure. A package of 42 movies from 20th Century Fox and 35 titles from MGM were purchased by the network for both its Monday and Saturday night movie series at a cost of $14 million.[2] With a 7:30 pm (EST) start time, the movies of the show's first season were made up of mostly light comedies, an occasional swashbuckler such as Prince Valiant, and musicals. These types of films were also chosen because they typically ran under 100 minutes, the normal running-time for a two-hour movie slot in 1963.
In the latter years of Monday Night Movie's run, mostly made-for-TV movies were showcased. The theatrical films were edited for content, to remove objectionable material, and occasionally, but not always, to reduce the film's running time to fit into the two-hour time slot. As all widescreen films were then, they were pan-and-scanned so the image would fit the standard 4:3 television screen (as opposed to letterbox format). An exception was the 1951 film version of "Show Boat", which made its television debut on NBC Monday Night at the Movies in 1972 and had not been filmed in widescreen. The choice of Show Boat as a movie offering on the program was rather unusual, given the fact that it was, at the time, a twenty-one-year-old film, rather than a recent one.
The first two series of films (February 1963-April 1964)
The first incarnation of NBC Monday Night at the Movies lasted from February 1963 until early September 1964. Despite the promise of big name stars each week, the series was no match for the CBS lineup of game shows, and sitcoms such as The Lucy Show. In hopes of better ratings, and to re-coup some of their investment, the films in the second list below would be re-broadcast on NBC Saturday Night at the Movies in the late spring and summer of 1964.[3]
Unless otherwise indicated, all films aired from 7:30pm–9:30pm Eastern Time on Monday Nights. The last number in the second list below notes the Nielsen rating the movie received:[4]
These first sixteen titles (all produced by 20th Century Fox studios) were aired on the following dates:[5]
- (2/4/1963) The Enemy Below (1957)
- (2/11/1963) The Bravados (1958)
- (2/18/1963) Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison (1957)
- (2/25/1963) King of the Khyber Rifles (1953)
- (3/4/1963) Hell and High Water (1954)
- (3/11/1963) Prince Valiant (1954)
- (3/18/1963) Boy on a Dolphin (1957)
- (3/25/1963) From Hell to Texas (1958)
- (4/1/1963) My Cousin Rachel (1952)
- (4/8/1963) April Love (1957)
- (4/15/1963) An Affair to Remember (1957)
- (4/22/1963) The Barbarian and the Geisha (1958)
- (4/29/1963) The Hunters (1958)
- (5/6/1963) Harry Black and the Tiger (1958)
- (5/13/1963) The Mudlark (1950)
- (5/20/1963) Mardi Gras (1958)
From here through September 9, the above titles were rerun on Monday nights. None of them appeared on NBC's other film series, Saturday Night at the Movies. The second season began below and mixed in MGM titles with those of 20th Century Fox. Like the above-listed films, these were all television premieres. The Nielsen ratings are listed next to the release year of each title.
One interesting note: There is no entry below for 11/25/1963. This was the Monday after the Friday that President John Kennedy was assassinated. Monday was the date of the state funeral, which was given all-day coverage by the networks. Understandably, NBC thus postponed broadcasting the musical Singin' in the Rain (originally slated for 11/25) until later in the season.
- (9/16/1963) Love Is a Many Splendored Thing (1955) (19.7)
- (9/23/1963) David and Bathsheba (1951;2hrs, 30 min.) (17.9)
- (9/30/1963) Executive Suite (1954) {First film on Network TV to receive the 'Edited for Television' tag on-screen; 4 minutes were cut} (15.4)
- (10/7/1963) The Wreck of the Mary Deare (1959) {5 minutes were cut for TV.} (15.5)
- (10/14/1963) The Rains of Ranchipur (1955) {4 minutes were cut for TV.} (16.0)
- (10/21/1963) The Mating Game (1959) (27.1)
- (10/28/1963) Good Morning, Miss Dove (1955) {7 minutes were cut for TV.} (19.4)
- (11/4/1963) White Feather (1955)(18.2)
- (11/11/1963) Father of the Bride (1950) (19.3)
- (11/18/1963) The Reluctant Debutante (1958) (16.5)
- (12/2/1963) House of Numbers (1957) (16.7)
- (12/9/1963) The Wings of Eagles (1957) {10 minutes were cut for TV} (22.3)
- (12/16/1963) Lost World (1960) (20.7)
- (12/23/1963) The Power and the Prize (1956) (N/A)
- (12/30/1963) Kiss Me Kate (1953) {9 minutes were cut for TV} (15.9)
- (1/6/1964) The Seven Cities of Gold (1955) (17.4)
- (1/13/1964) Singin' in the Rain (1952) (19.4)
- (1/20/1964) Action of the Tiger (1957) (15.8)
- (1/27/1964) House of Bamboo (1955) (17.7)
- (2/3/1964) Phone Call from a Stranger (1952) (18.2)
- (2/10/1964) Treasure of the Golden Condor (1953) (17.4)
- (2/17/1964) The Safecracker (1958) (13.4)
- (2/24/1964) Prince of Players (1955) (10.6)
- (3/2/1964) Underwater Warrior (1958) (16.0)
- (3/9/1964) The 39 Steps (1960) (15.0)
- (3/16/1964) The View from Pompey's Head (1955) (18.5)
- (3/23/1964) The Racers (1955) (16.6)
- (3/30/1964) The Pride of St. Louis (1952) (18.9)
- (4/6/1964) The Virgin Queen (1955) (14.4)
- (4/13/1964) Never Let Me Go (1960) (17.1)
From here, reruns were shown for the remainder of the season until mid-September 1964, when NBC announced that it would discontinue Monday Night at the Movies. Instead, a new prime-time movie night, Wednesdays, from 9 until 11 p.m. (ET), became the time slot for the network's alternative film anthology during the 1964-65 season[6] while Saturday nights remained a mainstay for NBC's film broadcasts.
References
- ↑ http://www.getty.net/texts/tv-67-83.txt (Cached by Internet Archive)
- ↑ UPI Interview with Don Bays, in charge of movies at NBC. Western Kansas Press, Great Bend, April 27, 1963
- ↑ TV Listings Pages;San Antonio Light Newspaper; San Antonio, TX; September 1963-April 1964
- ↑ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC/BC-1969/1969-11-03-BC.pdf
- ↑ February–May 1963 TV listings of The New York Times
- ↑ Adams, Val. "NBC-TV Acquires Post-1948 Movies: Buys Paramount Features for Showing in Fall." New York Times. (February 12, 1964): p. 67.