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BEN CASEY
 Ben Casey CAST
Dr.
Ben Casey..................................... Vince Edwards
Dr. David Zorba (1961-65)............................ Sam
Jaffe Dr. Maggie Graham.......................... Bettye
Ackerman Dr. Ted Hoffman....................................Harry
Landers Nick Kanavaras.......................................Nick
Dennis Nurse Wills...........................................Jeanne
Bates Jane Hancock (1965)............................Stella
Stevens Dr. Mike Fagers (1965)..............................Ben
Piazza Dr Daniel Niles Freeland (1965-66)..........Franchot
Tone Dr. Terry McDaniel (1965-66)..................Jim McMullan
Sally Welden (1965-66).........................Marlyn Mason
PRODUCERS
James
E. Moser, John E. Pommer, Matthew Rapf, Wilton Schiller, Jack Laird,
Irving Elman
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 153 Episodes
ABC
October
1961-September 1963...... Monday 10:00-11:00 September 1963-September
1964
.............................................. Wednesday 9:00-10:00
September 1964-March 1966......... Monday 10:00-11:00
U.S. Medical Drama
Ben Casey,
a medical drama about the "new breed" of doctors, ran on ABC from
October 1961 to May 1966. James Moser, who also created the Richard
Boone series Medic, created Ben Casey and Matthew Rapf produced
the program for Bing Crosby Productions. The show was very successful
for ABC and broke into the Top Twenty shows for its first two years.
A 1988 made-for TV movie, The Return of Ben Casey , enjoyed
only moderate success.
Ben Casey
was one of two prominent medical dramas broadcast during the early
1960s. In The Expanding Vista (1990), Mary Ann Watson characterizes
this show as a "New Frontier character drama." Indeed, the title
character often stood as a metaphor for the best and the brightest
of his generation. Often the ills to which Casey attended were stand-ins
for the ills of contemporary society. Symbolism was the stock-in-trade
of Ben Casey as evidence by its stylized opening: a hand
writing symbols on a chalk board as Sam Jaffe intoned, "Man, woman,
birth, death, infinity."
County General
Hospital was the setting for the practice of its most prominent
resident in neurosurgery, Ben Casey, played by Vince Edwards. Edwards
had been discovered by Bing Crosby who saw to it that his protege
had a suitable vehicle for his talents. As Casey, Edwards was gruff,
demanding, and decisive. Casey did not suffer fools lightly and
apparently had unqualified respect only for the chief of neurosurgery,
Dr. David Zorba (Sam Jaffe). The only other colleagues from whom
he would seek counsel were anesthesiologist Dr. Maggie Graham (Bettye
Ackerman) and Dr. Ted Hoffman (Harry Landers). Both Hoffman and
Graham provided counterpoints of emotion and compassion to the stolid
Casey. Virtually every episode in the entire first season of Ben
Casey involved a patient with a brain tumor. But the nature
of the malady was merely a device that allowed Casey to interact
with a panoply of individuals with unique problems--only one of
which was their illness. Like many shows of its era (Route 66,
The Fugitive), the core of Ben Casey could be found in
the development and growth of the characters in any given episode.
It was what Casey brought to a person's life as a whole that really
drove the show.
Patients were
not the only ones with problems. In Ben Casey the limits
of medicine, the ethics of physicians, and the role of medicine
in society were examined. The hospital functioned as a microcosm
of the larger society it served. The professionals presented in
Ben Casey were a tight group sworn to an oath of altruistic
service. The majority of physicians in the employ of County General
were not terribly inflated with self-importance. Their world was
not so far removed from the world inhabited by those they helped.
The problems that plagued the world outside the walls of County
General could often be found within as well. During their work at
County General, Casey and his colleagues came into contact with
representatives from every level of society. Part of that contact
was learning about and making judgments on certain societal issues
and problems. Racial tension, drug addiction, the plight of immigrants,
child abuse, and euthanasia were a few of the issues treated in
Ben Casey.
The series followed
an episodic format for its first four years. But the final season
saw Dr. Zorba replaced by Dr. Freeland (Franchot Tone) and a move
to a serial, soap opera-like story structure. In so doing, Ben
Casey moved away from the examination and possible correction
of society's problems and moved toward a more conventional, character-driven
drama. Vince Edwards, hoping to flex his creative muscles, directed
several of the episodes of the last two seasons. Chiefly in these
ways, Ben Casey departed from the characteristics of the
"New Frontier character drama" and more closely resembled an ordinary
medical melodrama. In March 1966, ABC cancelled the show.
The real value
of Ben Casey was in its presentation of maladies of the body
and mind as representative of larger problems that existed in our
society. The show was one of Hollywood's reactions to FCC Chairman
Newton Minnow's plea for better television. With the character of
Ben Casey at the center of each episode, the show presented
(often quite skillfully) the interrelationship of mental, physical,
and societal health.
-John
Cooper
FURTHER
READING
Alley, Robert S. "Media, Medicine, and Morality." In, Adler, Richard
P., editor. Understanding Television. New York: Praeger,
1981.
Turow,
Joseph. Playing Doctor. New York: Oxford University Press,
1988.
Watson,
Mary Ann. The Expanding Vista: Television in the Kennedy Years.
New York:Oxford University Press, 1990.
See
also Workplace
Programs
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