
East Side/West Side
CAST
Neil Brock...................................... George C. Scott
Frieda Hechlinger........................... Elizabeth Wilson
Jane Foster........................................ Cicely
Tyson
PRODUCERS
David
Susskind, Don Kranze, Arnold Perl, Larry Arrick
PROGRAMMING HISTORY 26 Episodes
CBS
September 1963-September 1964........................................
Monday 10:00-11:00
East
Side/West Side, an hour-long dramatic series, first appeared
on CBS in September 1963. Though it lasted only a single season,
it is a significant program in television history because of the
controversial subject matter it tackled each week and the casting
of black actress, Cicely Tyson, in a recurring lead role as secretary
Jane Foster.
During
the Kennedy years, with an increased regulatory zeal emanating from
the FCC, the networks attempted to de-emphasize the violence of
action-adventure series. One result was an increase in character
dramas. There was a trend toward programs based on liberal social
themes in which the protagonists were professionals in service to
society. As one producer of that era explained, "The guns of gangsters,
policemen, and western lawmen were replaced by the stethoscope,
the law book, and the psychiatrist's couch." This new breed of episodic
TV hero struggled with occupational ethics and felt a disillusionment
with values of the past.
Unlike
action-adventure series in which heroes often settled their problems
with a weapon, the troubles in New Frontier character dramas were
not always resolved. Writers grappled with issues such as poverty,
prejudice, drug addiction, abortion, and capital punishment, which
do not lend themselves to tidy resolutions. Although the loose ends
of a plot might be tied together by story's end, the world was not
necessarily depicted as a better place at the conclusion of an episode.
East
Side/West Side, produced by David Susskind and Daniel Melnick,
was among the best of the genre and won instant acclaim. The program
about a New York social worker appealed to sophisticates because,
according to Lawrence Laurent of The Washington Post, it
violated "every sacred tenet for television success." Typical TV
heroes all had a similar look, said Laurent, "Short straight noses,
direct from a plastic surgeon, gleaming smiles courtesy of a dental
laboratory." But Neil Brock, played by George C. Scott, observed
Laurent, was "hooknosed and disheveled."
An
exemplary episode of East Side/West Side entitled "Who Do
You Kill?" aired on 4 November 1963. The story portrays how a black
couple in their early twenties living in a Harlem tenement face
the death of their infant daughter, who is bitten by a rat while
in her crib. Diana Sands played the mother who works in a neighborhood
bar to support the family. Her husband, played by James Earl Jones,
is frustrated by unemployment and grows more bitter each day.
The
week after the broadcast, Senator Jacob Javits, a liberal, pro-civil
rights Republican, moved that two newspaper articles be entered
into the Congressional Record: "A CBS Show Stars Two Negroes:
Atlanta Blacks It Out," from the New York Herald Tribune,
and from The New York Times, "TV: A Drama of Protest." Javits
praised CBS for displaying courage in airing "Who Do You Kill?"
and told his Senate colleagues he was distressed that not all Southern
viewers had the opportunity to see the drama. The program, Javits
said, "dealt honestly and sensitively with the vital problems of
job discrimination, housing conditions and the terrible cancerous
cleavage that can exist between the Negro and the white community."
"Who Do You Kill?" he said, was "shocking in its revelations of
what life can be like without hope."
The
stark realism of the series was discomforting. Most viewers didn't
know what to make of a hero who was often dazed by moral complexities.
For CBS the series was a bust; one-third of the advertising time
remained unsold and the program was not renewed. A few years later
David Susskind reflected on the ratings problem of East Side/West
Side: "A gloomy atmosphere for commercial messages, an integrated
cast, and a smaller Southern station lineup, all of these things
coming together spelled doom for the show. I'm sorry television
wasn't mature enough to absorb it and like it and live with it."
-Mary
Ann Watson
Watson,
Mary Ann. The Expanding Vista: American Television in the Kennedy
Years. New York: Oxford University Press, 1990; Durham, North
Carolina: Duke University Press, 1994.