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THE NAME OF THE
GAME
 The Name of the Game CAST
Glenn
Howard ..............................................Gene Barry
Dan Farrell ................................................Robert
Stack Jeff Dillon ..............................................Tony
Franciosa Peggy Maxwell ....................................Susan
St. James Joe Sample................................................
Ben Murphy Andy Hill......................................................
Cliff Potter Ross Craig ..................................................Mark
Miller
PRODUCERS
Richard Irving, Richard Levinson, William Link, Leslie Stevens,
George Eckstein, Dean Hargrove
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
NBC
September 1968-September 1971
Friday 8:30-10:00
U.S. Adventure/Mystery
Series
The
Name of the Game occupies a unique place in the history of prime
time-television. Notable for the ambitious scope and social relevance
of its stories and for its innovative 90-minute anthology format,
the series was perhaps most influential in its lavish production
values, which aimed to recreate the audio-visual complexity of the
movies. In 1969 TV Guide reported that the show's budget
of $400,000 per episode made The Name of the Game the most
expensive television program in history. The series also functioned
as a kind of apprentice field for writers and directors who later
achieved great success, including Steven Bochco, Marvin Chomsky,
Leo Penn and Steven Spielberg.
The
two-hour pilot film for the series, Fame Is the Name of the Game,
was broadcast in 1966 as the first World Premiere Movie, a weekly
series of made-for-television films produced by Universal Studios
for NBC. The series itself, which premiered in 1968, retained the
fluid, quick-cutting visual texture of the pilot and added a pulsating
jazz theme by Dave Grusin. Tony Franciosa, star of the pilot film,
returned to the series as Jeff Dillon, ace reporter for People
Magazine, in a rotation every third week with Gene Barry and
Robert Stack. Barry played a Henry Luce-type media mogul, Glenn
Howard, CEO of Howard Publications, while Stack--in a role intended
to recall his performance as Eliot Ness, the crime-fighting hero
of The Untouchables--played Dan Farrell, a retired FBI agent
now a writer-editor on Crime Magazine. Providing continuity,
Susan St. James appeared in every episode as Peggy Maxwell, who
remained a research assistant and aide-de-camp to the male stars
through the run of the series despite her Ph.D. in archaeology and
her knowledge of five languages.
Because
each episode was essentially a self-contained film, the series offered
a rich venue for performers and served as something of a refuge
for journeyman movie actors drawn to television by the breakdown
of the Hollywood studios and the disappearance of the B-movie. Among
the movie actors who appeared in the series: Dana Andrews, Anne
Baxter, Charles Boyer, Joseph Cotton, Broderick Crawford, Yvonne
DeCarlo, Jose Ferrer, Farley Granger, John Ireland, Van Johnson,
Janet Leigh, Ida Lupino, Kevin McCarthy, Ray Milland, Gene Raymond,
Mickey Rooney, and Barry Sullivan.
One
of the first television programs to deal directly with the increasing
social and political turbulence of late 1960s, The Name of the
Game regularly confronted such topics as the counter culture,
racial conflict, the sexual revolution, political corruption, environmental
pollution. Its ideology was a muddled if revealing strain of Hollywood
liberalism, and its rotating heroes, especially Gene Barry's elegant
corporate aristocrat, were enlightened professionals who used the
power of their media conglomerate to right injustice and defend
the powerless. If many episodes ended on a reformist note of muted
affirmation for an America shown to be flawed and endangered but
resilient and ultimately fixable, individual scenes and performances
often dramatized social evils, injustice, moral and political corruption
with a vividness and truthfulness rare in television during this
period.
As
it continued, the series became more imaginative and unpredictable,
experimenting at times with unusual and challenging formats. "Little
Bear Died Running" (first broadcast 6 November 1970), written by
Edward J. Lakso, uses a complex strategy of multiple flashbacks
to reconstruct the murder of an American Indian by a "legal" posse,
in the process powerfully exposing the racist attitudes of an apparently
enlightened white culture. "Appointment in Palermo" (26 February
1971), directed by Ben Gazzara, is a zany, affectionate parody of
the godfather genre, its comedy notably sharpened by a clever use
of actors familiar to us from straight gangster films: Gabriel Dell,
Brenda Vacarro, Harry Guardino, John Marley and Joe De Santis. In
"Los Angeles 2017" (15 January 1971) Glenn Howard falls into a nightmare
of ecological disaster in which a vestigial American population
survives beneath the polluted surface of the earth in USA, Inc.,
a regimented society run by a corporate elite. This notable episode
was directed by Steven Spielberg from a thoughtful screenplay by
Philip Wylie.
Even
in its less imaginative and intellectually ambitious episodes, The
Name of the Game held to consistently high standards of production
and acting. Both in its formal excellence and in the intermittent
but genuine seriousness of its subject matter, the show brought
a new maturity to television and deserves recognition as an enabling
precursor of the strongest prime time programming of the 1970s and
1980s.
-David
Thorburn
FURTHER
READING
Gianakos,
Larry James. Television Drama Series Programming: A Comprehensive
Chronicle, 1959-1975. Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow, 1978.
Perry,
Jeb H. Universal Television: The Studio and Its Programs, 1950-1980.
Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow, 1983.
See
also Detective
Programs
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