"Four Star Playhouse" is a television show that ran from 1952 - 1956. It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into theatre. ... Comedy is the use of humor in the form of theater, where it simply referred to a play with a happy ending, in contrast to a tragedy. ... David Niven was the second unofficial James Bond. ... Charles Boyer in Love Affair Charles Boyer (August 28, 1899 â August 26, 1978) was a French actor. ... Dick Powell (1904-1963) The singer, actor, producer, and director Dick Powell was born as Richard Ewing Powell in Mountain View, Arkansas on November 14, 1904. ... Lupino in High Sierra Ida Lupino (February 4, 1918 â August 3, 1995) was a film actress, director, and a pioneer in the field of women filmmakers. ... CBS (formerly an acronym for Columbia Broadcasting System, the former legal name of the network) is one of the largest television networks, and formerly one of the largest radio networks, in the United States. ... September 1 is the 244th day of the year (245th in leap years). ... 1952 (MCMLII) was a Leap year starting on Tuesday (link will take you to calendar). ... 1956 (MCMLVI) was a leap year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
FourStar generated its share of the stampede, scoring its biggest hits in the genre with The Rifleman, Wanted: Dead or Alive, and Trackdown, as well as less successful entries like Johnny Ringo, Black Saddle, Law of the Plainsman, Stagecoach West, and the highly-regarded but extremely short-lived Sam Peckinpah project, The Westerner.
FourStarPlayhouse spawned two crime series featuring gambler Willy Dante: eight FourStar installments starring Powell as Dante were repackaged as a 1956 summer replacement series (The Best in Mystery), and a new Dante series was hatched in 1960 with Howard Duff in the title role.
Even FourStar's genre-bound series exhibited the kind of conventional innovation, and occasional quirkiness, that defines American commercial television at its most fascinating, and Powell was pursuing anthologies long after the conventional wisdom had abandoned the form.
Variation: On FourStar shows produced in color during the period, the logo was seen in blue-tone.
star appears, the number 4 (in a high-tech font) comes from the right and attaches itself to the star.
Availability: Rare, FourStars output was coming to a stop by this time; was last seen on 1984-85 episodes of Mad Movies with the L.A. Connection, mid-80s prints of the game show Liars Club, and the 1987 colorized version of Scrooge (1951) in syndication.