FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Terry Lynn Smith
(310) 786-1042
The Museum of Television
& Radio Presents
TV Goes
Revisit
the TV Cult Favorites
That
Inspired Some of This Summer’s Movies
June 10 to
Also travel back in time to
1938 during a MT&R Saturday Matinee presentation of The Mercury Theatre on the Air: War of the World on
Saturday, June 25 at
TV
Goes Hollywood will
screen Wednesdays through Saturdays at
June 10 - June 23 at
Batman: Chapters 1 and 2 of 15
Batman first appeared on screen
in this rarely seen 1943 Batman movie
serial, which finds the Caped Crusader and Robin the Boy Wonder opposing an
offensively stereotyped Japanese foe. This inaugural Batman remains an uncomfortable and fascinating wartime curio, and
demonstrates the character’s viability beyond the comic book—despite the wooden
acting, absurdly cheap production values, and Neanderthal politics. (1943; 45
minutes)
June 24 – July 7 at
Studio One: The Night
Edward R. Murrow
hosts this dramatic re-creation of the public reaction to Orson Welles’s The War of
the Worlds radio program of 1938. We see a broad cross number section of
folks enjoying a typical evening playing cards, going on dates, or staying in
with the evening paper, only to be driven into a frenzied panic by the
verisimilitude of the Mercury Theatre’s
fake news reports of invading Martians. Sharp-eyed viewers will spot Warren
Beatty, Ed Asner, and James Coburn among the large
cast. Includes
commercials. (1957; 60 minutes)
The Mercury Theatre on the Air: The War of
the Worlds
(In the Museum’s Radio Listening Room
beginning July 6)
Orson Welles’s
radio adaptation of the classic H.G. Wells story started a nationwide panic
when it aired Halloween of 1938. Some listeners actually believed that aliens
from Mars had landed on Earth, as the program imitated a series of live news
broadcasts. (1938; 60 minutes)
Bewitched: “Man’s
Best Friend”
Elizabeth Montgomery and Dick
York star in this series about a witch who marries a mortal. When a spoiled
young warlock from Samantha’s past makes an appearance in the Stephens’s
household, Samantha tries to remedy the situation without using witchcraft. A
young Richard Dreyfuss guest stars. (1966; 25
minutes)
Bewitched: “Samantha’s
Magic Sitter”
Esmeralda, a witch who always
muddles her spells, agrees to baby-sit for the child of one of Darrin’s
clients. When her tricky witchcraft lands her in trouble, Samantha comes to the
rescue with a mixed-up magic show. Dick Sargent, the
second of two actors to play the role of Darrin, stars in this episode. (1972;
25 minutes)
June 25 at
MT&R Saturday Matinee – The Mercury Theatre on the Air: The War of the Worlds
For
one Saturday afternoon only, travel back in time to 1938 and experience Orson Welles’s broadcast of The
War of the Worlds, one of the most terrifying events in radio history. In
response to this frighteningly realistic broadcast, many Americans armed
themselves and took to the streets in order to combat invading Martians. Listen
to this classic, hour-long program in a living room setting, sitting on couches
and eating popcorn. A Museum Educator will join you to provide background
information about the broadcast and answer questions. Free admission.
Reservations required. Call
July
8 - July 21 at
I. The Fantastic Four:
“Three Predictions of Doctor Doom”
The super powered
dysfunctional family goes up against their nemesis Doctor Doom, a hooded madman
who, this time out, extorts the United Nations with threats of massive tidal
waves in the world’s major cities (
II. The
Fantastic Four: “It Started on
The pugnacious Thing faces
down the infamous Yancy Street Gang—because though
sticks and stones can’t break his bones, harsh words will always hurt him. If
that weren’t bad enough, the Red Ghost shows up with his super apes—and that’s
just not fair. (1967; 25 minutes)
July 22 – August 4 at
The Dukes of Hazzard:
“Daisy’s Song”
In this series, crafty
country cousins Luke and Bo Duke are always in some kind of trouble with the
corrupt
August 5 – August 19 at
I. The
Honeymooners: “The Original Sketches”
Jackie Gleason’s The Honeymooners originally appeared on
the
II. The
Honeymooners: “Oh My Aching Back”
Ralph lies
his way out of going to dinner at his mother-in-law’s house and goes bowling
instead. But when he comes home with a bad back, he has to think up a plan to
hide it from
Admission to TV Goes Hollywood is
included with free admission in
The Museum of Television & Radio, with locations in
The Museum of Television & Radio in New York,
located at 25 West 52 Street in Manhattan, is open Tuesdays through Sundays
from noon to 6:00 p.m. and until