The Play of the Week
The Play of the Week | |
---|---|
Genre | Anthology Teleplay |
Written by | various |
Directed by | Stuart Burge Marc Daniels Sidney Lumet Ralph Nelson Don Richardson Boris Sagal |
Theme music composer | John Green Maurice Levin David Martin |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 67 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Lewis Freedman Worthington Miner David Susskind |
Producers | Henry Weinstein Jack Kuney |
Production location | New York City |
Cinematography | Mel London |
Production company | Talent Associates |
Original release | |
Network | Syndication (NTA Film Network) |
Release | October 12, 1959 May 1, 1961 | –
The Play of the Week is an American anthology series of televised stage plays which aired in NTA Film Network syndication from October 12, 1959, to May 1, 1961.
Ambitious undertaking
[edit]The series presented 67 (35 in the first season, 32 in the second) videotaped Broadway-style productions, broadcast nightly and Sunday afternoons on NTA-owned independent station WNTA-TV (now WNET) in New York City, and syndicated to approximately 100 other NTA Film Network-affiliated stations.[1] Because well-known performers were willing to accept minimum payments (top salary was $750) for the prestige of appearing in the critically praised showcase, production costs were kept to an average of $40,000. Although the budget was low, the show had a high distinction which, combined with its reputation as an innovative production, gave it momentum and propelled it into winning a Peabody Award.[2][3][4]
Episodes
[edit]Season 1 (1959–60)
[edit]First aired | # | Title | Author Adaptation | Producer | Director | Notes Cast |
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Oct 12 1959 | 1x01 | Medea | Euripides translated by Robinson Jeffers | David Susskind | H. Wesley Kenney and José Quintero | [In order of appearance] Judith Anderson as Medea (1947–48 and 1949 Broadway cast), Henry Brandon as Jason (1949 Broadway cast), Aline MacMahon as Nurse, Jacqueline Brookes as Attendant to Medea, Eric Berry as Aegeus, Colleen Dewhurst[5] as Second Woman of Corinth, Morris Carnovsky as Creon, Michael Wager as Jason's Slave, Mannie Sloane as Child, Rickey Sloane as Child, Don McHenry as Tutor (1947–48, 1949 and 1982 Broadway cast), Betty Miller as First Woman of Corinth Introduction by episode producer David Susskind |
Oct 26 1959 | 1x02 | Burning Bright | John Steinbeck | Lewis Freedman and Henry Weinstein | Curt Conway | Staged by Guthrie McClintic and produced by Rodgers and Hammerstein, Burning Bright opened on Broadway at the Broadhurst Theatre on October 18, 1950 and closed on October 28, after 13 performances.
|
Nov 2 1959 | 1x03 | Back to Back: The Dock Brief and What Shall We Tell Caroline? | John Mortimer | David Susskind | Stuart Burge | Michael Hordern as Morgenhall and Tony Peters, George Rose as Fowle and Arthur Louden, Lueen McGrath as Bin, Jeane Marsh as Caroline |
Nov 9 1959 | 1x04 | A Month in the Country | Ivan Turgenev translated by Emlyn Williams | Lewis Freedman and Henry Weinstein | Marc Daniels | Uta Hagen as Natalia Petrovna, Luther Adler as Ignaty Illyich Shpichelsky, Alexander Scourby as Rakitin, Richard Easton as Beliaev, Tim O'Connor as Yslaev, Olga Bellin as Vera |
Nov 16 1959 | 1x05 | The Waltz of the Toreadors | Jean Anouilh translated by Lucienne Hill | David Susskind | Stuart Burge | Hugh Griffith as Général St. Pé, Mildred Natwick as Mme. St. Pé, Beatrice Straight as Mlle. de St. Euverte, John Abbott as Dr. Bonfant, Mary Grace Canfield as Sidonia, Jenny Egan as Estelle, Louise Kirtland as Mme. Dupont-Fredaine, James Valentine as Gaston |
Nov 19 1959 | 1x06 | The Power and the Glory | Graham Greene adapted by Pierre Bost and Denis Cannan | David Susskind | Carmen Capalbo | James Donald as Priest, Peter Falk as Mestizo, Ronald Long as Tench, Val Avery as Police Chief, Scotty McGregor as Maria, David J. Stewart as Governor's Cousin, John Alderson as Miguel, Alfred Ryder, Rudy Bond |
Nov 23 1959 | 1x07 | The White Steed | Paul Vincent Carroll | David Susskind | Joseph Gistirak | Frank Conroy as Canon Matt Lavelle, Tim O'Connor as Father Shaughnessy, Helena Carroll as Nora Fintry, Dermot McNamara as Denis Dillon, Roy Poole as Patrick Hearty, Pauline Flanagan as Sarah Hearty, Lester Rawlins as Toomey, Neil Fitzgerald as Fintry, Tom Clancy as Shivers |
Nov 30 1959 | 1x08 | Crime of Passion | Jean-Paul Sartre translated by Lionel Abel | David Susskind | Stuart Burge | Claude Dauphin as Hoederer, Donald Harron as Hugo, Betsy von Furstenberg as Jessica, Marian Seldes as Olga, Horace McMahon as Georges |
Dec 7 1959 | 1x09 | Simply Heavenly | Langston Hughes music by David Martin | David Susskind | Joshua Shelley | Melvin Stewart as Jesse P. Simple, Claudia McNeil as Mamie, Gail Fisher as Joyce Lane, Ethel Ayler as Zarita, Frederick O'Neal as Boyd, Earle Hyman as Hopkins |
Dec 14 1959 | 1x10 | The World of Sholom Aleichem | Arnold Perl Music by Serge Hovey and Robert de Cormier | Producer for NTA Lewis Freedman Produced by Henry T. Weinstein | Don Richardson | 1. "A Tale of Chelm" 2. "Bontche Schweig — Based on a story by I. L. Peretz 3. "The High School" — Based on a story by Sholom Aleichem
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Dec 21 1959 | 1x11 | Thieves' Carnival | Jean Anouilh translated by Lucienne Hill | Lewis Freedman | Warren Enters and Richard Dunlap | [in alphabetical order] Larry Blyden as Hector, Tom Bosley as Dupont-Dufour Jr., Howard Da Silva as Dupont-Dufour Sr., Kurt Kasznar as Peterbono, Robert Morse as Gustave, Cathleen Nesbitt as Lady Hurf, Pat Stanley as Juliette, Frances Sternhagen as Eva |
Dec 28 1959 | 1x12 | The Cherry Orchard | Anton Chekhov | David Susskind | Daniel Petrie | Helen Hayes as Madame Ranevskaya, E. G. Marshall as Lopakhin, Susan Strasberg as Anya, Salome Jens as Dunyasha, John Abbott as Gayev, Peggy McCay as Vary, Gerald Hiken as Trofimoff, Martin Wolfson as Semyonoff-Pishtchik, Paula Laurence as Carlotta Ivanova, Woodrow Parfrey as Epihodoff, Byron Russell as Fiers, Julian Battersby as Gardener |
Jan 4 1960 | 1x13 | The Closing Door | Alexander Knox | David Susskind | Alexander Knox and Karl Genus | Staged by Lee Strasberg and produced by Cheryl Crawford, The Closing Door opened on Broadway at the Empire Theatre on December 1, 1949 and closed on December 17, after 22 performances. The playwright, Alexander Knox, had the leading role of Vail Trahern, and his wife, Doris Nolan, played Vail Trahern's wife, Norma.
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Jan 11 1960 | 1x14 | The Emperor's Clothes | George Tabori | Lewis Freedman | Boris Sagal | Viveca Lindfors as Belia Odry, Jules Munshin as Kossa, George Voskovec as Elek Odry, Sandor Szabo as the Baron, Charles Saari as Ferike, Tamara Daykarhanova, Peter Falk, Margit Fossgrin, David Hurst, Reuben Singer |
Jan 18 1960 | 1x15 | Lullaby | Don Appell | David Susskind | Don Richardson | Eli Wallach as Johnny Horton, Anne Jackson as Eadie Horton, Ruth White as Mother, Tom Carlin as the Bellboy |
Jan 25 1960 | 1x16 | Strindberg on Love: Miss Julie and The Stronger | August Strindberg translated by Arvid Paulsen adapted by George Tabori | David Susskind | Henry Kaplan | Lois Smith as Julie, Robert Loggia as Gene, Patricia Neal as the Mistress, Nancy Wickwire as the Wife, Madeleine Sherwood as Kristin |
Feb 2 1960 | 1x17 | Juno and the Paycock | Seán O'Casey | David Susskind | Paul Shyre | Pauline Flanagan as Juno Boyle, Hume Cronyn as Captain Jack Boyle, Walter Matthau as Joxer Daly, Evans Evans as Mary Boyle, Luella Gear as Maisie Madigan, Liam Clancy as Johnny Boyle, Thomas A. Carlin as Jerry Devine, James Kenny as Charlie Bentham |
Feb 8 1960 | 1x18 | Tiger at the Gates | Jean Giraudoux translated by Christopher Fry | Robert L. Joseph and Henry Weinstein | Paul Almond and Harold Clurman | Directed by Harold Clurman and produced by Robert L. Joseph, Tiger at the Gates, the English-language title translator-playwright Christopher Fry chose for Jean Giraudoux's 1935 play La guerre de Troie n'aura pas lieu [The Trojan War Will Not Take Place] opened on Broadway at the Plymouth Theatre on October 3, 1955, transferred to the Helen Hayes Theatre on November 21, and closed on April 7, 1956, after 217 performances.
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Feb 15 1960 | 1x19 | Don Juan in Hell | George Bernard Shaw | David Susskind | Don Richardson | [in alphabetical order] Marc Connelly as The Stage Manager, Hurd Hatfield as Don Juan, Dennis King as The Statue of the Commander, Siobhán McKenna as Dona Ana, George C. Scott as The Devil |
Feb 22 1960 | 1x20 | A Very Special Baby | Robert Alan Aurthur | David Susskind | Marc Daniels | Oscar Homolka as Mr. Casale, Marion Winters as Anna Casale, Larry Blyden as Joey Casale |
Feb 29 1960 | 1x21 | The Climate of Eden | Moss Hart adapted from Edgar Mittelholzer's 1951 novel | David Susskind | Moss Hart | Staged by Moss Hart, who adapted it from Edgar Mittelholzer's British Guiana-set novel, Shadows Move Among Them, The Climate of Eden opened on Broadway at the Martin Beck Theatre on November 13, 1952 and closed on November 22, after 20 performances.
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Mar 7 1960 | 1x22 | Volpone | Ben Jonson | Jack Kuney [7] | J. Robert Blum and Gene Frankel | [in alphabetical order] Ludwig Donath as Corbaccio, Alfred Drake as Mosca, Evans Evans as Colomba, Lou Jacobi as Corvino, Kurt Kasznar as Volpone, Art Smith as Voltore, Michael Tolan as Leone, Jo Van Fleet as Canina |
Mar 14 1960 | 1x23 | The Rope Dancers [8] | Morton Wishengrad | David Susskind | Peter Hall | Directed by Peter Hall, The Rope Dancers opened on Broadway at the Cort Theatre on November 20, 1957, transferred to Henry Miller's Theatre on January 27, 1958 and closed on May 3, after 189 performances. At the 12th Tony Awards on April 13, 1958, The Rope Dancers was one of eight nominees for Best Play and Siobhán McKenna was among six nominees for Best Actress in a Play.
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Mar 21 1960 | 1x24 | Henrick Ibsen's The Master Builder [9] | Henrik Ibsen Translated by Eva Le Gallienne | Executive Producer David Susskind Produced by Lewis Freedman | John Stix and Richard A. Lukin | In London, two months after the December 1892 Norwegian publication of The Master Builder, the play received its first English-language production, with a translation by William Archer. The January 1900 American premiere in New York City was not at a Broadway theater, but in Carnegie Hall's Lyceum.
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Mar 28 1960 | 1x25 | The Grass Harp [10] | Truman Capote | Jack Kuney | Word Baker | Directed by Robert Lewis, The Grass Harp opened on Broadway at the Martin Beck Theatre on March 27, 1952 and closed on April 26, after 36 performances.
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Apr 4 1960 | 1x26 | A Palm Tree in a Rose Garden [12] | Meade Roberts | David Susskind | Keve Hjelm and Wes Kenney | Directed by Warren Enters, A Palm Tree in a Rose Garden opened Off-Broadway at the Cricket Theatre on November 26, 1957 and closed on January 19, 1958.
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Apr 11 1960 | 1x27 | The Enchanted [13] | Jean Giraudoux translated by Maurice Valency | David Susskind | Keve Hjelm and Wes Kenney | Staged by George S. Kaufman, The Enchanted, playwright-critic Maurice Valency's English-language title for his 1950 translation of Jean Giraudoux's 1933 play Intermezzo, opened on Broadway at the Lyceum Theatre on January 18, 1950, and closed on February 25, after 45 performances.[14]
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Apr 18 1960 | 1x28 | The Girls in 509 [15] | Howard Teichmann | David Susskind | Keve Hjelm and Wes Kenney | Staged by Bretaigne Windust, The Girls in 509 opened on Broadway at the Belasco Theatre on October 15, 1958 and closed on January 24, 1959, after 117 performances.[16]
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Apr 25 1960 | 1x29 | Morning's at Seven | Paul Osborn | David Susskind | Jack Ragotzy | [in alphabetical order] Beulah Bondi as Mother, Russell Collins as Carl (1939–40 Broadway cast), Frank Conroy as David Crampton, Dorothy Gish as Aaronetta (1939–40 Broadway cast), Ann Harding as Cora, Eileen Heckart as Myrtle, Chester Morris as Swanson, Hiram Sherman as Homer Bolton, Ruth White as Ida Intermission interview hosted by Russel Crouse |
May 2 1960 | 1x30 | Night of the Auk [17] | Arch Oboler | Lewis Freedman | Nikos Psacharopoulos | Based on Arch Oboler's radio play Rocket from Manhattan, Night of the Auk, directed by Sidney Lumet, opened on Broadway at the Playhouse Theatre on December 3, 1956 and closed on December 8, 1959, after 8 performances. The cast, in alphabetical order, was: Martin Brooks as Lt. Jan Kephart, Wendell Corey as Colonel Tom Russell, Christopher Plummer as Lewis Rohnen, Claude Rains as Doctor Bruner, Dick York as Lt. Max Hartman.[18] Three years after the TV production, another staging, at Off-Broadway's Cricket Theatre, lasted 3 performances, May 21–23, 1963.[19]
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May 9 1960 | 1x31 | A Piece of Blue Sky [20] | Frank Corsaro | David Susskind | Keve Hjelm and Wes Kenney | Originally titled The Squirrel Cage, A Piece of Blue Sky, with its star, Shelley Winters, was produced by Jay Julian and directed by the author, Frank Corsaro, as a touring play which went into rehearsals on December 15, 1958 and, following three and a half weeks of performances in regional theatre, was scheduled to open in New York City at the end of January 1959.[21] The production folded, however, upon completion of its brief tour.[22]
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May 16 1960 | 1x32 | Archy and Mehitabel [24] | Mel Brooks and Joe Darion adapted from Don Marquis' book The Life and Times of Archy and Mehitabel music by George Kleinsinger | Jack Kuney Producer for NTA Worthington Miner | J. Robert Blum and Ed Greenberg | Titled Shinbone Alley and supervised by Sawyer Falk (original director Norman Lloyd requested the removal of his name from the credits), Archy and Mehitabel opened on Broadway at the Broadway Theatre on April 13, 1957 and closed on May 25, after 49 performances.[25]
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May 23 1960 | 1x33 | Mary Stuart [26] | Friedrich Schiller translated by Jean Stock Goldstone and John Reich | David Susskind | Dennis Vance | Directed by Tyrone Guthrie, Mary Stuart opened off-Broadway at the Phoenix Theatre on October 8, 1957 and closed on November 24, after 56 performances.[27]
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May 30 1960 | 1x34 | The Grand Tour [28] | Elmer Rice | David Susskind | William A. Graham | Staged by the playwright, Elmer Rice, The Grand Tour opened on Broadway at the Martin Beck Theatre on December 10, 1951 and closed on December 15, after 8 performances.[29]
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Jun 7 1960 | 1x35 | The House of Bernarda Alba [30] | Federico García Lorca translated by James Graham-Lujan and Richard L. O'Connell | David Susskind | Keve Hjelm and Wes Kenney | Directed by Boris Tumarin and Robert Breen, The House of Bernarda Alba opened on Broadway at the ANTA Playhouse on January 7, 1951 and closed on January 20, after 17 performances.[31]
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Season 2 (1960–61)
[edit]- Henry IV, Part 1 by William Shakespeare; in the cast: Donald Davis as Henry IV, Stephen Joyce as Prince Hal, Donald Madden as Hotspur, Eric Berry as Falstaff, John Frid as The Earl of Worcester, and Nan Martin as Lady Percy (September 26, 1960)
- The Dybbuk adapted by Joseph Liss; directed by Sidney Lumet; in the cast: Ludwig Donath, Carol Lawrence, Michael Tolan, Theodore Bikel and Vincent Gardenia (October 3, 1960)
- Legend of Lovers by Jean Anouilh; adapted by Kitty Black; directed by Ralph Nelson; cast: Piper Laurie, Robert Loggia, Sam Jaffe, Michael Constantine and Polly Rowles (October 10, 1960)
- The Velvet Glove by Rosemary Casey; in the cast: Helen Hayes, Robert Morse, Arthur Shields, Larry Gates and Collin Wilcox (October 17, 1960)
- Duet for Two Hands by Mary Hayley Bell; cast: Signe Hasso, Eric Portman, Patrick Horgan and Lois Nettleton (October 24, 1960)
- Seven Times Monday by Ernest Pendrell; directed by Wes Kenney; in the cast: Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee, Rosetta LeNoire, William Windom and Warren Berlinger (October 31, 1960)
- Two by Saroyan—"Once Around the Block" and "My Heart's in the Highlands" by William Saroyan; in the cast: Walter Matthau, Orson Bean, Myron McCormick, Larry Hagman and Eddie Hodges (November 7, 1960)
- The Iceman Cometh by Eugene O'Neill; directed by Sidney Lumet; introduced by Brooks Atkinson; in the cast: Jason Robards as Hickey, Farrell Pelly as Harry Hope, Robert Redford as Don Parritt, Myron McCormick as Larry Slade and Julie Bovasso as Pearl (Part I—November 14, 1960)
- The Iceman Cometh (Part II—November 21, 1960)
- Highlights of New Faces by Leonard Sillman; in the cast: Robert Clary, Alice Ghostley, Ronny Graham, Paul Lynde and Inga Swenson (November 28, 1960)
- Uncle Harry by Thomas Job; in the cast: Ray Walston, Betty Field, Jeff Donnell, Sylvia Miles and John Zacherle (December 5, 1960)
- Rashomon – December 12, 1960; directed by Sidney Lumet
- Emmanuel – December 19, 1960
- A Clearing in the Woods – January 2, 1961
- The Potting Shed – January 9, 1961
- Black Monday – January 16, 1961
- New York Scrapbook – January 23, 1961
- He Who Gets Slapped – January 20, 1961
- Four by Tennessee – February 6, 1961
- The Sound of Murder – February 13, 1961
- Night of the Auk – February 20, 1961
- No Exit and The Indifferent Lover – February 27, 1961
- The Old Foolishness – March 6, 1961
- Thérèse Raquin – March 13, 1961
- The Wooden Dish – March 20, 1961
- A Cool Wind Over the Living – March 27, 1961
- Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett; in the cast: Zero Mostel as Estragon and Burgess Meredith as Vladimir (April 3, 1961)
- In a Garden – April 10, 1961
- The Wingless Victory – April 17, 1961
- Close Quarters – April 24, 1961
- All Summer Long – May 1, 1961
References
[edit]- ^ Time writers (14 December 1959). "Waking Them Up at Night". Time. Archived from the original on February 1, 2011. Retrieved 2008-10-26.
- ^ Pace, Eric. "Ely Landau, Producer, 73, Dies; Filmed Plays for TV and Theaters" (The New York Times, November 8, 1993)
- ^ Shepard, Richard F. "4 Dramas Listed by Play of the Week" (The New York Times, January 15, 1960)
- ^ Shepard, Richard F. "Allen to Give Up Regular TV Show / To Appear on Time-to-Time Basis in the Fall—Susskind Drops 'Play of the Week' Post / Miner Replaces Susskind" (The New York Times, April 6, 1960)
- ^ Colleen Dewhurst—Her Autobiography—Written with and Completed by Tom Viola. Simon and Schuster, 2002, pp. 141–143
- ^ Harron, Don. My Double Life—Sexty Yeers of Farquharson Around With Don Harn. Google eBook, 2012, p. 228.
- ^ Fox, Margalit. "Jack Kuney, 88, Producer of Notable Early TV Shows, Is Dead" (The New York Times, November 17, 2007)
- ^ Shanley, John P. "Rope Dancers Bows" (The New York Times, March 15, 1960)
- ^ Gould, Jack. "TV: The Master Builder; Ibsen Work Begins on Play of the Week" (The New York Times, March 22, 1960)
- ^ Gould, Jack. "Television: Grass Harp; Capote's Work on Free Human Spirit Begins on The Play of the Week" (The New York Times, March 29, 1960)
- ^ Peck, Seymour. "Then and Now: Lillian Gish" (The New York Times, April 17, 1960)
- ^ Shanley, John P. "TV Review; Meade Roberts Work Is Play of Week" (The New York Times, April 5, 1960)
- ^ Gould, Jack. "TV: Giraudoux Comedy; His The Enchanted Gallicizes Art of Confusion on The Play of the Week" (The New York Times, April 12, 1960)
- ^ The Enchanted at IBDb
- ^ Gould, Jack. "TV Review: Girls in 509 starts on Play of Week" (The New York Times, April 19, 1960)
- ^ The Girls in 509 at IBDb
- ^ Shepard, Richard F. "Night of the Auk on Play of the Week" (The New York Times, May 3, 1960)
- ^ Night of the Auk at IBDb
- ^ Night of the Auk at the Internet Off-Broadway Database Archived 2015-09-01 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Gould, Jack."TV: A Piece of Blue Sky" (The New York Times, May 10, 1960)
- ^ Calta, Louis. "Play Role Taken by Ruth Gordon; Actress Will Appear in La Bonne Soupe—Shelley Winters in Comedy; Julien Plans Production" (The New York Times, November 6, 1958)
- ^ Zolotow, Sam."Corsaro to Direct" (The New York Times, April 21, 1960)
- ^ "Miss Winters 'Typed' as Mother; Cast in 4 Varied Roles in Films" (The New York Times, May 4, 1960)
- ^ Shanley, John P. "archy and mehitabel" (The New York Times, May 17, 1960)
- ^ Shinbone Alley at IBDb
- ^ Gould, Jack. "TV: Clash of Royalty" — Eva LeGallienne and Signe Hasso Star in Mary Stuart on Play of the Week
- ^ Mary Stuart at IBDb
- ^ Shanley, John P. "TV: A Teacher Abroad — Grand Tour, with Audrey Meadows and Scott McKay", on Play of the Week
- ^ The Grand Tour at IBDb
- ^ Shanley, John P. Garcia Lorca Work on Play of the Week (The New York Times, June 7, 1960)
- ^ The House of Bernarda Alba at IBDb