Dr. Kildare (television series)
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''Dr. Kildare'' is an NBC medical drama television series which originally ran from September 28, 1961, until August 30, 1966,Newcomb, Horace, ed. ''Encyclopedia of Television'' (2nd ed.).
Routledge (Taylor & Francis), 2013, p. 756–757. .
for a total of 191 episodes over five seasons. Produced by MGM Television, it was based on Dr. Kildare, fictional doctor characters originally created by author Max Brand in the 1930s and previously used by MGM in a popular Dr. Kildare#Films, film series and Dr. Kildare#Radio, radio drama. The TV series quickly achieved success, and made a star of Richard Chamberlain, who played the title role. ''Dr. Kildare'' (along with an American Broadcasting Company, ABC medical drama, ''Ben Casey'', which premiered at the same time) inspired or influenced many later TV shows dealing with the medical field.LaFollette, Marcel Chotkowski. ''Science on American Television: A History.''
Univ. of Chicago Press, 2013, p. 65–67. .
''Dr. Kildare'' aired on NBC network affiliate, affiliate stations on Thursday nights at 8:30–9:30 p.m. until September 1965, when the timeslot was changed to Monday and Tuesday nights at 8:30–9:00 p.m. through the end of the show's run.Brooks, Tim, and Earle Marsh
''The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946–Present'' (9th ed.)
Ballantine Books (Random House), 2007, pp. 371, 1584–1589. .


Plot

Like the earlier MGM Dr. Kildare#Films, film series (1938–1942), the TV series initially told the story of young intern Dr. James Kildare (Richard Chamberlain) working at the fictional large metropolitan "Blair General Hospital" and trying to learn his profession, deal with patients' problems, and win the respect of the senior Dr. Leonard Gillespie (Raymond Massey). In the series' third episode, "Shining Image", Gillespie tells the earnest Kildare, "Our work is to keep people alive. We can't tell them how to live any more than how to die." Kildare ignores the advice, which provides the basis for stories over the next four seasons, many with a soap opera touch. By the third season, Dr. Kildare was promoted to resident and episodes began to focus less on him and his medical colleagues, and more on the stories of individual patients and their families. In order to create realistic scripts, the series' first writer, E. Jack Neuman, spent several months working alongside interns in a large hospital. Episodes frequently highlighted diseases or medical conditions that had not been widely discussed on television, including addiction, drug addiction, sickle cell anemia and epilepsy. Episodes about venereal disease (personally requested by President Lyndon B. Johnson) and combined oral contraceptive pill, the birth control pill were written, but never produced due to network objections.Stempel, Tom. ''Storytellers to the Nation: A History of American Television Writing.''
Syracuse Univ. Press, 1996, p. 90-91. .
Technical advice was provided by the American Medical Association, whose name appeared in the end credits of each episode. The series was initially formatted as self-contained one-hour episodes, aired once per week. In later seasons, a trend towards serialized drama, inspired by the success of the prime time soap opera ''Peyton Place (TV series), Peyton Place'', caused the network to develop some ''Dr. Kildare'' storylines over multiple episodes and, in the final season, to air two separate half-hour episodes each week instead of a single one-hour episode.


Cast

An unsold and unaired pilot, directed by John Newland, was shot in 1960 featuring Lew Ayres as Dr. Kildare and (Joseph) Joe Cronin as Dr. Grayson.Terrace, Vincent
''Encyclopedia of Television Pilots, 1937–2012''
McFarland & Co., 2013, p. 77. .
As a younger man, Ayres had played the role of Kildare for many years in the earlier MGM film and radio series. Later, a second, successful pilot was made with Richard Chamberlain as Kildare and Raymond Massey as Gillespie. Before the little-known Chamberlain was cast, the Kildare role was offered to William Shatner and James Franciscus, who both turned it down.Shatner, William, with David Fisher. ''Up Till Now: The Autobiography.''
Thomas Dunne Books (St. Martin's Press), 2008, p. 94-95. .
The role catapulted Chamberlain to fame."Artists' Biographies - Richard Chamberlain (MGM),"
Billboard, June 9, 1962, p. 36.
In 2006, Chamberlain reprised the Kildare role in a parody of ''Grey's Anatomy'' (along with other famous TV doctors from ''Julia (American TV series), Julia'', ''St. Elsewhere'', ''M*A*S*H (TV series), M*A*S*H'' and ''The Love Boat'') on the ''2006 TV Land Awards''. Massey accepted the role of Dr. Gillespie thinking that it would last only one season, leaving him time to accept feature film roles. Instead, the time demands of appearing in a multiple-season hit series prevented Massey from appearing in any films for the duration of the series' run.


Supporting cast

Supporting cast members with recurring roles included Ken Berry as Dr. John Kapish, Jean Inness as Nurse Beatrice Fain, Eddie Ryder as Dr. Simon Agurski, Jud Taylor (who also directed several episodes) as Dr. Thomas Gerson, Steve Bell as Dr. Quint Lowry, Clegg Hoyt as Mac, Sam Reese as Dr. Dan Shanks (first season), Jo Helton as Nurse Conant, and Lee Kurty as Nurse Zoe Lawton.


Guest cast

Over the years, numerous well-known or soon-to-be well-known actors appeared as guest stars, including: *Eddie Albert *Jack Albertson *Fred Astaire *Ed Asner *Mary Astor *Lauren Bacall *Barbara Barrie *Anne Baxter *Ed Begley *Fred Beir *Russ Bender *Charles Bickford *Joan Blondell *Tom Bosley *Hank Brandt *Beau Bridges *Charles Bronson *Robert Burton (actor), Robert Burton *James Caan *Conlan Carter *Lawrence P. Casey *John Cassavetes *John Cliff (actor), John Cliff *Sidney Clute *Marian Collier (actress), Marian Collier *Noreen Corcoran *Joseph Cotten *Robert Culp *Ossie Davis *Ruby Dee *Angie Dickinson *Don Dubbins *Olympia Dukakis *Barbara Eden *Linda Evans *Douglas Fairbanks Jr. *Peter Falk *Beverly Garland *Thomas Gomez *Harold Gould *Herman Hack *Peter Helm *Tim Herbert *Bern Hoffman *Celeste Holm *Ron Howard *Clark Howat *Rodolfo Hoyos Jr. *Gary Hunley *Kim Hunter *Carolyn Jones *James Earl Jones *Victor Jory *Brian Keith *Ray Kellogg (actor), Ray Kellogg *Jess Kirkpatrick *Ted Knight *Harvey Korman *Otto Kruger *John Lasell *Cloris Leachman *William Leslie (actor), William Leslie *Jack Lord *Dorothy Malone *Lee Marvin *James Mason *Walter Matthau *Ken Mayer *Mercedes McCambridge *Gavin McLeod *Yvette Mimieux *Sal Mineo *Ricardo Montalbán *Harry Morgan *Jack Nicholson *Leonard Nimoy *Ramon Novarro *Margaret O'Brien *Richard O'Brien (American actor), Richard O'Brien *Carroll O'Connor *Susan Oliver *Robert Phillips (actor), Robert Phillips *Walter Pidgeon *Suzanne Pleshette *Joe Ploski *John Qualen *Claude Rains *Basil Rathbone *Robert Redford *Robert Reed *Cyril Ritchard *Cesar Romero *Gena Rowlands *Penny Santon *Joseph Schildkraut *George Selk *William Shatner *Jean Stapleton *Gloria Swanson *Kelly Thordsen *Rip Torn *Paul Trinka *Diane Varsi *Lesley Ann Warren *Sam Waterston *Dennis Weaver *Robert Young (actor), Robert Young


Reception

The series quickly became a top ten hit in its first season, and remained in the top 20 during its second and third seasons, drawing as many as 12,000 fan letters each week. Its success spawned a number of merchandising tie-ins featuring the likeness or endorsement of Chamberlain as Kildare, including Dr. Kildare#Television series tie-ins by other authors, novels, Dr. Kildare#Comics, comics, toys and games, candy bars, and records of Chamberlain singing songs featured on the show. Chamberlain had a hit single, "Three Stars Will Shine Tonight, Theme from Dr. Kildare (Three Stars Will Shine Tonight)," in which he sang romantic lyrics set to the music from the show's familiar opening theme. Largely as a result of the show, Chamberlain became a teen idol during the 1960s. The show's influence was so great that viewers would sometimes write to Chamberlain asking "Dr. Kildare" for medical advice. According to Mort Fleischmann, a former promotions executive for NBC, at one point the network promoted the show by having "Dr. Kildare" paged as if he were a real doctor on the public announcement system in airports, train stations, and bus stations across the United States. In the later seasons of the series, a decline in ratings (possibly coupled with a high asking price for sponsor advertisements) led to the series' cancellation in 1966. Despite its cancellation, the ''Dr. Kildare'' series continued to influence many later television medical dramas.


Home media

Warner Bros. has released all five seasons on DVD-R in Region 1 via their Warner Archive Collection. These are Manufacture-on-Demand (MOD) releases, available via WBShop.com & Amazon.com. The unaired 1960 pilot episode starring Lew Ayres was also released on DVD by Warners as an extra included with the DVD release of their "Dr. Kildare Movie Collection" (compiling all the MGM Dr. Kildare#MGM films featuring Dr. Kildare, Kildare films) via Warner Archive Collection in 2014. The DVD release of "Dr. Kildare: The Complete First Season" included, as an extra, the original never-aired pilot episode for the 1962 psychiatric medical drama series ''The Eleventh Hour (1962 TV series), The Eleventh Hour'', in which Dr. Kildare (Chamberlain) and Dr. Gillespie (Massey) appear assisting "Dr. Theodore Bassett" (a psychiatrist character played by Wendell Corey) in diagnosing patient Ann Costigan (played by guest star Vera Miles).ComicMix Staff, "Never-Aired Pilot Highlights Dr. Kildare The Complete First Season."
Comicmix.com, April 17, 2013. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
The episode was initially meant to air as an episode of ''Dr. Kildare'', but was instead reworked to cut out Chamberlain and Massey's parts and remove all Kildare and Gillespie references before airing on October 3, 1962 as the debut episode of ''The Eleventh Hour (1962 TV series), The Eleventh Hour'' TV series, entitled "Ann Costigan: A Duel on a Field of White."


Music

The series theme was composed by Jerry Goldsmith (credited here as Jerrald Goldsmith). In 2009 Film Score Monthly released a three-disc set of original music from the series, featuring Goldsmith's theme and his scores for the pilot and four season one episodes, plus further scores by Harry Sukman (the series' most frequent composer), Richard Markowitz, Morton Stevens, Lalo Schifrin and John Green (composer), John Green. (Stevens' represented work includes his music for the three-part "Rome Will Never Leave You," which incorporates an original song composed by Burt Bacharach.) The album also includes music from the original unaired 1960 pilot adapted by Alexander Courage from Bronislau Kaper's theme for ''The Power and the Prize'', and Richard Chamberlain's recording of "Three Stars Will Shine Tonight."


Related series

A second television series, titled ''Young Dr. Kildare (TV series), Young Dr. Kildare'', premiered in first-run Broadcast syndication, syndication in 1972. Starring Mark Jenkins (actor), Mark Jenkins as Dr. Kildare and Gary Merrill as Dr. Gillespie, it lasted for only one season of 24 episodes.


References


External links

* (1961 television series) *
Dr. Kildare
' (1961 television series) a
TV.com
* (1972 television series) {{DEFAULTSORT:Doctor Kildare 1961 American television series debuts 1966 American television series endings 1960s American drama television series 1960s American medical television series Black-and-white American television shows English-language television shows NBC original programming Television series by MGM Television