| Index | 2 reviews in total |
This was the best "teacher" show ever on TV. It was intelligent,
thoughtful
presented real problems facing high school students and their teachers and
concentrate don education and it's role in people's lives. Later shows
tended to idealize the attitudes of students, showing them getting involved
in political campaigns and the like. Here, as in reality, they are more
concerned with their own lives.
James Franciscus was the first choice to play Dr. Kildare but had to bow
out due to a scheduling conflict. this was his consolation prize. the show
is basically Kildare in a high school instead of a hospital, with Dean
Jagger playing principal Albert Vane, who mentors Novak the way Gillespie
mentors Kildare. Franciscus, who looked enough like Richard Chamberlain to
have been his older brother, is like Chamberlain, a thoughtful, restrained
actor who is easy for the audience to identify with. Jagger's manor is
totally different from the imperious Gillespie but he is just as impressive
in his own way, as his surface nervousness resolves itself into a steely
moral rectitude. Also impressive is Jeanne Bal, who plays a businesslike
but
knowing assistant principal. She is not only a talented actress but ask
yourself if you have ever seen a more beautiful woman.
Like Kildare, Novak is a symbol of the earnest optimism of the early 60's
and his handsomeness and youthful idealism suggest President Kennedy, at
least as we chose to remember him. Kennedy was assassinated during the
first
year of this show and Mr. Novak did a show that was an obvious tribute to
him, called "Death of a Teacher". A popular teacher dies suddenly at school
and each character has to deal with sudden grief in their own way, as we
were all having to do at that time. It's an especially touching episode of
a
special show.
It's hard to overstate how impressive this series was for those of us
seeing it for the first time. As the first reviewer here noted, its
positive theme was very impressive for the day, coming on the heels of
dramas that were either saccharine or "tough" or of certain tried and
true genres, such as the western, the medical or doctor story, and
others of the day.
Franciscus was impressive for his acting skills, obvious from the first
episode, and the entire cast was well-chosen, especially Dean Jagger,
who had a chance in this series to get his career off to a new start,
and did a good job of convincing us of his position and authority. A
long gone actor of great skill; compare his performance as the town
drunk in "Bad Day at Black Rock."
I highly recommend this series.
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