A Sound of Different Drummers (Playhouse 90) explained

Series:Playhouse 90
Season:2
Episode:4
Director:John Frankenheimer
Guests:
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"A Sound of Different Drummers" was an American television play broadcast live on October 3, 1957, as part of the CBS television series, Playhouse 90. It was the fourth episode of the second season. John Frankenheimer directed, and Sterling Hayden starred.

Plot

A young security police officer in a future totalitarian state is assigned to suppress illegal intellectual activity, including executing book readers. He catches a librarian hiding a banned book and joins her in reading books.

Cast

Tony Randall hosted the broadcast.

Production

Martin Manulis was the producer and John Frankenheimer the director. The teleplay was written by Robert Alan Aurthur.

Reception

In The New York Times, Jack Gould called it "the boldest and most stimulating" play of the season, an "intellectually compelling narrative", and "a powerful drama protesting the disease of conformity." He also praised the futuristic settings and sensitive direction of John Frankenheimer.[1]

Notes and References

  1. News: TV: A Powerful Drama: 'Playhouse 90' Offers 'Sound of Different Drummers,' Anti-Conformity Protest The Real McCoys. The New York Times. Jack Gould. October 4, 1957. 47.