Friday the 13th (The Philco Television Playhouse) explained

Series:The Philco Television Playhouse
Season:6
Episode:21
Director:Arthur Penn
Producer:Fred Coe
Length:60 mins

"Friday the 13th" is a 1954 American television play by Sumner Locke Elliott. It originally aired as an episode of The Philco Television Playhouse produced by Fred Coe and directed by Arthur Penn.[1]

Elliott originally wrote the script for television but then adapted it for radio and sent it back to Harry Dearthin Australia. He arranged a broadcast of the play on Australian radio in 1955 as an episode of Harry Dearth's Playhouse starring Gordon Glenwright and Charles Tingwell.

The script was filmed again for television for NBC Matinee Theater in 1956.

Premise

According to a description of the radio adaptation it is "The tense and dramatic story of three women involved in a car accident-a skillful combination of suspense and human interest-it is, in fact, an omnibus play for it tells three stories in one."[2]

A longer description was provided by ABC Weekly which said "When the car containing Trilby Harris, Barbara Mack and Elaine Prescott skids off a wet road, crashes through a fence and careers over a cliff edge, one of the occupants is killed. But the husbands of the three women are not told which one. As they wait at the cliff top a single question drums in the mind of each man: “Was it my wife?”"

Notes and References

  1. News: 26 June 1954 . Friday the 13th on Playhouse . 10 . The Times-Mail.
  2. News: 6 February 1955 . WEDNESDAY, FEB. 9 . 19 . . 2931 . Western Australia . 20 November 2023 . National Library of Australia.