The Last Clear Chance (Playhouse 90) Explained

Series:Playhouse 90
Season:2
Episode:26
Runtime:90 minutes
Director:George Roy Hill
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"The Last Clear Chance" was an American television film broadcast on March 6, 1958, as part of the CBS television series, Playhouse 90. A courtroom drama, it features a strong performance by Paul Muni as an attorney defending his son in disbarment proceedings. Muni was nominated for both an Emmy Award and a Sylvania Award for his performance.

Plot

An attorney, Scott Arlen, represents a girl, Peggy Maylin, accused of murder trial. She gives him a gun, and he decides not to turn it over to the court or the prosecutor. After winning the girl's acquittal, Arlen turns over the gun and faces disbarment. Sam Arlen is an aging lawyer who comes out of retirement to defend his son in the disbarment proceeding.

Cast

Production

George Roy Hill was the director. The script was written by A. E. Hotchner.

Paul Muni received nominations as best actor at both the 11th Primetime Emmy Awards and the 1958 Sylvania Television Awards.

Reception

In The New York Times, Jack Gould praised Paul Muni's for a "commanding" and "extremely powerful" performance. However, he found the production to be "rambling and disorganized."[1]

United Press television critic William Ewald was effusive in his praise for Muni's performance, calling it intelligent, authoritative, excessive but "all very right", a "calisthenic grab bag," and "a performance with salt and bite that dripped with brine."[2]

Notes and References

  1. News: TV: Muni as Lawyer: Stars in 'Playhouse 90' Presentation of A. E. Hotchner's 'Last Clear Chance' . The New York Times. Jack Gould. March 7, 1958. 49. Newspapers.com.
  2. News: 'Last Clear Chance' Called TV Playground For Actor Paul Muni. Appeal-Democrat. March 7, 1958.