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  1. Days of Wine and Roses Playhouse 90. Edit. Release Date. United States. October 2, 1958; Also Known As (AKA) (original title) Days of Wine and Roses; Contribute to ...

  2. "Playhouse 90" Days of Wine and Roses (TV Episode 1958) - Plot summary, synopsis, and more... Menu. Movies. Release Calendar Top 250 Movies Most Popular Movies Browse ...

  3. Days Of Wine & Roses - Cliff Robertson & Piper Laurie, "Playhouse 90" Original TV Version The drama depicts the slow deterioration of a marriage due to alcoholism as ambitious ad man Joe Clay (Robertson) gets his wife Kristen to join him in drinking bouts that soon begin to destroy their lives...This is the highly acclaimed 1958 live TV version.

    • 77 min
  4. Books. Days of Wine and Roses: The Screenplay. James Pinckney Miller, Jp Miller. Harvest Moon Publishing, 2000 - Drama - 298 pages. Based on Miller's Playhouse 90 Emmy nominated script of the same title, this well crafted script shatters misconceptions about middle class alcoholism. 1962 Academy Award Nominations for Best Actor and Best Actress.

  5. Days Of Wine & Roses - Cliff Robertson & Piper Laurie, Playhouse 90 Original TV Version. Available on iTunes. A middle-class couple succumb to alcoholism. Joe Clay is a PR man whose job description includes partying and drinking copious amounts of alcohol to keep his clients happy and his career on track. When young secretary Kirsten Arnasen, a ...

  6. 1 de mar. de 2000 · J.P. Miller. Based on his own Playhouse 90 Emmy nominated script of the same title, JP Miller's well crafted screenplay shatters misconceptions about middle class alcoholism. This moving character study of a newly married man who drags his wife into his own addiction is relentlessly real and uncompromising. For their work in the 1962 film, Jack ...

  7. A relative latecomer to the group of live anthology dramas, Playhouse 90 was broadcast on CBS between the fall of 1956 and 1961. Its status as a "live" drama was short lived in any case, since the difficulties in mounting a ninety-minute production on a weekly basis required the adoption of the recently developed videotape technology, which was used to pre-record entire shows from 1957 onward.