394:, and when he moved into features he was associated with comedies. Lemmon, too, had been in a long string of comedies, and it's easy to assume that both filmmakers were using the opportunity to "stretch". Unfortunately, Edwards, who is kind of a combination of George Stevens (comedy director turned prestige filmmaker) and Vincente Minnelli (excitable content with no distinctive visual style), tilted the original material towards schmaltz, from the comically lush theme-song by Henry Mancini to the exaggerated binge scenes. According to one Lemmon biography, the actor felt a little bad about the fact that his friend Cliff Robertson, who had appeared in the TV production, wasn't invited to be in the movie, but the studio insisted on a certified star for the film... What's missing is the calm plausibility of the original TV broadcast, revived briefly on cable TV in the 1990s.
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tremens—the flighty dancing around the room, her weakness of character and moments of anxiety and her charm when she was sober—was a superlative accomplishment. Miss Laurie is moving into the forefront of our most gifted young actresses. Mr. Robertson achieved first-rate contrast between the sober man fighting to hold on and the hopeless drunk whose only courage came from the bottle. His scene in the greenhouse, where he tried to find the bottle that he had hidden in the flower pot, was particularly good... John
Frankenheimer's direction was magnificent. His every touch implemented the emotional suspense but he never let the proceedings get out of hand or merely become sensational.
520:, among others), who was also a friend of Miller's; but he only received by-line credit on the book's first iteration, a movie tie-in edition featuring cover stills from the film. The book proved hugely popular, though, and the story had become so iconic that its publisher Bantam Books (and one supposes the authors, by mutual arrangement) took Westheimer's name off the book to move it into the "literature" category and keep it in print (which they did, for decades). Subsequent printings were branded only "JP Miller's Days of Wine and Roses" without an explicit by-line for the novel itself. This novelization was followed by another in 1970, adapting the screenplay for
524:, published by Dell Books. And once again, no author is given direct attribution for the prose; the cover says, "JP Miller's penetrating story of teenagers on drugs and parents on trial"; and the title page says only that the book is "based on the original story by JP Miller," with his name positioned to imply authorship. As the writing style is much the same, it's probably safe to assume that Westheimer (at Miller's invitation) was the novelizer here too.
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After his first marriage to Ayers
Elizabeth Fite, Miller married Juanita Marie Currie. On November 24, 1965, he married Liane Nicolaus. His children are James P. Miller, Jr. (from his first marriage); John R. and Montgomery A. (second marriage); and journalist Lia Marie, Anthony Milo and Sophie Jetta
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about a man who blackmailed restaurants by injecting a foul-smelling substance into eggs. When an egg was cracked, customers fled, and the villain demanded cash to prevent future incidents. When this drama was televised, Miller immediately quit his job as a salesman to write full-time. In 1954 he had
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synopsized the drama: "While on vacation, a father and son set a rabbit trap. They are to return the next day to free the rabbit, a prospective pet for the boy. But the family is forced to return to the city after a rush call from the father's demanding boss." Back home, the boy points out that the
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It was a brilliant and compelling work... Mr. Miller's dialogue was especially fine, natural, vivid and understated. Miss Laurie's performance was enough to make the flesh crawl, yet it also always elicited deep sympathy. Her interpretation of the young wife just a shade this side of delirium
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and then went to
Houston, where he sold real estate and Coleman furnaces. Moving to New York, he sold York refrigerators and air conditioners while spending off hours at theaters, television studios and
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to London in the 1960s, reworking it to focus on a young couple just arrived from
Belfast. That stage version had a West End premiere at the Donmar Warehouse in a
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rabbit will die in the trap. As Miller put it, "The guy finally realizes that the rabbit in the trap is him, and he takes his family and goes back to
Vermont."
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about a man who works in Long Island City at a construction firm where he is bullied by his boss. He takes his family to
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received favorable critical attention and was nominated for an Emmy in the category "Best
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495:(Warner Books, 1984), about a spelunker confronting a cave creature who may or may not be from his own imagination. In what was the first use of a
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returned to the United States with 13 battle stars, and a
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Miller was the son of construction engineer
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producer Martin
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205:(minus periods after the initials) after receiving orders in that format by U.S. Navy addressing machines. The
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meetings (which were something of a mystery in the early 1950s). The drama was telecast October 2, 1958, on
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began as a Fox project, but ended up at Warner Bros. when the Fox studio started going down the Nile with
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subsidiary. Warner Books paid $ 6000 for the hologram elements, part of a $ 50,000 publicity campaign.
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in the South Pacific, primarily as a gunnery officer, seeing combat first aboard the heavy cruiser
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was telecast, Jack Gould wrote a rave review with much praise for the writer, director and cast:
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on a book cover, the Skook was sketched by Miller and then sculpted by Eidetic Images, Inc., an
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is usually credited to Miller, but he did not, in fact, write it. The prose adaptation was by
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Miller's first script for television was "The Polecat Shakedown", a 30-minute drama for
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when the movie adaptation was released that year. His TV movies include
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Rice University: Guide to the James Pinckney Miller Papers, 1955–1972
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In addition to poetry and short stories, Miller wrote four novels.
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Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series
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Von Dobeneck, Monica. "JP Miller: The man behind the Skook,"
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in the late 1930s, he became a part-time reporter for the
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David Geffen School of Drama at Yale University alumni
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Joel Oliansky for "To Taste of Death But Once" (1971)
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In 1994–1995, Miller taught a playwriting workshop.
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429:(1964). In 1970, Dell published
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983:for "John Adams: Lawyer" (1976)
951:for "Death Lends a Hand" (1972)
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1183:for "Seoul Mates" (1992)
959:for "The Scholar" (1973)
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298:Alcoholics Anonymous
283:The People Next Door
1465:for "Always" (2011)
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1122:Terry Louise Fisher
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703:Craic: JP Miller's
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269:Producers' Showcase
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1564:Joe Weisberg
1551:Bruce Miller
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1420:Kater Gordon
1388:Members Only
1296:Aaron Sorkin
1221:Darin Morgan
1201:Ann Biderman
1177:Diane Frolov
1001:Gerald Green
993:Ernest Kinoy
949:William Link
928:William Link
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861:Ernest Kinoy
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134:directed by
127:Playhouse 90
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81:(2001-11-01)
29:
1671:2001 deaths
1666:1919 births
1539:D. B. Weiss
1523:D. B. Weiss
1479:Gideon Raff
1396:David Chase
1372:David Shore
1348:Robin Green
1344:David Chase
1324:Joel Surnow
1312:Robin Green
1269:David Chase
1249:David Milch
1233:David Milch
1189:Tom Fontana
1130:Paul Haggis
1106:John Masius
1102:Tom Fontana
1086:Tom Fontana
1082:John Masius
1070:David Milch
973:Howard Fast
865:Rod Serling
824:Rod Serling
810:Rod Serling
674:DVD Journal
609:Opening Act
605:Judi Barton
441:Edgar Award
423:(1962) and
376:Jack Lemmon
275:(1956) and
181:Mexico City
18:J.P. Miller
1660:Categories
1643:Will Smith
1511:Ozymandias
1471:Alex Gansa
1257:Bill Clark
1110:Joe Tinker
1054:Jeff Lewis
965:Joanna Lee
873:David Karp
665:Holm, D.K.
623:References
589:Peter Gill
585:Sam Mendes
579:relocated
392:Peter Gunn
364:D. K. Holm
229:Television
95:Occupation
60:1919-12-18
1483:"Pilot" (
1447:Erin Levy
1352:Whitecaps
1005:Holocaust
905:JP Miller
730:JP Miller
599:Influence
492:The Skook
388:Cleopatra
346:Miller's
225:classes.
203:JP Miller
196:USS
189:USS
142:Biography
36:JP Miller
1637:" (2023)
1625:" (2022)
1605:" (2020)
1582:" (2019)
1570:" (2018)
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1485:Homeland
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1227:" (1996)
1215:" (1995)
1195:" (1993)
1044:" (1981)
1007:" (1978)
934:" (1970)
636:TV Guide
560:Revivals
497:hologram
464:April 6,
447:Articles
407:(1959),
374:, actor
289:(1968).
271:(1955),
249:TV Guide
1499:Q&A
1273:College
362:critic
191:Chester
1555:Offred
1537:&
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846:(1962)
832:(1961)
818:(1960)
793:(1955)
671:review
473:Novels
285:, for
98:Writer
89:, U.S.
70:, U.S.
1633:for "
1621:for "
1601:for "
1591:2020s
1578:for "
1568:START
1566:for "
1553:for "
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1525:for "
1509:for "
1497:for "
1453:for "
1439:2010s
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1271:for "
1223:for "
1211:for "
1191:for "
1153:1990s
1040:for "
1021:1980s
1003:for "
930:for "
916:1970s
802:1960s
777:1950s
399:Films
384:Roses
207:Cabot
198:Cabot
105:James
1481:for
1326:and
1267:and
1255:and
1239:and
840:for
826:for
812:for
787:for
466:2019
261:and
215:Yale
185:Navy
124:for
76:Died
54:Born
732:at
487:Liv
417:),
309:CBS
179:in
1662::
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1235:,
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1080:,
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62:)
58:(
20:)
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