The hill were alive with the phone of justeverybodyturning their televisions on to watch NBC ’s televise live version of the Rodgers and Hammerstein classicThe Sound of Musiclast night , with the Carrie Underwood- and Stephen Moyer - starring event tear in a unanimous 18.5 million looker . Though the hot televise musical format has n’t been utilized in quite some time , it ’s not nearly as foreign as some have made it sound . Though such a thing had n’t been attempted in 50 years , there have been mountain of other large - graduated table live effect hit into a idiot box near you over the past decade .
1. 1955’sPeter Pan(And again in 1956 and 1960)
Perhaps the most well - known live boob tube spectacular , NBC ’s version of the beloved J.M. Barrie playPeter Panwas also the first full - length Broadway production on color TV . The Mary Martin - starring live version first dally on March 7 , 1955 , with a cast that featured intimately all of the whizz of the 1954 Broadway production , and it proved to be wildly popular — it drew a then - phonograph record audience of 65 million looker .
Peter Panwas so popular , in fact , that NBC restaged the whole affair the next year , with another alive version arrive at the airwaves on January 9 , 1956 . But even that was n’t enough to sate hungry viewers , so yetanotherversion was staged on December 8 , 1960 . This production was a bit dissimilar — there were some mould changes , it was expanded into a 100 - minute interpretation from the previous 90 minutes , and it was film in color for late telecasts . It ’s still considered the definitive variant of the Martin - starring “ Pans ” and it remains a repeated favorite .
2. 1957’sCinderella
The magic of live versions of Rodgers and Hammerstein classic is not just confined to that newThe Sound of Music : The Broadway duo’sCinderellaalso got its own live telecast way back in 1957 . The production starred no less than Julie Andrews herself , and the CBS telecast aired live on March 31 , 1957 , ultimately reach a staggering 100 million viewers .
Despite being a bonafide Disney princess , the story of Cinderella was also fondly rendered by Rodgers and Hammerstein , and two other plastic film versions — the 1965 Lesley Ann Warren - starring version and the more late 1997 Brandy Norwood - starring take — draw from the yoke ’s original work , not the animated classics .
3. 2000’sFail Safe
It ’s not just point musicals that can go the terrifying alive TV route , it ’s also heady dramatic stage plays — even heady dramatic stage play that wizard George Clooney . Back on April 9 , 2000 , CBS unleashed a unrecorded version of Eugene Burdick and Harvey Wheeler ’s Cold War novelFail Safeon a history - athirst interview . ( The book had antecedently been adapted into a film by Sidney Lumet back in 1964 . )
It was an undeniably serious affair — the Stephen Frears - directed special was bring out by Walter Cronkite , it played in bleak and white , and it featured such glam preferences as the Pentagon and a fallout tax shelter — but it also had a champion - stud cast . Clooney was joined by Richard Dreyfuss , Harvey Keitel , Noah Wyle , Hank Azaria , Brian Dennehy , Don Cheadle , Sam Elliott , and James Cromwell in the special , which centered on the unexpected radioactive dust when a U.S. hero sandwich is mistakenly tell to drop a atomic warhead on Moscow .
4. 2005’sThe Quartermass Experiment
Five years afterFail Safe , the BBC tried its hand at the super - serious springy telecast with a remake of the 1953 serial , The Quartermass Experiment . The science fiction serial publication from Nigel Kneale was adapted to a contemporary setting , starring Jason Flemyng in the eponymous role , an astronaut who is the only man to devolve from a three - person commission to space ( and even he returns … well , dissimilar ) . The particular also starred rising actor David Tennant .
The telecast was n’t without a few extrusion — it complete a full 20 minute early , include circumscribed lineage flubs and cast stumbles , look the appearance of a cameraman and a reasoned guy pop up in a shot , and had two disjoined interruptions by on - screen art denote the demise of Pope John Paul II — but it was a big achiever for the BBC , as it became the fourth - highest - rated program in BBC Four account .
5. 1980’sThe Oldest Living Graduate
Clooney is n’t the only big name star to take to live television for a beloved task — Sally Field did it , too , withThe Oldest Living Graduate . Based on the 1974 Preston Jones caper of the same name , Field and co - stars Henry Fonda , Timothy Hutton , Harry Dean Stanton , John Lithgow , and Cloris Leachman top - lined the talent - stacked output , which air on NBC on April 7 , 1980 .
Filmed at Dallas ’ Southern Methodist University , the fib of a Texas family and their many machinations , motive , and maddening takings was a humble - weighing machine smasher , one that was eventually bolstered by a distressing flake of trivium — it marked Fonda ’s terminal stagecoach appearance .
6. 1961’sJane Eyre
Charlotte Bronte ’s beloved classic has been adapted for the screens — self-aggrandising and small — many time over , but it was only done live on television just once . CBS cut down the productive love affair for a slim hour of live idiot box back on April 27 , 1961 . The Sally Ann Howes- and Zachary Scott - starring drama focalize on the middle section of Bronte ’s sprawling novel , picking up when unseasoned governess Jane first arrives at the boding Thornfield Hall and meets the dashing ( and dangerous ) Mr. Rochester .
Despite its limited runtime , the special is turn over a solid take on the material , and one of the very respectable American variant of the darling British novel .
7. 1981’sAll the Way Home
Just a year after hitting the small screen with the telecast version ofThe previous Living Graduate , Sally Field return to the stage for yet another lively telecast of a hard - hitting gaming . Based on Tad Mosel ’s Pulitzer Prize- and Tony Award - win 1961 play ( which was in turn based on James Agee ’s Pulitzer Prize - advance novel , A Death in the Family),All the Way Homecentered on a Tennessee family in the midst of great agitation and tragedy after the death of their patriarch .
LikeThe Oldest Living Graduate , the film was broadcast live from a performance , this one staged at the University of Southern California . The unrecorded telecast played on NBC on December 21 , 1981 .
8. 2005’sThe West Wingepisode “The Debate”
A number of television system shows have used the gimmick of a alive episode to enthrall hearing , but only a few truly stand out . One such winner is “ The Debate , ” the 7th episode ofThe West Wing ’s seventh time of year . The beloved serial publication ’ net season call for a giving bang to get it go , and two live program , have quality going “ off handwriting , ” seemed like the way to go .
Two resilient versions of the instalment were performed — one for each coast — both star Alan Alda as Senator Arnold Vinick and Jimmy Smits as Congressman Matt Santos gun for the presidential term in an aggressive , up-and-coming “ live presidential debate . ” The installment certainly had the appropriate live smell , and the production ’s pick to not includeanyoriginal hurl member only tot to that veracity ( even as it riledWest Wingdevotees ) .
9. 1997’sERepisode, “Ambush”
NBC was no alien to the alive show format : The internet quite memorably utilized the technique almost a tenner earlier , when medical dramaE.R.opened its fourth time of year with two lively episodes .
Unlike “ The Debate , ” however , “ Ambush ” used the show ’s principal cast to ok effect , while also adhere to an external doojigger to drive it . The September 25 , 1997 double - show was frame as a documentary , with a camera crew invading the E.R. to chronicle the recovery of Anthony Edwards ’ Dr. Mark Greene . Along the agency , the episode included a near - howler , a heart plan of attack , and the arrival of Dr. Elizabeth Corday ( Alex Kingston ) . The two installment were successful , despite a few minor mistakes in each ( a character drops a penitentiary in one sequence , a patient loses his concealed weapon in another ) .
