Genre: | Drama |
Creator: | Roy Huggins (based on William Inge's play, Bus Stop) |
Director: | Robert Altman (selected episodes) |
Starring: | Marilyn Maxwell Richard Anderson Rhodes Reason Joan Freeman Buddy Ebsen |
Theme Music Composer: | Arthur Morton |
Composer: | Arthur Morton Lionel Newman Jeff Alexander |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Num Seasons: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 26 |
Executive Producer: | William Self Roy Huggins |
Producer: | Robert Blees John Newland (final episode) |
Company: | Belmont Television Company, Inc. Palomino Productions, Inc. (final episode), in association with 20th Century-Fox Television |
Runtime: | 60 minutes |
Channel: | ABC |
Bus Stop is a 26-episode American drama which aired on ABC from October 1, 1961, until March 25, 1962, starring Marilyn Maxwell as Grace Sherwood, the owner of a bus station and diner in the fictitious town of Sunrise in the Colorado Rockies. The program was adapted from William Inge's play, Bus Stop, and Inge was a script consultant for the series, which followed the lives of travelers passing through the bus station and the diner. Maxwell's co-stars were Richard Anderson as District Attorney Glenn Wagner, Rhodes Reason as Sheriff Will Mayberry, Joan Freeman as waitress Elma Gahrigner, Bernard Kates as Ralph the coroner, and Buddy Ebsen as Virge Blessing. Increasingly, as it became difficult to have guest stars be characters arriving by bus every week, the stories became more about people in the town which left little for Maxwell's character to do and led to her leaving the series after 13 episodes. She said, "There was nothing for me to do but pour a second cup of coffee and point the way to the men's room."[1]
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See main article: A Lion Walks Among Us.
The episode "A Lion Walks Among Us", with guest star Fabian Forte and directed by Robert Altman, was highly controversial because of its depiction of violence. Twenty-five ABC affiliates refused to air the program.[2] It attracted negative comment from politicians in Washington. The episode was shown to a Congressional Committee discussing violence on TV.