This show featured four rotating stars, Charles Boyer, David Niven, Ida Lupino, and Dick Powell in individual episodes consisting of everything from comedy to drama.This show featured four rotating stars, Charles Boyer, David Niven, Ida Lupino, and Dick Powell in individual episodes consisting of everything from comedy to drama.This show featured four rotating stars, Charles Boyer, David Niven, Ida Lupino, and Dick Powell in individual episodes consisting of everything from comedy to drama.
- Nominated for 14 Primetime Emmys
- 2 wins & 16 nominations total
Browse episodes
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe original four stars who were to appear in this show were Charles Boyer, Joel McCrea, Dick Powell, and Rosalind Russell. McCrea and Russell pulled out soon after the company was formed, and were replaced by Ida Lupino and David Niven.
- Crazy creditsIn episode 1.2, "Dante's Inferno," the character played by Regis Toomey is listed as "Lt. Wald," even though he is referred to in dialog several times as "Lt. Waldo." The role of Herb Vigran is identified there as "Monty Leeds," but in all subsequent episodes set in the titular nightclub the name is given as "Monte [no surname]."
- Alternate versionsThe syndicated rerun version of the episode "The House Always Wins" (4/28/1955), also used for at least one video release, is missing Jack Benny's cameo appearance.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Biography: Angela Lansbury: A Balancing Act (1998)
Featured review
"Four Star Playhouse" was regularly viewed and enjoyed in my home during the 1950s, at which time half-hour anthology series were in vogue. The long-time winner in the ratings race was Frank Wisbar's "Fireside Theatre" on NBC, skillfully produced and directed, with the emphasis on often suspenseful stories, well-cast with noted players who, for the most part, were not accustomed to seeing their names above a film's title to attract patrons to theaters. Dick Powell and his associates set about to produce a different sort of series, with the focus on rotating star players - their names, on the small screen, indeed appearing before the title of each half-hour play. All four stars had attracted fans to the box office over the years. We tuned in weekly to see Mr. Powell, Charles Boyer, David Niven, and often Ida Lupino in a variety of roles, ranging from melodrama to mild comedy. The shows were uniformly excellent.
After "Four Star Playhouse," several anthology series were built around star players, although this program initiated the pattern of using rotating leads. The show's dramatic entries have held up extremely well over the years, and considerably better than the whimsical stories and light comedies. Syndicated under the title "Star Performance," the series has enjoyed a long life on the small screen, and the majority of the episodes may be found in circulation today for home video or online enjoyment. In the late 1950s, Official Films syndicated a package of 153 episodes of "Star Performance," and only a small number are inaccessible today. Mr. Boyer, Ms. Lupino, Mr. Niven, and Mr. Powell were excellent actors - and, although each specialized in a certain type of role, the series permitted all four to occasionally step into less familiar territory, to display versatility. Each of us has favorites from the anthology, but the series as a whole was produced for the purpose of entertaining an audience - and the fact that we continue to enjoy the programs some seventy years after they were filmed is a tribute to those who created, produced, wrote and performed in them.
After "Four Star Playhouse," several anthology series were built around star players, although this program initiated the pattern of using rotating leads. The show's dramatic entries have held up extremely well over the years, and considerably better than the whimsical stories and light comedies. Syndicated under the title "Star Performance," the series has enjoyed a long life on the small screen, and the majority of the episodes may be found in circulation today for home video or online enjoyment. In the late 1950s, Official Films syndicated a package of 153 episodes of "Star Performance," and only a small number are inaccessible today. Mr. Boyer, Ms. Lupino, Mr. Niven, and Mr. Powell were excellent actors - and, although each specialized in a certain type of role, the series permitted all four to occasionally step into less familiar territory, to display versatility. Each of us has favorites from the anthology, but the series as a whole was produced for the purpose of entertaining an audience - and the fact that we continue to enjoy the programs some seventy years after they were filmed is a tribute to those who created, produced, wrote and performed in them.
- LeCarpentier
- Aug 16, 2023
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Charles Boyer Stars
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content