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How I Escaped from Gilligan's Island

And Other Misadventures of a Hollywood Writer-Producer

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In the early 1950s writers were leaving radio en masse to try their hand at another promising medium—television. William Froug was in the thick of that exodus, a young man full of ideas in a Hollywood bursting with opportunities. In his forty-year career Froug would write and/or produce many of the shows that America has grown up with. From the drama of Playhouse 90 and the mind-bending premises of The Twilight Zone to the escapist scenarios of Adventures in Paradise, Gilligan's Island, Bewitched, and Charlie's Angels, Froug played a role in shaping his trade. He crossed paths with some of the memorable personalities in the industry, including Jack Benny, Lucille Ball, Agnes Moorehead, Elizabeth Montgomery, Robert Blake, Rod Serling, Gene Roddenberry, Aaron Spelling, and Sherwood Schwartz.

Froug reveals a post-WWII America giddy with the success of its newest medium—yet sobered at moments by strikes and union politics, McCarthyism and anti-Semitism. It was a world of hastily written scripts, sudden firings, thwarted creativity, and fickle tastes. And yet, while clearly exasperated with many aspects of Hollywood, Froug was a man utterly in his element, his frustration with the industry ultimately eclipsed by his dedication to his craft.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 29, 2005
      Writer and former television producer Froug follows his five books on screenwriting with a mean-spirited, overlong memoir of his life in the entertainment industry that will be of interest solely to television history buffs. Despite the book's title, Froug quickly dispatches his work on Gilligan's Island as "trivial and uninteresting" choosing instead to share anecdotes about celebrities, including Elizabeth Montgomery, Lucille Ball and Aaron Spelling, but his mean-spirited stories have a sourness to them that keeps the gossip from being enjoyable. Froug's writing is alternately cliched and shallow, one moment telling the reader, "The deepening blue sky was crystal clear," and a few pages later brusquely describing the "milk-skinned redhead with a voluptuous body" who ditched her movie star boyfriend to hop in the sack with Froug As for his work in television, Froug portrays himself as the innocent victim of a devious studio system, so much so that it's hard to take what he says at face value. For completists interested in the birth of television, The Twilight Zone, Bewitched or one of the other shows Froug worked on, this book is a necessity; to anyone else the book will appear as Froug's belated attempt at score settling. Photos

    • Library Journal

      October 3, 2005
      Writer and former television producer Froug follows his five books on screenwriting with a mean-spirited, overlong memoir of his life in the entertainment industry that will be of interest solely to television history buffs. Despite the book's title, Froug quickly dispatches his work on Gilligan's Island as "trivial and uninteresting" choosing instead to share anecdotes about celebrities, including Elizabeth Montgomery, Lucille Ball and Aaron Spelling, but his mean-spirited stories have a sourness to them that keeps the gossip from being enjoyable. Froug's writing is alternately cliched and shallow, one moment telling the reader, "The deepening blue sky was crystal clear," and a few pages later brusquely describing the "milk-skinned redhead with a voluptuous body" who ditched her movie star boyfriend to hop in the sack with Froug As for his work in television, Froug portrays himself as the innocent victim of a devious studio system, so much so that it's hard to take what he says at face value. For completists interested in the birth of television, The Twilight Zone, Bewitched or one of the other shows Froug worked on, this book is a necessity; to anyone else the book will appear as Froug's belated attempt at score settling. Photos

      Copyright 2005 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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