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Person to Person

Person to Person
Person to Person (logo).jpg
Logo for 2012 version
Genre Interview
Directed by Franklin J. Schaffner (1953–1959)
Bob Daily (1959–1960)
Presented by Edward R. Murrow (1953–1959)
Charles Collingwood (1959–1961)
Charlie Rose (2012)
Lara Logan (2012)
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 9
Production
Executive producer(s) Susan Zirinsky (2012)
Producer(s) John Aaron
Jesse Zousmer
Charles Hill
Robert Sammon
Edward R. Murrow
Running time 30 minutes (original run)
60 minutes (revival)
Release
Original network CBS
Picture format Black-and-white (1953-1961)
1080i (HDTV) (2012)
Original release October 2, 1953 – September 8, 1961
February 8, 2012 – November 23, 2012

Person to Person is a popular television program in the United States that originally ran from 1953 to 1961, with two episodes of an attempted revival airing in 2012. Edward R. Murrow hosted the original series from its inception in 1953 until 1959, interviewing celebrities in their homes from a comfortable chair in his New York studio (his opening: "Good evening, I'm Ed Murrow. And the name of the program is 'Person to Person'. It's all live – there's no film"). In the last two years of its original run, Charles Collingwood was the host.

Although Murrow is best remembered as a reporter on programs such as Hear It Now and See It Now and for publicly confronting Senator Joseph McCarthy, on Person to Person he was a pioneer of the celebrity interview.

The program was well planned but not strictly scripted, with as many as six cameras and TV lighting installed to cover the guest's moves through his home, and a microwave link to transmit the signals back to the network. The guests wore wireless microphones to pick up their voices as they moved around the home or its grounds. The interviews were done live. The two 15-minute interviews in each program were typically with very different types of people, such as a movie star and a scientist. Guests often used the appearance to promote their latest project or book.

The long list of guests included then-Senator John F. Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline, Elizabeth Taylor, Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Jerry Lewis, Marlon Brando, Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, Liberace, Ethel Waters,Sammy Davis Jr., Groucho and Harpo Marx, Margaret Mead, Harry Truman, Marilyn Monroe, W.C. Handy, Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh, Fidel Castro, Bing Crosby, Leopold Stokowski, Kirk Douglas and John Steinbeck.


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