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  • 10 months later...
  • Replies 21
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 Sept 1965

Canada has apparently struck. back at the "sex -and -violence drain" as represented by United States television programs imported to this country. It's reported that Procter & Gamble Ltd. pulled its sponsorship out of one episode of a Canadian - made soap opera showing on NBC television stations in the U.S., "because it deemed a scene too sexy for. identification with a P & G product."

The withdrawal evidently concerned a July 20 episode of Moment of Truth, produced by Robert Lawrence Productions Ltd. of Toronto and also shown on the CBC Television Network. The questionable scene consisted of a seduction sequence climaxed with a blackout. Undaunted, P & G is said to be planning to up its participation in the show from four to five minutes a week, beginning this month.

Feb 1965 discussing a location sequence

DIRECTOR JIM GATWARD OF Robert Lawrence Productions discusses the car -crash scene for an episode in Moment of Truth,. a videotape daytime serial running on the CBC television network in Canada and NBC in the U.S. Actress Lynn Gorman (Mrs. Walter Leeds in the story) practices looking cracked - up. To get a realistic sequence the RLP production crew had to search southern Ontario for a slightly bent version of the 1965 Dodge Monaco regularly used in the program. Smashing up a perfectly good car didn't strike the producers as the best way to reduce costs. The right car was found by a fluke. Scenic artist Fred Geringer took his car in for minor servicing and spotted a shattered model of a Monaco on the service station lot. The Moment of Truth was series originated by RLP and sold to the networks last December

  • 2 years later...
  • Member

 A friend on Facebook has been posting TVGuide pages with descriptions THE DOCTORS. As an added bonus, there were a few weeks of MOMENT OF TRUTH episode descriptions.   I typed up what I found.

 

I'm posting the cast list identify the characters....

MOMENT OF TRUTH

JANUARY 4, 1965-NOVEMBER 5, 1965 NBC

TORONTO
 
 

Dr. Gil Barrett...John Bethune

Diane Bowen  ...Anne Campbell  (Lila's daughter)

Lila  Bowen     Sandra Scott   (Sister, Nancy)..

Eric Brandt...John Horton 

Dr. Vince Conway...Peter Donat 

Dexter Elliott...Chris Wiggins

Helen Gould...Lucy Warner

Professor ___ Hamilton...Bob Christie

Barbara Harris...Mira Pawluk

Linda Harris...Anna Hagen

Dean ___  Hogarth...Cec Linder 

Arthur Leeds       Alan Bly

Walter Leeds...Rob Goodier

Wilma ____Leeds...Lynne Gorman   mother, Carol

Dr. ___ Lennox      Frank Perry

Johnny Wallace...Mike Dodds

Nancy Bowen  Wallace...Louise King

Dr. Robert Wallace...Douglas Waton   

Sheila Wallace...Barbara Pierce

Carol Leeds  Williams...Toby Tarnow

Jack Williams...Stephen Levy (Young)

Kathy  ____  Wingate ....Anne Collings 

Monique Wingate...Fernande Giroux

Dr. Russell Wingate...Ivor Barry 

 

 

Claude  ...    Stephen Barringer

Link              Barry Lavender

Steve...        Tom Fielding 

 

 

???...Jamie Rix...(six year old actor)

 

 

Actor Stephen Young is credited in several magazines as Jack Williamson...I assume that's Jack Williams. Possible that Stephen Levy is Stephen Young.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1/18/1965
Dr. Wallace tries to locate Mrs. Leeds.
1/19/65
Barbara runs away.
1/20/65
Pre-Empted
1/21/65
Jack tells his mother-in-law to stay away from his wife.
1/22/65
Mrs. Leeds decides to leave her husband.
1/25/65
Mr. Leeds refuses to divorce his wife.
1/26/65
Leeds presents his wife with an unpleasant ultimatum.
1/27/65
Mrs. Leeds refuses to visit Carol.
1/28/65
Nancy and Dr. Wallace discuss the hearing.
1/29/65   
Linda and Barbara discuss Vince and Dr. Wallace.
2/1/65
Mr. Leeds tries to force Wilma to testify.
2/2/65
Vince has an important talk with Dr. Wallace.
2/3/65
Linda and Barbara argue.
2/4/65
Linda and her sister have an important conversation
2/5/65
Jack and Carol argue about her mother.
2/8/65
Lila overhears a conversation.
2/9/65
Mrs. Leeds suicide note clears Dr. Wallace.
2/10/65
Nancy arrives.
2/11/65
Miss Gould has her first hypnosis session.
2/12/65
Barbara Harris discusses Vince and Linda with Dr. Wallace.
2/15/65   
Dr. Wallace discovers the cause of Barbara's problems.
2/16/65
Nancy's niece arrives.
2/17/65
Not Available
2/18/65
Diane tells why she lied.
2/19/65
Lila has a fight with Nancy.
2/22/65
Not Available
2/23/65
Lila causes more trouble in the Wallace house.
2/24/65    
The session between Helen Gould and Dr. Bennett has unusual results.
2/25/65
Not Available
2/26/65
Carol Williams goes into shock.
 
 
 

Edited by slick jones

  • 4 months later...
  • Member

Variety Nov 18 64 lists MOT cast and includes renowned actor Raymond Massey. 

However he seems to be still involved with the Dr Kildare TV series at that point.

So some confusion there.

  • 3 years later...
  • Member

After over 3 years something new for Moment of Truth!

IN DECEMBER 1964 a new television soap opera called "Moment of Truth" made its debut with á big splash. The NBC television network in the United States proclaimed a firm 26 -week purchase of the Canadian made series, and almost immediately announced the program was sold right out to network affiliate stations. The sale was hailed as a quarter -million dollar Christmas gift to Canadian talent. It was applauded by Canadian commercial producers and advertisers as the icebreaker for future Canadian independent production efforts. An agency TV buyer was quoted as saying, "The day has arrived when our obligation to sponsor Canadian content programming can be considered positively rather than negatively." That was the story up till Christmas 1964.

Then on December 28 the CBC network started airing Moment half -an -hour daily five days a week. Before long the daytime serial was doing well as a network spot carrier. In fact there was only one thing wrong with Moment's success story - Robert Lawrence Productions (Canada) Limited, the show's Toronto -based producer, apparently wasn't making a dime on it. And to be more exact about it, John Ross, RLP president, claimed all indications pointed to a highly measurable loss. Why? With all those sales shouldn't Moment have been strutting like a fat -cat? It seems not.

And one of the reasons for the grotesque situation wasn't complicated at all - it's just that the CBC wasn't paying for the show. The Corporation apparently intends to, starting April 1, and will pay up in terms Ross calls satisfactory and generous. But Ross says, "Even if the CBC had bought it from the beginning, we couldn't produce it for that." Evidently the only hope for a reasonable profit on Moment lies in renewal of the existing 26 -week NBC contract and an extended CBC run. The amortization of pilot costs and heavy initial production expenses takes that long, in Ross' view.

FOCUS ON PROBLEMS

One of the vital jobs Moment of Truth has done is to focus a glaring light on problems facing independent television producers in Canada. RLP'S "success" has dragged the question of any independent's ability to go it alone on major TV productions and make money, out of the area of speculation. It has plunked the issue on firm ground, for once. Ross says an independent can't make it independently, period. He considers subsidization "absolutely essential". (If the CBC buys a show at a price higher than potential commercial revenues, that's a form of subsidization. The Corporation regularly aids Canadian talent by producing shows at costs of $50,000 an hour and up, selling them to commercial sponsors at a fraction of true cost.)

It was back in May 1964 that RLP "put it on the line, crossed its fingers" and gambled $30,000 to produce a pilot for Moment. After selling the show to NBC Ross noted, "It's amusing in a way, because the odds are so greatly stacked against you." Before long RLP moved toward what it felt to be the next logical step for a Canadian -made, Canadian talent show - airing on the CBC. As it happened, the only way RLP could get the program on the national network was "under an arrangement whereby we participated in the network's portion of ad revenue," says Ross. (He believes the Corporation takes half the network spot dollars. Local stations get the other half.) RLP's sales representative, All -Canada Radio & Television Ltd., pressed the CBC to buy the program. But it was no dice. Ross feels authority in the Corporation was spread too thin (before the CBC's recent executive realignment), so no one was in position to make a decision. "They all liked Moment of Truth," he says. But they figured I suppose that with the total number of dollars they had to spend, they didn't want to spend it on daytime television." RLP contended daytime shouldn't be discounted. "The CBC's final comment when I was there (at a meeting in Ottawa) was 'We have no money'. I didn't believe them at the time, but now they've made it public I guess it must be true," Ross adds.

RLP's target in the CBC talks was hung on a figure of approximately $7500 for each episode of Moment. (Ross believed $7500 was about the lowest figure the CBC could spend producing a half hour of its own.) Scaled down to allow for Moment being daytime TV, and not high -Canadian -culture ("I've never said our show was like the Second Coming, or fabulous or wonderful," Ross insists), $7500 became a take-off point in RLP's thinking.' Ross felt, and still believes that the CBC shouldn't be called on to back every program idea dreamed up by independent producers - "The program has to be something more than self-indulgence."

COMMERCIAL WITH A BIG C "I'm in the commercial business with a big C", he says. "Everything has to be considered ing the ground of quality -level suitable for national broadcast, he explains. "You can apply this test to Moment of Truth because it's stood the test of a foreign sale," he continues. "And you should be able to ask the CBC to support you if the program has stood the test elsewhere." He thinks RLP took on its fair share of risk by getting the program produced, sold and on the air, making it possible for RLP to turn to the CBC with a proved -out product. "At no time did we ask the Corporation to gamble with us. At no time did the taxpayer have to gamble. "The CBC could at least have indicated interest in supporting us," he states. (The Corporation has pledged support, from April 1 as noted above.) But what happened to the prediction that the Canadian obligation to sponsor Canadian content programming could now be considered positively?

RLP's lengthy struggle for support of its Canadian talent opus leaves John Ross in some doubt. In fact he admits expressing his misgivings to a US producer who wondered if there was any future for an independent producer wanting to develop something up here. What have they done for you on this show, except criticize?" is the way the American put it.

AGONY OF UNCERTAINTY

Asked if his negotiations with the CBC have been satisfactory Ross replies, "Of course not," although the dickering seems to have led at last to an acceptable financial arrangement. Ross believes if others are to escape RLP's agony of uncertainty, "the first thing the CBC has to clarify, not only for Robert Lawrence Productions but for everybody, is its attitude, They've got to define it." The question in Ross' mind is, "Do they want independent Canadian production or not?" As an afterthought he adds, "The NBC, CBS and ABC networks have made a great success of their businesses by producing as little as possible themselves." Stuart MacKay, principal figure in All -Canada's negotiations on behalf of RLP, says, "We've been trying to see it half -way," and get the CBC to do the same. "In the beginning they told us - 'Look here, we don't have any money. Are you prepared to gamble with the Corporation?" MacKay concludes, "That's not a solid base for a production house."

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