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''Fame Is the Name of the Game'' (1966) is an American TV-movie that aired on NBC and served as the pilot episode of the subsequent series ''The Name of the Game''. It was directed by Stuart Rosenberg. It was produced by Ranald MacDougall, who also wrote the teleplay, from the novel ''Three Women'' by Tiffany Thayer.〔Marill, Alvin H. ''Movies Made for Television, The Telefeature and the Mini-Series 1964-1986''. New York, 1987, New York Zoetrope. Page 130.〕 The film stars Anthony Franciosa as investigative journalist Jeff Dillon. It also presents the screen debut of 20-year-old Susan Saint James as Peggy Chan, Dillon's new editorial assistant. (In the series, St. James's character is renamed Peggy Maxwell, and she is the research assistant to all three of the rotating lead characters.) In the film, Jeff Dillon writes for ''Fame'' magazine, a publication of Janus Enterprises, and Glenn Howard (George Macready) is just the managing editor. In the subsequent series, Dillon writes for ''People'' magazine, a division of Howard Publications, and Glenn Howard (Gene Barry) is head of the whole company. The telefilm also features Jill St. John, Jack Klugman, and Robert Duvall. In the weeks before the telefilm's first broadcast, NBC ran an unprecedented blitz of TV ads which erroneously billed ''Fame is the Name of the Game'' as television's first "world premiere" of a "major motion picture". The film garnered phenomenal ratings leading to the spin-off series. ==Plot summary== An investigative reporter looks into the murder of a call girl. His investigation unearths her diary, with the names of many prominent people in it. He sets out to find her killer from among the names contained in the diary. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Fame Is the Name of the Game」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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