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J.P. Miller : ウィキペディア英語版
JP Miller

James Pinckney Miller (December 18, 1919, San Antonio, Texas - November 1, 2001, Flemington, New Jersey), known to friends and associates by the nickname Pappy, wrote under the name JP Miller. He was a leading playwright during the Golden Age of Television, receiving three Emmy nominations. A novelist and screenwriter, he was best known for ''Days of Wine and Roses'', directed by John Frankenheimer for ''Playhouse 90'' (1958) and later a motion picture (1962) directed by Blake Edwards.
Miller was the son of construction engineer Rolland James Miller and touring actress Rose Jetta Smith Miller. At the age of 17, living in Palacios, Texas, he sold his first story to ''Wild West Weekly''. That same year, he boxed professionally in Beaumont, Texas and other Texas rings under the name Tex Frontier, usually earning $10 a fight.
While attending Rice University in the late 1930s, he became a part-time reporter for the ''Houston Post''. After graduating from Rice in 1941, he traveled to Mexico as a special feature writer but failed to send back any copy because he became interested in art and was studying sculpture at La Escuela de Artes Plasticas in Mexico City. Sick with jaundice, he returned to Texas, where he received a draft notice. He served in the Navy in the South Pacific, primarily as a gunnery officer, seeing combat first aboard the heavy cruiser ''U.S.S. Chester''—torpedoed early in the war by a Japanese submarine. Aboard the aircraft carrier ''USS Cabot'', he learned deep sea diving and adopted the name JP Miller (minus periods after the initials) after receiving orders in that format by U.S. Navy addressing machines. The ''Cabot'' returned to the United States with 13 battle stars, and a Presidential Unit Citation. Miller came back with a Purple Heart and Bronze Star. After WWII, he studied writing and acting at the Yale Drama School and then went to Houston where he sold real estate and Coleman Furnaces. Moving to New York, he sold York refrigerators and air conditioners while spending off hours at theaters, television studios and American Theater Wing classes.
==Television==

Miller's first script for television was ''The Polecat Shakedown'', a 30-minute drama for ''Man Against Crime'' about a man who blackmailed restaurants by injecting a foul-smelling substance into eggs. When an egg was cracked, customers fled, and the villain demanded cash to prevent future incidents. When this drama was televised, Miller immediately quit his job as a salesman to write full-time. In 1954 he had five plays produced on live television.
Scripting during the early years of live television, his first notable success came February 13, 1955 with ''The Rabbit Trap'' on ''Goodyear Television Playhouse'' about a man who works in Long Island City at a construction firm where he is bullied by his boss. He takes his family to Vermont for a two-week vacation. ''TV Guide'' synopsized the drama: "While on vacation, a father and son set a rabbit trap. They are to return the next day to free the rabbit, a prospective pet for the boy. But the family is forced to return to the city after a rush call from the father's demanding boss."〔''TV Guide'', February 13, 1955.〕 Back home, the boy points out that the rabbit will die in the trap. As Miller put it, "The guy finally realizes that the rabbit in the trap is him, and he takes his family and goes back to Vermont."
Miller's teleplays were staged on ''Kraft Television Theatre'' and ''The Philco Television Playhouse'', followed by ''Producers' Showcase'' (1955), ''Playwrights '56'' (1956) and ''Playhouse 90'' (1958–59). He did his LSD drama, ''The People Next Door'', for ''CBS Television Playhouse'' (1968).
However, Miller received the most acclaim for ''Days of Wine and Roses'', which was prompted by his notion to dramatize Alcoholics Anonymous meetings (which were something of a mystery in the early 1950s). The drama was telecast October 2, 1958 on ''Playhouse 90''. It became a movie four years later, but Miller preferred the earlier teleplay, commenting, "Of course, the television version was closer to my heart, because it was closer to my original image."
Presented live with tape inserts on CBS, the television production, starring Cliff Robertson, Piper Laurie, Charles Bickford and Malcolm Atterbury, was a powerful slice of life probe into the nature of alcoholism. In ''The New York Times'', the day after ''Days of Wine and Roses'' was telecast, Jack Gould wrote a rave review with much praise for the writer, director and cast:
:It was a brilliant and compelling work... Mr. Miller's dialogue was especially fine, natural, vivid and understated. Miss Laurie's performance was enough to make the flesh crawl, yet it also always elicited deep sympathy. Her interpretation of the young wife just a shade this side of delirium tremens—the flighty dancing around the room, her weakness of character and moments of anxiety and her charm when she was sober—was a superlative accomplishment. Miss Laurie is moving into the forefront of our most gifted young actresses. Mr. Robertson achieved first-rate contrast between the sober man fighting to hold on and the hopeless drunk whose only courage came from the bottle. His scene in the greenhouse, where he tried to find the bottle that he had hidden in the flower pot, was particularly good... John Frankenheimer's direction was magnificent. His every touch implemented the emotional suspense but he never let the proceedings get out of hand or merely become sensational.〔(Gould, Jack. "TV: Study in Alcoholism," ''The New York Times'', October 3, 1958. )〕
Miller's ''Days of Wine and Roses'' received favorable critical attention and was nominated for an Emmy in the category "Best Writing of a Single Dramatic Program - One Hour or Longer." ''Playhouse 90'' producer Martin Manulis decided the material would be ideal as a motion picture, but some critics observed that the film, directed by Blake Edwards, lacked the impact of the original television production. In an article written for ''DVD Journal,'' critic D.K. Holm noted alterations from the original:
:When the opportunity arose to make a film version of J. P. Miller's powerful TV drama ''Days of Wine and Roses'', actor Jack Lemmon suggested that the studio hire Blake Edwards (according to Edwards, that is) rather than the ''Playhouse 90'' production's original director, John Frankenheimer. On the big screen, ''Roses'' began as a Fox project, but ended up at Warner Bros. when the Fox studio started going down the Nile with ''Cleopatra''. With the advent of Lemmon's participation, little remained of the founding teleplay, except for actor Charles Bickford reprising his role. Edwards had started out in television, too, first as a writer then after that mostly noted for the series ''Peter Gunn'', and when he moved into features he was associated with comedies. Lemmon, too, had been in a long string of comedies, and it's easy to assume that both filmmakers were using the opportunity to "stretch". Unfortunately, Edwards, who is kind of a combination of George Stevens (comedy director turned prestige filmmaker) and Vincente Minnelli (excitable content with no distinctive visual style), tilted the original material towards schmaltz, from the comically lush theme-song by Henry Mancini to the exaggerated binge scenes. According to one Lemmon biography, the actor felt a little bad about the fact that his friend Cliff Robertson, who had appeared in the TV production, wasn't invited to be in the movie, but the studio insisted on a certified star for the film... What's missing is the calm plausibility of the original TV broadcast, revived briefly on cable TV in the 1990s.〔Holm, D.K.. (''Days of Wine and Roses'' review ) ''DVD Journal''.〕

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