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A teleplay is a screenplay used in the production of television plays, productions of comedies or dramas written or adapted specifically for television. The term surfaced during the 1950s with wide usage to distinguish teleplays from stage plays written for theater and screenplays written for films. All three have different formats, conventions and constraints. On the hour-long TV anthology drama shows of the Golden Age of Television, such as ''The United States Steel Hour'', ''The Goodyear Television Playhouse'', ''The Philco Television Playhouse'', ''The Alcoa Hour'', ''Armstrong Circle Theatre'', and ''Studio One'', productions often were telecast live from studios with limited scenery and other constraints similar to theatrical presentations. These constraints made a teleplay quite different from a screenplay. However, television dramatists, such as Paddy Chayefsky, JP Miller and Tad Mosel, turned such limitations to their advantage by writing television plays with intimate situations and family conflicts characterized by naturalistic, slice of life dialogue. When seen live, such productions had a real-time quality not found in films (shot out of sequence), yet they employed tight close-ups, low-key acting and other elements not found in stage productions. For many viewers, this was equivalent to seeing live theater in their living rooms, an effect enhanced when television plays expanded from 60-minute time slots to a 90-minute series with the introduction of ''Playhouse 90'' in the late 1950s.〔(Serling, Rod. "Writing for Television," ''Patterns''. New York: Bantam, 1957. )〕 Notable examples: * ''The Comedian'' (1957) * ''Days of Wine and Roses'' (1958) * ''Playhouse 90'' (1956-1961) ==References== 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「Teleplay」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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