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・ The Pines Catholic Camp
・ The Pines, Butte County, California
・ The Pines, Madera County, California
・ The Pines, Putney
・ The Pines, Virginia
・ The Piece of String
・ The Piece Talks
・ The Pieces Don't Fit Anymore
・ The Pied Piper (1933 film)
・ The Pied Piper (1942 film)
・ The Pied Piper (1972 film)
・ The Pied Piper (1986 film)
・ The Pied Piper (song)
・ The Pied Piper of Cleveland
・ The Pied Piper of Guadalupe
The Pied Piper of Hamelin (1957 film)
・ The Pied Pipers
・ The Pied Pumkin
・ The Pierces
・ The Pierces (album)
・ The Pierre
・ The Pierre Berton Show
・ The Pietasters
・ The Pietasters (album)
・ The Pig
・ The Pig and Whistle
・ The Pig Got Up and Slowly Walked Away
・ The Pig King
・ The Pig Scrolls
・ The Pig Who Saved the World


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The Pied Piper of Hamelin (1957 film) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Pied Piper of Hamelin (1957 film)

''The Pied Piper of Hamelin'' is an American ninety-minute musical film in color, originally made as a television special and first shown by NBC on November 26, 1957,〔http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0050842/releaseinfo〕 as their Thanksgiving Day offering for that year. It preempted that evening's telecasts of ''Tic Tac Dough'', ''You Bet Your Life'', and ''Dragnet''.〔http://web.archive.org/web/20070523193621/www.getty.net/texts/tv-48-66.txt〕 Based on the famous poem of the same name by Robert Browning and using the music of Edvard Grieg arranged by Pete King with special lyrics by Hal Stanley and Irving Taylor, it starred Van Johnson, Claude Rains (in his only singing and dancing role), Lori Nelson, Jim Backus, and Kay Starr.〔http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0050842/〕 It was directed by Broadway veteran Bretaigne Windust. In a direct nod to Browning's poem, nearly all of the dialogue in ''The Pied Piper of Hamelin'' was written in rhyme, much of it directly lifted from the poem.
Unusually for a made-for-TV family special of the era, it was not presented live but on actual motion picture film, and the color process used was not NBC's usual "living color", but three-strip Technicolor, which had previously been used on television only in the one-hour science specials ''Our Mr. Sun'' 〔http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0159620/〕 and ''Hemo the Magnificent''. Theatrical prints, however, erroneously bill the film as having been made in Eastman Color.
The program was successful enough to be repeated in 1958 and then syndicated to many local stations, where it was rerun annually for many years, in the tradition of other holiday specials. The film was briefly released to movie theatres in 1966, where it did not fare nearly as well.〔http://www.kiddiematinee.com/kgm_f12.html〕
Years later, Van Johnson's performance as the Pied Piper was still so fondly remembered that he played a Piper-like criminal called "The Minstrel" on the 1966 TV series ''Batman''.〔http://www.musicals101.com/tv2b.htm〕
== Plot summary ==
The Pied Piper (Van Johnson) is first spotted working magic in Hamelin by a disabled boy, Paul, and playing his signature tune ''In the Hall of the Mountain King''. Paul tells his best friend, the schoolteacher Truson (=''true son''), also played by Johnson, but Truson is skeptical.
The town of Hamelin has entered a competition in order to win a banner from the King. To this end, the Mayor (Claude Rains) exhorts the people to work incessantly, even the children, to the extent that they are denied school and play. Truson protests, but his protests go unheeded by the arrogant Mayor. As part of a competition between several villages, the Mayor and his cabinet plan to construct golden chimes to impress the King's Emissary, who is due to pay a visit to Hamelin. But their efforts are temporarily halted when the town is invaded by rats, which have fled the neighboring city of Hamelout after the Weser River flooded and destroyed the town.
It is then that the Piper magically appears before the Mayor and his councilors. (He can appear inside the council room although the door is bolted.) Asking to be paid all the money in the town's treasury, (fifty-thousand guilders) he offers to rid the town of the rats. An unusual element is introduced into the story here: whenever the Piper plays a happy tune for the children, only Truson and the children can hear it. When he plays "In the Hall of the Mountain King" and leads the rats to their doom in the river, the children quickly fall asleep and only the material-minded adults such as the Mayor, but not Truson, can hear the music.
The Piper rids the town of the rats, but rather than simply paying him, the Mayor and his Cabinet attempt to use legal pettifoggery to trick him into an agreement whereby he must deposit a certain amount of money as a guarantee that the rats will not return, and if they do he must return the rest of the money that he has been paid. Furious, the Piper leaves without his money, and the Mayor plots to use the gold to construct the chimes. Truson, who is in love with the Mayor's daughter Mara (Lori Nelson) is thrown in jail for speaking out against this injustice. The Mayor plans to marry off Mara to the King's Emissary (Jim Backus), but at this point, the Piper takes his revenge. Playing a happy variation on "In the Hall of the Mountain King", he leads the children of Hamelin away and into a beautiful kingdom concealed by a cave which magically opens to let the children in. But Paul is accidentally left behind, after he falls while trying to catch up with the other children and the cave closes before he can pass through.
The rest of the plot concerns the resolution of the Truson-Mara love story, the attempts of the adults to bring back the children, and the townsfolk and the Mayor. A happy ending showing the Piper's forgiveness and his returning of the children was added to the story in order to keep the program a family special.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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