Pilgrim: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(33 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) | |||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
|headerstyle = background:#ccf; | |headerstyle = background:#ccf; | ||
|labelstyle = background:#ddf; | |labelstyle = background:#ddf; | ||
|image = [[File:PilgrimCD.jpeg|360px|center]] | |||
|header1 = Series | |header1 = Series | ||
|header3 = Original Broadcast Date | |header3 = Original Broadcast Date | ||
Line 10: | Line 11: | ||
|label10 = Preceded by: | |label10 = Preceded by: | ||
|label11 = Followed by: | |label11 = Followed by: | ||
|data8 = [[:Category:Absurd Monologue|Absurd Monologue]], [[:Category:Scripted Actors|Scripted Actors]], | |data8 = [[:Category:Absurd Monologue|Absurd Monologue]], [[:Category:Scripted Actors|Scripted Actors]], 55 minutes | ||
|data4 = [[1993|1993]] | |data4 = [[:Category:1993|1993]] | ||
|title = [https://www.joefrank.com/shop/pilgrim Pilgrim][https://www.joefrank.com/streaming/shows/?jfsearch=Pilgrim] | |title = [https://www.joefrank.com/shop/pilgrim Pilgrim][https://www.joefrank.com/streaming/shows/?jfsearch=Pilgrim] | ||
|data6 = | |data6 = [[Arthur Miller]], [[Grace Zabriskie]], [[Helen Wilson]], [[Florinel Fatulescu]], [[Douglas Johnson]], Joe Frank | ||
|data10 = [[Problems]] | |data10 = [[Problems]] | ||
|data11 = [[Smile]] | |data11 = [[Smile]] | ||
Line 19: | Line 20: | ||
| | | | ||
}} | }} | ||
''The first light snow of the year has fallen, and the ground is dusted in white.'' | |||
'' | '''Pilgrim''' is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series [[In The Dark]]. It was originally broadcast in [[:Category:1993|1993]]. | ||
'' | == Synopsis == | ||
Joe tells of a Thanksgiving dinner in which he eats too much. | |||
6:00: Joe wonders how many people think about the origins of | |||
Thanksgiving, imagines Pilgrims. | |||
8:00: [[Arthur Miller]] tells of being on a raft trying to paddle up | |||
the Zhang (sp?) river, but they can't out-row the current, so they | |||
drift downstream. They see the Holy Man of Bei-lin (sp?). They | |||
misunderstand the weird noises he makes, think he's gone mad; Arthur | |||
later concludes that he was mirroring their confusion. | |||
11:30: Joe talks about the idea of the pilgrim, that the journey, not | |||
the destination, is the true meaning of a pilgrimage. | |||
14:30: Arthur Miller opines that pilgrimage is a search for a home, | |||
tells of a journey from Paranaguá to Curitiba,<ref>both in the Paraná | |||
state of Brazil</ref> stops in a chapel along the way, has a | |||
metaphysical experience, falls asleep, is robbed and dumped in the | |||
gutter. | |||
19:10: Bill Nelson's 'The spirit cannot fail you'. | |||
20:50: Wandering the streets of Soho, Joe falls in love with a 1953 | |||
Buick Century 4-holer convertible. Though it's worth only a few | |||
hundred, he pays the owner ([[Grace Zabriskie]]?) $15,000 for it | |||
(she's suspicious of his motives), having sold all his stuff and | |||
borrowed from friends and family. He drives west. | |||
27:10: At a Philips 66 service center, Joe stops for a tuna melt, | |||
falls in love with his waitress ([[Helen Wilson]]?), tries to get her | |||
to go with him. She refuses. | |||
30:00: Joe delivers a mock paean to a fictional mother, all the things | |||
she did for her children and husband.<ref> originally aired in | |||
[[Problems]].</ref> | |||
38:40: Arthur Miller tells of trying to kill himself in Budapest, but | |||
failing. He takes a train to Cracow, hoping to consult Dr Heinrich | |||
Gorscht (sp?), who, he thinks, is the only man who can help him. He | |||
finds him in a billiards hall. | |||
44:40: Joe reaches the Rockies. A state trooper ([[Florinel Fatulescu]]) stops him for a flickering | |||
tail light; he likes the car, complains that Americans move too much | |||
(He's Rumanian). | |||
47:20: Joe arrives in Las Vegas. He opines that the gambler is more | |||
in touch with ultimate reality than the engineer because the gambler | |||
abandons himself to chance. | |||
50:00: Joe arrives at the Pacific ocean, drives into it. He sees a | |||
guy with a car (1957 Chevy Belair) in the water up the shore | |||
([[Douglas Johnson]]?). He's fallen in love with it, plans to haul it | |||
out, refurbish it, drive it to the East coast. | |||
52:50: Joe imagines all the people who sneak into the US, that what | |||
they really want is a car, a full tank of gas, the freedom of the | |||
highways, they're our new pilgrims. | |||
== | <div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width:100%; overflow:auto;"> | ||
<div style="font-weight:bold;line-height:1.6;">Legacy Synopsis</div> | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
Second person description of a thanksgiving dinner. Thoughts about the pilgrims including birth defects. Actor: Meeting a holy man while being washed downriver. The point of a pilgrimage. Actor: Falling asleep in a temple. Falling in love with a car and buying it, then driving across the country as a pilgrim, falling for a waitress. Actor: trying to commit suicide in Budapest, taking a train to see a doctor in a pool hall. Driving in the rockies and the desert. Being pulled over by a cop who complains that people travel too much. Driving to Las Vegas. Driving into the ocean. | |||
</div> </div> | |||
== | == Music == | ||
{{ | {{Fly Boy Ross (Christopher Young)}} [5:58] | ||
{{The Spirit Cannot Fail (Bill Nelson)}} [19:17] | |||
{{Long Gray Line (Thomas Newman)}} [29:56] | |||
== Additional credits == | |||
The original broadcast credits state: "[W]ith [[Arthur Miller]], [[Grace Zabriskie]], [[Helen Wilson]], [[Florinel Fatulescu]], [[Douglas Johnson]], and Joe Frank; mixed by Jerry Summers, remixed by [[Ray Guarna]]; written and produced by Joe Frank." | |||
== | == Miscellanea == | ||
* This program was originally broadcast in two half hour parts, but appears on [http://joefrank.com joefrank.com] as a single program. | |||
* This program was often rebroadcast on Thanksgiving | |||
== Footnotes == | |||
[[Category:Absurd_Monologue]] | [[Category:Absurd_Monologue]] | ||
[[Category:Scripted_Actors]] | [[Category:Scripted_Actors]] | ||
Line 46: | Line 111: | ||
[[Category:Grace Zabriskie]] | [[Category:Grace Zabriskie]] | ||
[[Category:Helen Wilson]] | [[Category:Helen Wilson]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Florinel Fatulescu]] | ||
[[Category:Douglas Johnson]] | [[Category:Douglas Johnson]] | ||
[[Category:Ray Guarna]] | |||
[[Category:In The Dark]] | |||
[[Category:Unknown_air_date]] | |||
[[Category:Show]] | |||
[[Category:Show_by_date|19930003]] {{Airdate|airdate=1993}} | |||
{{Series|series=In The Dark}}{{Cast|cast=[[Arthur Miller]], [[Grace Zabriskie]], [[Helen Wilson]], [[Florinel Fatulescu]], | |||
[[Douglas Johnson]], Joe Frank}} |
Revision as of 07:50, 15 March 2022
Series | |
---|---|
In The Dark | |
Original Broadcast Date | |
1993 | |
Cast | |
Arthur Miller, Grace Zabriskie, Helen Wilson, Florinel Fatulescu, Douglas Johnson, Joe Frank | |
Format | |
Absurd Monologue, Scripted Actors, 55 minutes | |
Preceded by: | Problems |
Followed by: | Smile |
The first light snow of the year has fallen, and the ground is dusted in white.
Pilgrim is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series In The Dark. It was originally broadcast in 1993.
Synopsis
Joe tells of a Thanksgiving dinner in which he eats too much.
6:00: Joe wonders how many people think about the origins of Thanksgiving, imagines Pilgrims.
8:00: Arthur Miller tells of being on a raft trying to paddle up the Zhang (sp?) river, but they can't out-row the current, so they drift downstream. They see the Holy Man of Bei-lin (sp?). They misunderstand the weird noises he makes, think he's gone mad; Arthur later concludes that he was mirroring their confusion.
11:30: Joe talks about the idea of the pilgrim, that the journey, not the destination, is the true meaning of a pilgrimage.
14:30: Arthur Miller opines that pilgrimage is a search for a home, tells of a journey from Paranaguá to Curitiba,[1] stops in a chapel along the way, has a metaphysical experience, falls asleep, is robbed and dumped in the gutter.
19:10: Bill Nelson's 'The spirit cannot fail you'.
20:50: Wandering the streets of Soho, Joe falls in love with a 1953 Buick Century 4-holer convertible. Though it's worth only a few hundred, he pays the owner (Grace Zabriskie?) $15,000 for it (she's suspicious of his motives), having sold all his stuff and borrowed from friends and family. He drives west.
27:10: At a Philips 66 service center, Joe stops for a tuna melt, falls in love with his waitress (Helen Wilson?), tries to get her to go with him. She refuses.
30:00: Joe delivers a mock paean to a fictional mother, all the things she did for her children and husband.[2]
38:40: Arthur Miller tells of trying to kill himself in Budapest, but failing. He takes a train to Cracow, hoping to consult Dr Heinrich Gorscht (sp?), who, he thinks, is the only man who can help him. He finds him in a billiards hall.
44:40: Joe reaches the Rockies. A state trooper (Florinel Fatulescu) stops him for a flickering tail light; he likes the car, complains that Americans move too much (He's Rumanian).
47:20: Joe arrives in Las Vegas. He opines that the gambler is more in touch with ultimate reality than the engineer because the gambler abandons himself to chance.
50:00: Joe arrives at the Pacific ocean, drives into it. He sees a guy with a car (1957 Chevy Belair) in the water up the shore (Douglas Johnson?). He's fallen in love with it, plans to haul it out, refurbish it, drive it to the East coast.
52:50: Joe imagines all the people who sneak into the US, that what they really want is a car, a full tank of gas, the freedom of the highways, they're our new pilgrims.
Second person description of a thanksgiving dinner. Thoughts about the pilgrims including birth defects. Actor: Meeting a holy man while being washed downriver. The point of a pilgrimage. Actor: Falling asleep in a temple. Falling in love with a car and buying it, then driving across the country as a pilgrim, falling for a waitress. Actor: trying to commit suicide in Budapest, taking a train to see a doctor in a pool hall. Driving in the rockies and the desert. Being pulled over by a cop who complains that people travel too much. Driving to Las Vegas. Driving into the ocean.
Music
- "Fly Boy Ross" - Christopher Young (from Bat 21, 1988) | YouTube [5:58]
- "The Spirit Cannot Fail" - Bill Nelson (from Chance Encounters in the Garden of Lights, 1987) | YouTube [19:17]
- "Long Gray Line" - Thomas Newman (from Scent Of A Woman, 1993) | YouTube [29:56]
Additional credits
The original broadcast credits state: "[W]ith Arthur Miller, Grace Zabriskie, Helen Wilson, Florinel Fatulescu, Douglas Johnson, and Joe Frank; mixed by Jerry Summers, remixed by Ray Guarna; written and produced by Joe Frank."
Miscellanea
- This program was originally broadcast in two half hour parts, but appears on joefrank.com as a single program.
- This program was often rebroadcast on Thanksgiving