Lies
Series | |
---|---|
WBAI and NPR Playhouse | |
Original Broadcast Date | |
1982 | |
Cast | |
Mark Hammer, F. Murray Abraham, Barbara Sohmers, Christina Moore, Tim Jerome, Arthur Miller, Jane Hunt, Joe Frank | |
Format | |
, 1 hour | |
Preceded by: | Summer Notes |
Followed by: | Pilot :: The End |
"At some point when I was in high school I lost my draft card, and my folks changed houses, and I think there was a period of two years there, or three years, or four years, when the Army lost me. They couldn't find me."
Lies is the name of a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series WBAI and NPR Playhouse. It was originally broadcast in 1982.
Synopsis
- A guy avoids the draft by pretending to take drugs.
- A military intelligence officer at a translation center in Vietnam during the war.
- A pair of radical women screw up a revolutionary bank robbery and go on the run.
- A man talks about having been politically active.
- A man meets a woman in a deli; "it had the cadence of witty repartee without the wit;" her roommate makes bagel and cream cheese paperweights, he goes to her place later. She tells him about a rape long ago, about a marriage to a man who shits in bed.
- Joe is a social climbing night watchman, lists things he must do every night, discusses office people.
- Scenes from the office - a board room filled with terror, one with giggling idiots, a woman shouts colors against a background of machinery.
- Joe buries his boss and takes his place.
Interesting Facts
The first 30 minutes of the 1985 Martin Scorcese comedy After Hours plagiarizes the plot setup and portions of woman-in-the-deli segment from "Lies". Joe recounts learning about this plagiarism in the 90 minute version of No Show, and his decision to accept a settlement and remain uncredited on the film.
Coincidentally, Larry Block appears as a taxi driver in the film, a role that originates with this episode.
Music
Template:Part One (Phillip Glass)
- "Ceres Motion" - Mother Mallard's Portable Masterpiece Co. (from Mother Mallard's Portable Masterpiece Co., 1973) | YouTube
- "I Will Wait For You" - Mantovani (from To Lovers Everywhere, 1971) | YouTube
Commentary
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External Links
The Scandalous Origins of Martin Scorsese’s After Hours