Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Total Loss


01:35 am - 02:05 am, Wednesday, June 3 on WJLP MeTV (33.1)

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About this Broadcast
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Total Loss

Season 4, Episode 17

A debt-ridden department-store owner agrees to a fiery plan to cut her losses.

repeat 1959 English Stereo
Drama Anthology

Cast & Crew
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Nancy Olson (Actor) .. Jan Manning
Ray Teal (Actor) .. Fire Chief
Ralph Meeker (Actor) .. Mel Reeves
Ruth Storey (Actor) .. Evy
Dave Willock (Actor) .. Voss
Barbara Lord (Actor) .. Susan

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Nancy Olson (Actor) .. Jan Manning
Born: July 14, 1928
Trivia: The daughter of a Milwaukee physician, Nancy Olson attended UCLA, then briefly acted on stage before signing a Paramount Pictures contract in 1949. Her best screen assignment at Paramount was as self-effacing script clerk Betty Schaffer in Billy Wilder's Sunset Boulevard. She went on to be teamed with her Boulevard co-star William Holden in Union Station (1950), Force of Arms (1951) and Submarine Command (1951). Olson briefly retired in the mid-1950s when she married songwriter Alan Jay Lerner (they later divorced; her second husband was record executive Alan Livingston). In 1960, Olson went back before the cameras as Betty Carlisle, ever-patient fiance of would-be inventor Ned Brainard (Fred MacMurray) in Disney's The Absent Minded Professor; she repeated this characterization in the 1963 sequel Son of Flubber. She went on to do a smattering of TV films, including the 1967 pilot of the Darren McGavin private eye series The Outsider. Nancy Olson also played continuing roles in the 1977 weekly Kingston: Confidential and the 1984 prime-time soaper Paper Dolls.
Ray Teal (Actor) .. Fire Chief
Born: January 12, 1902
Died: April 02, 1976
Birthplace: Grand Rapids, Michigan
Trivia: Possessor of one of the meanest faces in the movies, American actor Ray Teal spent much of his film career heading lynch mobs, recruiting for hate organizations and decimating Indians. Naturally, anyone this nasty in films would have to conversely be a pleasant, affable fellow in real life, and so it was with Teal. Working his way through college as a saxophone player, Teal became a bandleader upon graduation, remaining in the musical world until 1936. In 1938, Teal was hired to act in the low-budget Western Jamboree, and though he played a variety of bit parts as cops, taxi drivers and mashers, he seemed more at home in Westerns. Teal found it hard to shake his bigoted badman image even in A-pictures; as one of the American jurists in Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), he is the only member of Spencer Tracy's staff that feels that sympathy should be afforded Nazi war criminals -- and the only one on the staff who openly dislikes American liberals. A more benign role came Teal's way on the '60s TV series Bonanza, where he played the sometimes ineffectual but basically decent Sheriff Coffee. Ray Teal retired from films shortly after going through his standard redneck paces in The Liberation of LB Jones (1970).
Ralph Meeker (Actor) .. Mel Reeves
Ruth Storey (Actor) .. Evy
Dave Willock (Actor) .. Voss
Born: August 13, 1909
Barbara Lord (Actor) .. Susan

Before / After
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Mannix
02:05 am