The Alfred Hitchcock Hour: The Star Juror


01:00 am - 02:00 am, Monday, December 8 on WSWB MeTV (38.2)

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About this Broadcast
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The Star Juror

Season 1, Episode 24

Murderer George Davies (Dean Jagger) faces an ironic problem: he's a member of the jury that is trying another man for the crime. J.J.: Will Hutchins. Jenny: Betty Field. Lola: Cathie Merchant. Sheriff: Crahan Denton. Mrs. Fenton: Katherine Squire. Pauline: Josie Lloyd. Alice: Jennifer West.

repeat 1963 English HD Level Unknown
Drama Anthology

Cast & Crew
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Dean Jagger (Actor) .. George Davies
Will Hutchins (Actor) .. J.J.
Betty Field (Actor) .. Jenny
Cathie Merchant (Actor) .. Lola
Cathy Merchant (Actor) .. Lola
Crahan Denton (Actor) .. Sheriff
Harry Harvey (Actor) .. Dr. Vance
Katherine Squire (Actor) .. Mrs. Fenton
Josie Lloyd (Actor) .. Pauline
Jennifer West (Actor) .. Alice
William Challee (Actor) .. Jess

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Dean Jagger (Actor) .. George Davies
Born: November 07, 1903
Died: February 05, 1991
Trivia: An Ohio farm boy, Dean Jagger dropped out of school several times before attending Wabash College. He was a schoolteacher for several years before opting to study acting at Chicago's Lyceum Art Conservatory. By the time he made his first film in 1929, Jagger had worked in stock, vaudeville and radio. At first, Hollywood attempted to turn Jagger into a standard leading man, fitting the prematurely balding actor with a lavish wig and changing his name to Jeffrey Dean. It wasn't long before the studios realized that Jagger's true calling was as a character actor. One of his few starring roles after 1940 was as the title character in Brigham Young, Frontiersman--though top billing went to Tyrone Power, cast as a fictional Mormon follower. Jagger won an Academy Award for his sensitive performance in Twelve O'Clock High (1949) as one of General Gregory Peck's officers (and the film's narrator). Physically and vocally, Jagger would have been ideal for the role of Dwight D. Eisenhower, but he spent his career studiously avoiding that assignment. Having commenced his professional life as a teacher, Dean Jagger came full circle in 1964 when cast as Principal Albert Vane on the TV series Mr. Novak.
Will Hutchins (Actor) .. J.J.
Born: May 05, 1932
Trivia: Sandy-haired, 6'1" leading man Will Hutchins established his reputation with "aw, shucks," country bumpkin roles -- even though he was born in a suburb of Los Angeles, won a Shakespearean festival Best Actor award while still in high school, and specialized in Greek drama at Pomona College. After military service, he took cinema classes at U.C.L.A., learning virtually every technical aspect of filmmaking. Discovered by TV producer Albert McCreery, he was signed to a Warner Bros. contract in 1956. The following year he was cast as the title character in the TV Western Sugarfoot, playing laconic, easygoing frontier lawyer Tom "Sugarfoot" Brewster (so named because he was "one grade lower than a tenderfoot") from 1957 through 1960. He continued appearing in guest roles on TV until his next series stint as Dagwood Bumstead in the short-lived 1968 revival of Blondie. Eventually Will Hutchins left films to write poetry and pursue a second career as a circus clown.
Betty Field (Actor) .. Jenny
Born: February 08, 1918
Died: September 13, 1973
Trivia: Betty Field was a versatile character and lead actress said to have never repeated a characterization. She attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts before appearing professionally in summer stock in 1933. The following year, Field made her Broadway debut and soon became a popular ingenue in George Abbott's comedies of the late '30s. She made her premiere feature-film appearance in What a Life (1939), reprising her role in a Broadway play of the same name. With her provocative performance in Of Mice and Men (1940), she established herself as a significant actress. Throughout the '40s, Field alternated between Broadway plays and Hollywood films. On screen she tended to play neurotic, hard-bitten women. After only making one film around 1950, Field did not return to steady film work until after 1956, when she became a character actress frequently cast as unkempt but well-meaning mothers. One of her three marriages was to playwright Elmer Rice, who wrote several plays as vehicles for her. Betty Field died of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1973.
Cathie Merchant (Actor) .. Lola
Cathy Merchant (Actor) .. Lola
Crahan Denton (Actor) .. Sheriff
Born: March 20, 1914
Harry Harvey (Actor) .. Dr. Vance
Born: January 10, 1901
Died: November 27, 1985
Trivia: Actor Harry Harvey Sr. started out in minstrel shows and burlesque. His prolific work in Midwestern stock companies led to film assignments, beginning at RKO in 1934. Harvey's avuncular appearance (he looked like every stage doorman named Pop who ever existed) won him featured roles in mainstream films and comic-relief and sheriff parts in B-westerns. His best known "prestige" film assignment was the role of New York Yankees manager Joe McCarthy in the 1942 Lou Gehrig biopic Pride of the Yankees. Remaining active into the TV era, Harry Harvey Sr. had continuing roles on two series, The Roy Rogers Show and It's a Man's World, and showed up with regularity on such video sagebrushers as Cheyenne and Bonanza.
Katherine Squire (Actor) .. Mrs. Fenton
Born: March 09, 1903
Died: March 29, 1995
Trivia: Best known for her stage work, character actress Katherine Squire also acquired extensive film and television credits. She first appeared on Broadway in 1932, after gaining initial acting experience at the Cleveland Playhouse. She made her feature film debut in The Story on Page One (1959). She made her final film appearance as half of one of the long-married couples interviewed during the course of When Harry Met Sally (1989). Squire's television resumé includes appearances on Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Twilight Zone, and The Virginian.
Josie Lloyd (Actor) .. Pauline
Jennifer West (Actor) .. Alice
William Challee (Actor) .. Jess
Born: January 01, 1912
Died: March 18, 1989
Trivia: Originally intending to become a journalist, William Challee abandoned this dream when he began appearing in Chicago-based theatrical productions. Challee's Broadway career reached its peak in the late '30s with Wonder Boy. In films from 1943, he was usually seen as well-dressed gangsters, pushy reporters, and grim military officers. William Challee's later credits included such roles as Nicholas Duprea in the Jack Nicholson starrer Five Easy Pieces.

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