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Navy Log is an American television drama created by that presented stories from the history of the United States Navy. This series ran on CBS from September 20, 1955, until September 25, 1956. On October 17, 1956, it moved to ABC, where it aired until September 25, 1958.

(1996). 9780140249163, Penguin Books USA, Inc..
It changed networks because CBS "could not schedule it to the sponsor's wishes". The program aired for a total of three seasons and 104 episodes.

The Department of Defense and departments of the Navy cooperated with production of the filmed 30-minute series. In conjunction with that cooperation, the Navy Information Office solicited suggestions for stories, accompanied by brief documentation, with a Navy Log Project Officer in charge. The opening scene, filmed aboard the , showed 2,000 sailors forming the words "Navy Log".

The program's theme was "The Navy Log March" by Fred Steiner. Episodes opened with an announcer saying, "This is Navy Log. The dramas you see each week on Navy Log are from official U. S. Navy files. They tell of ships and places and those who man them. Recorded through the years in Navy Log."

(2025). 9780810892507, Scarecrow Press. .

In August 1957, then-Senator John F. Kennedy was technical adviser for the "P. T. 109" episode of the program, which related the story of the sinking of the patrol torpedo boat that he commanded. He also was a guest on the broadcast of that episode.

(1999). 9780345429230, The Ballentine Publishing Group.


Staff and sponsors
Sam Gallu was the producer. In 1955, the New York and Washington chapters of the Navy League of the United States awarded him a citation of appreciation. In 1957, he received a distinguished public service award from the Navy for his efforts related to Navy Log. CBS Television Film Sales was the distributor.

was the writer, and Tom Connors was the production manager. John Ewing was the art director, and was the music director.

Sponsors for the series included , , American Tobacco, and the United States Rubber Company.


Reception
Navy Log used a fictionalized — rather than documentary — approach for its presentation of stories. Executive producer Leslie Harris contrasted it with Victory at Sea, which NBC presented as a documentary. Harris said the documentary treatment created too large a scope and failed to let viewers feel "close to any of the participants" or view action as those on hand saw it.

In at least one broadcast, fictionalization stirred discontent. The crew of the PC-565, only patrol craft that sank a German submarine during World War II, saw their presidential-citation-winning efforts turned into what a newspaper columnist described as "a comedy of errors". wrote in that the men involved said the facts and circumstances were not shown correctly.

Columnist Hal Humphrey described the first two episodes of the series as having excellent production quality but needing a higher quality of writing. He described some of the lines as "very trite and corny dialogue". A review in The New York Times of the first ABC episode said, "Action shots in the later part of the half hour were exciting and graphic, but the acting and dialogue in general were rather routine." An unsigned review in the trade publication Broadcasting noted that the program needed "a firmer hand at editing" to avoid elements that appeared amateurish..


Syndication
CBS Television Film Sales released episodes of Navy Log in two 52-episode packages that local stations could run over two years.


Notable guest stars
  • as General Chen in "Operation Typewriter" (1956)
  • John Archer as the Skipper in the episode "Hiya Pam" (1955)
  • as Lieutenant Fenton in "Operation Typewriter" (1956)
  • as Ensign in "Survive" (1957)
  • and in "The Phantom of the " (1955)
  • in "Bucket of Sand" (1956) and as Reed in "The Beach Pounders" (1957)
  • Paul Burke as Sparks in "Sky Pilot" (1955)
  • as Marge in "Web Feet" (1956)
  • Russ Conway as Commander Loomis in "A Day for a Stingray" (1956)
  • as Col. Jack Connors in "Destination - 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW" (1956) and "The Lady and the Atom" (1957)
  • Francis De Sales in the role of naval officers in "Operation Three-In-One" (1955) and "Get Back Somehow" (1956)
  • as Bob Levine in "Ninety Day Wonder" (1956)
  • Mason Alan Dinehart as Marly in "Joe Foss, Devilbird" (1957). This episodes focuses on the World War II hero , later the governor of South Dakota and an American sportsman.
  • as Colonel Huam in "Operation Typewriter" (1956)
  • as DeMarco in "War of the Whale Boats" (1957)
  • as Johnny Fletcher in "Ninety Day Wonder" (1956), as Jimmy Milano in "The Lady and the Atom" (1957), and as Swenson in "The Draft Dodger" (1958)
  • as Eileen Murphy in "The Decoy" (1957)
  • as Lieutenant Bradshaw in "War of the Whale Boats" (1957)
  • as McNair in "Ito of Attu" (1957)
  • Douglas Kennedy as Lt. Cmdr. Boggs in "Men from Mars" (1956) and as Cmdr. Bourne in "Call Conrad" (1957)
  • as Joey McAdams in "Home Is a Sailor (1957)
  • Robert Knapp as Captain Weatherby in "The Death of Dillinger" (1956)
  • as Monsignor Flaherty in "Sky Pilot" (1955) and "The Draft Dodger" (1958)
  • as Lois MacKenzie in "Call Conrad" (1957)
  • as Bill Mathison in "The Long Weekend" (1956)
  • as Horn in "American U-Boat III" (1958)
  • as Jack Franklin in "The Long Weekend" (1956)
  • as Burns in "The Lonely Watch" (1958)


External links

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