Genre: | Medical drama |
Creator: | Meta Rosenberg |
Director: | Robert Ellis Miller |
Starring: | Paul Richards Eduard Franz |
Theme Music Composer: | David Raksin |
Composer: | John Carisi Walter Scharf Richard Markowitz John Williams Morton Stevens Jerry Goldsmith George Duning Gerald Fried Van Alexander |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Num Seasons: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 30 |
Executive Producer: | John E. Pommer George Lefferts (1964) |
Producer: | George Lefferts Richard Collins Morton Fine David Friedkin |
Cinematography: | Robert Hauser |
Camera: | Single-camera |
Runtime: | 45–48 minutes |
Company: | Bing Crosby Productions (produced at the studios of Desilu) |
Channel: | ABC |
Related: | Ben Casey The Eleventh Hour |
Breaking Point is an American medical drama that aired on ABC from September 16, 1963, to April 27, 1964, with reruns continuing until September 7, 1964.[1] The series, which was a spin-off of Ben Casey, stars Paul Richards and Eduard Franz. The series was created by Meta Rosenberg.
The NBC drama The Eleventh Hour was the inspiration for creation of Breaking Point, the characters of which were first seen on the September 9, 1963, episode of Ben Casey. Following that development, Ben Casey moved to Wednesday nights, and Breaking Point took its Monday night slot.
Producer George Lefferts was partially inspired to create Breaking Point on the back of the success of an earlier show that also dealt with mental health issues, Special for Women.
Richards stars as Dr. McKinley Thompson (known as "Dr. Mac" to most of the staff), resident in psychiatry at York Hospital in Los Angeles. Franz co-starred as Dr. Edward Raymer, the hospital's psychiatric clinical director.[2] Episodes focused more on problems of people who sought help at the clinic than on activities at the clinic.
Breaking Point was produced by Bing Crosby Productions.[2] George Lefferts was the producer, with Sydney Pollack as the director. Lefferts and Allan Sloane were the writers. It was broadcast on Mondays from 10 to 11 p.m. Eastern Time. Its competition included East Side West Side on CBS and Sing Along with Mitch on NBC.[3]
Sloane was nominated for an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Writing Achievement in Drama".[4]