Seaway (TV series)

Seaway
GenreDrama
Created byAbraham Polonsky
Written byEdward DeBlasio
Lindsay Galloway
Alvin Goldman
Ian McLellan Hunter
Charles E. Israel
Norman Klenman
Abraham Polonsky
Directed byJohn Berry
Abner Biberman
Herschel Daugherty
Lawrence Dobkin
Harvey Hart
Irving Lerner
George McCowan
Daniel Petrie
Abraham Polonsky
Gayne Rescher
Harrison Starr
Eric Till
StarringStephen Young
Austin Willis
Cec Linder
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes30
Production
Executive producerMaxine Samuels
ProducerMichael Sadlier
Production companiesSeaway Films
ATV
Original release
NetworkCBC (Canada)
ATV (United Kingdom)
ReleaseSeptember 16, 1965 (1965-09-16) –
September 8, 1966 (1966-09-08)
Infobox instructions (only shown in preview)

Seaway is a Canadian drama series that aired on CBC Television for the 1965–1966 season. The series was a Seaway Films production in collaboration with the UK's ATV, with production money provided by the CBC. It was presented by ASP and distributed internationally by ITC Entertainment (for international screenings ITC replaced the theme music by John Bath with another composition by Edwin Astley, and prepared a different title sequence).

Although officially Canadian, many of the show's writers and directors were American (as was the series creator/script supervisor Abraham Polonsky), with some British contributors as well (such as Ian McLellan Hunter and Donald James). It was the most expensive series produced in Canada to that time with a total cost of $3 million ($12.9 million today), and although it did well enough for the CBC in terms of viewers, a hoped-for sale to American network television never happened because the series was shot in black-and-white, and U.S. network shows by that time were increasingly being made in color (with fewer and fewer exceptions). Only the two final two-part episodes of Seaway, "Don't Forget to Wipe the Blood Off" and "Gunpowder and Paint," were filmed in color. [1]

  1. ^ Peter Kenter with Martin Levin (2001). TV North: everything you wanted to know about canadian television. Whitecap Books. p. 160. ISBN 1-55285-146-X.