------------------------------
The Old-Time Radio Digest!
Volume 2002 : Issue 443
A Part of the [removed]!
ISSN: 1533-9289
Today's Topics:
THE OLDE TYME RADIO NETWORK SCHEDULE [ HERITAGE4@[removed] ]
re: shadow [ Michael Beck <mbeck@[removed]; ]
CBS Radio / Network Radio of the 196 [ Mark J Cuccia <mcuccia@[removed]; ]
THE SHADOW - "Murder by the Dead" [ SanctumOTR@[removed] ]
Re: One Man's Family [ HRRMIKES@[removed] ]
re: Barbour Family [ chris chandler <chrischandler84@yah ]
Freeman Gosden - Ham Station [ "Bill Orr" <billorr6@[removed]; ]
JFK Assassination [ chris chandler <chrischandler84@yah ]
Tape to CD [ "Holm, Chris " <[removed]@delphiau ]
Gene Nobles [ "Mary Ann Allen" <wallen@[removed] ]
Stephen Dunne as Sam Spade [ "Gordon Gregersen" <gsgreg@pacifier ]
GENE NOBLES [ PURKASZ@[removed] ]
Logs for "Backstage Wife" [ Kenneth Clarke <kclarke5@[removed]; ]
WORDS AT WAR publication date [ Howard Blue <khovard@[removed]; ]
Re: FOTR Videos [ Fred Berney <berney@[removed]; ]
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 10:24:15 -0500
From: HERITAGE4@[removed]
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: THE OLDE TYME RADIO NETWORK SCHEDULE for
week of: 11/17/02
Hi Folks - Here's the lineup for the coming week on the Olde Tyme Radio
Network at:
[removed]
New shows posted for hi-end streaming audio every Sunday for 7 days.
SAME TIME, SAME STATION with Jerry Haendiges
The first week of Jerry's Thanksgiving shows
1. THE JACK BENNY PROGRAM CBS 11/30/52 "Thanksgving Pilgrims"
2. JEFF REGAN, INVESTIGATOR 11/13/48 "The Pilgrim's Progress"
3. LIFE WITH LUIGI CBS 11/22/49 "Hot Dogs for Thanksgving"
4. TARZAN, LORD OF THE JUNGLE 11/29/51 "African Thanksgiving"
HERITAGE RADIO THEATRE with Tom Heathwood
1. THE NEW ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES ABC 4/7/47
with Tom Conway and Nigel Bruce in "The Adventure of the Tolling Bell"
2. STRAIGHT ARROW MBS 1/7/50 "Howard Culver stars in "The Faithful
Blackfoot" aka "The Loyal Indian Guide" or "The Snowbound Wagon Train"
3. THE COLGATE SPORTS NEWSREEL with BILL STERN NBC #514
6/2/49 With Special Guest: Former US President, Herbert Hoover.
Enjoy -- Tom & Jerry
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 11:40:06 -0500
From: Michael Beck <mbeck@[removed];
To: <[removed]@[removed];
Subject: re: shadow
There was a movie about the Shadow made in 1994 starring Alec Baldwin.
[removed]
Not bad. NOt great, either, though.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 12:14:01 -0500
From: Mark J Cuccia <mcuccia@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: CBS Radio / Network Radio of the 1960s
Jim Koski (JIMWMQT@[removed]) replied, regarding Andy Griffith on CBS Radio:
Andy Griffith did indeed have a nightly 5-minute monologue little chat
on CBS in late '59 & early '60. It ran in, if I remember my research
corectly, a half an hour block at 7:30 with a 5-minute newscast, a
5-minute selection of audio clips from the "Burns & Allen" TV (yes,
TV!) show, and "Bob & Ray". Most of the shows were dumpd a few months
before CBS axed almost everything else in November of 1960.
In the "repeat" of SUSPENSE: Sorry Wrong Number, which aired in Spring
1960 (this originated from New York, but was a reformatted "rerun" of the
1957 or 58 version recorded in Hollywood), there is a CBS RAD))|((O promo
for "Commedy Time". CBS New York announcer Stuart Metz (sp?) starts off
the promo mentioning Bob & Ray airing weeknights on CBS Radio, but also
mentions Andy Griffith, Burns & Allen, and Amos 'n' Andy as well, all part
of "Commedy Time, weeknights at the 'Stars Address', CBS Radio".
By the mid-1950's and continuing through the cancellation of a good deal
of CBS Radio programming in Nov/Dec 1960, Amos 'n' Andy had become the
"Amos 'n' Andy Music Hall". It was about 25-min's long, and was more like
a 'DJ' program with little commedy one-liners. It ran M-F evenings.
Bob & Ray were (briefly) on CBS Radio at this time as well (for the most
part, I think of Bob & Ray on NBC Radio, especially on the weekend MONITOR
Beacon). The CBS Radio schedules I've seen from 1959/60 indicate Bob & Ray
as being a full quarter hour (15-min's) in this weeknight "Commedy Time"
block.
I would assume that the 5-min weeknight Andy Griffth on CBS Radio was from
his commedy albums of "down home humor and philosophy", probably stuff
like "What it was, was football", or his rendition of "Romeo & Juliet".
Many of these Andy Griffith commedy monologues were later incorporated
into dialog on Andy's TV sit-com. I can remember him telling Opie about
Romeo & Juliet, or telling Barney about football!
And the 5-min Burns & [removed] I seem to think that these were the little
"stand-up" skits of dialog between George & Gracie, which would frequently
close-out the TV episodes, where they would be standing in front of a
stage curtain, and George would simply ask Gracie how her brother or
mother or whoever was doing that week, and Gracie would just TALK for five
or so min's (with George occasionally interrupting to ask something "HOW?
could such happen?"!).
This "Commedy Time" block would run approx. 50 mins total. The remaining
ten-mins would probably have been :00-:05 for five min's of CBS Radio news
(still only [removed] it wasn't until December 1960 when CBS RAD))|((O
expanded most hourly newscasts to TEN full min's for most of the 60's),
and the other five-min's, maybe at :55 to close out the hour? (or maybe
from :30-:35?) would have been a 5-min news COMMENTARY or maybe a five-min
sportscast.
Yes, ALL of these short-form or semi-long form entertainment segments on
"Commedy Time" were gone shortly before or by the [removed] major
revamping of the CBS Radio schedule. With that change, most hourly
newscasts were expanded to TEN full min's, "Have Gun Will Travel" was
cancelled, "Suspense" was cancelled (only temporarily, it came back in
June 1961 to replace "Gunsmoke" -- the TV Gunsmoke with Arness would be
expanding to a full hour in Fall 1961 anyways)... the weekday/daytime
P&G "Soaps" (some of which dated back to the 1930's were cancelled), and
so forth.
"Gunsmoke" remained (until replaced with the return of "Suspense" in June
1961) as did "Johnny Dollar". But "Suspense" and "Yours Truly, Johnny
Dollar" were gone at the end of [removed]
[removed]
Even though many of these programs were being "trimmed back" some, Arthur
Godfrey Time, Art Linkletter's Houseparty (audio track of the TV show),
Garry Moore, Bing Crosby & Rosemary Clooney's "Funny Side Up", and several
other entertainment programs were retained by the CBS RAD))|((O NETWORK
well into the 1960's. There was also "Dear Abby" and also a brief run of
"Let's Talk with Lucy" (Lucille Ball) added to CBS Radio's in the 1960's
as well.
While these weren't necessarily the "same" as prime-time or even daytime
network radio fare of the 1940's/50's, CBS Radio did maintain SOME form of
"semi-traditional" programming throughout the 1960's. ABC Radio also
continued Don McNeill's "Breakfast Club" until the end of 1968 (with
1-1-1968, it was packaged as part of the American Entertainment Network
format), and NBC Radio had the weekend MONITOR Beacon until [removed]
(But I've always wondered about what did "poor Mutual" have in the 1960's
in the way of "traditional" network radio fare?)
Art Linkletter's broadcasts on CBS Radio continued through about 1968 or
so, and Godfrey left the network in April 1972. (Yet less than two years
later, CBS is returning to more "traditional" type programming with the
CBS Radio Mystery Theater, in [removed]!).
If you can find un-edited (non-AFRTS) copies of 1961/62 Gunsmoke, Suspense
and Johnny Dollar tapes, you'll hear promos for the TEN-full-min's CBS
hourly newscasts, promos for the weekday daytime "variety/commedy"
programs, and promos for the (new) NetALERT system of bulletins and
automation tones (the BLEEPS tones) which many episodes of 1962 Suspense
and Johnny Dollar have in them. The NetALERT Bleeps are still used by
Westwood/CBS Radio to this day, but the system was completely upgraded in
May or June 1978. The current "bleep" tones are much more softer than they
were in the 1960's/70's.
Mark J. Cuccia
New Orleans LA
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 12:54:17 -0500
From: SanctumOTR@[removed]
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: THE SHADOW - "Murder by the Dead"
In a message dated 11/18/02 9:42:01 AM, oRuk77@[removed] writes:
does any one have info about the episode ladeled 'Murder By The Dead'
10/17/37. This sounds like a recreation.
***Yes, it was the first OTR recreation I ever directed, and occurred at the
1983 Friends of Old-Time Radio Convention. Rosa Rio (who provided the music
on the Orson Welles Goodrich season and later filled in on some of the
Johnstone and Morrison Blue Coal broadcasts) was behind the Hammond organ for
the recreation. Featured in the cast were announcer Ken Roberts, Dwight
Weist as The Shadow, Margot Stevenson as Margot Lane, Jackson Beck as Weston
. . . and Gertrude Warner (radio's longest-running Margot Lane), Arnold Moss,
Dick Osgood, Sidney Slon (THE SHADOW's most prolific scriptwriter), Arthur
Anderson, Karl Weber and Parley Baer. All of the cast members had worked on
the original series except Parley, including WXYZ's Dick Osgood who acted on
Street & Smith's DETECTIVE STORY PROGRAM in 1930 and LOVE STORY DRAMAS (also
hosted by The Shadow) in 1931-32 before beginning his 37-year run at
Detroit's WXYZ. And to make the occasion extra special, Shadow-creator
Walter Gibson was in the audience. --ANTHONY TOLLIN***
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 13:24:25 -0500
From: HRRMIKES@[removed]
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: Re: One Man's Family
dantrigg422@[removed] raised questions about information in a One Man's
Family premium that bore Fanny Barbour's name-probably Fanny Barbour's Memory
Book from [removed] As fans of OMF know, the Barbour Family tree has many, many
people and characters who were written in and out of the ongoing story lines.
Yes, there were marriages, births and deaths over the many years and the
details are part of the lore and the attraction of this great show.
If the Dan would like to get more info, there are several things he can
do. 1. Join the One Man's Family Family and get our Family Ties newsletter
on an ongoing basis. 2. As a member, he can order one of the truly
outstanding logs of all time, produced by our own Dr. Edwin Titus. The
information included in the 80+ pages is amazing. 3. Check our website at
[removed] (due to be updated within the next two weeks)
And, Dan can write us directly if he wishes.
Mike Sprague
The One Man's Family Family
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 13:37:39 -0500
From: chris chandler <chrischandler84@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: re: Barbour Family
Dan Trigg asks about the Barbours' poor track record
of keeping their spouses [removed]
Claudia Barbuor, born 8/1/12. Married 5/6/31 to Jim
Roberts Jr. (deceased 1931).
Based on these dates, you probably have a copy of
Fanny's "Memory Book", issued in spring, 1953. This
turned out to be the final premium offer in the
series' run, attracting a quarter-million responses
even while network radio was otherwise quickly
collapsing.
Claudia actually married the gangster Johnny Roberts
in 1932, but two decades later the date was subtly
inched back a year so that the Joan character (along
with cousins Pinky and Hank)could reach adulthood a
teensy big sooner, in 1950. This was one of the few
liberties the series ever took with 'aging' its
characters. There was also a
subtle-but-never-dishonest effort near the end of the
OMF run to de-emphasize Father Barbour's advancing
years (he would have turned 85 in 1960).
Clifford Barbour, twin to Claudia Barbour. Married
/19/37 to Anne Waite. deceased1938.)
Poor Cliffie had it even worse than the rest of the
family--his second wife Irene was also killed, mowed
down by a car (long story) in 1946. And even AFTER
the 'Memory Book' was published, young Hank lost HIS
wife and child in a tragic auto accident in, I think,
early 1954.
Are these marriages and then deaths true, and
If they are, were they questioned?
Oh they're all true, but you must remember that the
span from 1917, when Paul's true love died, and 1959,
when the series ended, is a VERY long time--especially
in the land of Radio Soapdom, where gangsters,
amnesiacs, psychotic suitors, and long-lost/previously
unmentioned relatives were par for the course. OMF
managed to stay remarkably true to life over the
years--even though it featured ALL of the above at
some point, and so (as you'll discover when you start
listening), this bizarre-sounding track record really
rings remarkably true within the context of the
series. You'll see. :)
chris
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 15:18:20 -0500
From: "Bill Orr" <billorr6@[removed];
To: "OTR List" <[removed]@[removed];
Subject: Freeman Gosden - Ham Station
There is also a photo of him at his station on Page 184 of "A Pictorial
History of Radio's First 75 Years" by B. Eric Rhoades. It is credited to
[removed] Don't know if it is the same pix or not.
Bill Orr, K5SYP (ex-W4TIM)
Tulsa, OK
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 15:19:58 -0500
From: chris chandler <chrischandler84@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: JFK Assassination
Was just watching some old NBC-TV video of the Kennedy
assassination 39 years ago this week.
I've heard hundreds of hours of old *radio* news, but
never seen much early TV network stuff--and I must say
I'm really taken aback at how very, VERY low-tech it
is! Essentially, it's a radio broadcast, accompanied
by some very, very boring pictures!! There's almost
no film; correspondents' reports are illustrated with
cardboard-cutout graphics; and the whole enterprise is
burdened by cumbersome technical procedures that
rendered it nearly impossible, for example, to get
even telephone reports from Dallas on the air.
TV usually gets most of the kudos for its handling of
this story, but comparing what I watched this weekend
to the radio assassination coverage I've acquired over
the years, I have to say the radio stuff is by far
better--faster, more facile, more broad-ranging and
sure.
NBC radio ran its coverage as basically an emergency
edition of "Monitor", and the steadidness of its
effort reflects the net's several years' experience in
mounting those marathon long-form broadcasts. Anchor
Morgan Beatty was absolutely rock-solid that
afternoon, his performance almost--but not
quite--matched by Alan Jackson over on CBS. And
whether you think it was a giant scoop or a giant
mistake in judgement, it was CBS *radio*, not TV,
which first broadcast word that JFK was indeed dead--a
historic scoop that came an agonizingly long while
before official confirmation arrived (all this, of
course, because Dallas correspondent Dan Rather told
his NY desk the President had died. He thought he was
gossipping--only to hear his bulleting being relayed
over the air, followed by the National Anthem!!)
ABC's radio coverage was also remarkably agile,
scooping all other broadcast networks with a report
from Texas only moments after the shooting. And even
Mutual, though hampered by a lack of resources--and
the unfortunate MIA status, early on, of its Dallas
reporter--kept up a coherent stream of wire reports
and reax from Washington.
In short: forty years later, you only hear about TV
coverage of the assassination. But there's plenty of
evidence that the radio effort was every bit
television's equal. And I'd say sheer logistics
suggest more people--in offices, factories, schools,
and cars--got their early crisis news from radio,
rather than TV.
So how about it: I'm not old enough to remember, but
those of you who were--are your broadcast memories
that day of TV, or radio?
chris
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 15:20:17 -0500
From: "Holm, Chris " <[removed]@[removed];
To: <[removed]@[removed];
Subject: Tape to CD
I know this has come up before, and I don't want to start a whole thread on
it, but I do have a question. I would like to copy some tapes to CD. They
don't have to be great, I just want a few for the car. Can someone recommend
a good way of doing this?
I would like to use my computer, so I don't have to buy any new hardware.
I've got a [removed] GHz P4, with an 80 gig harddrive, 12X CD burner, and Sound
Blaster Audigy Platinum sound (so I've got all sorts of sound inputs). Can
someone:
a) recommend software?
b) tell me if I should first copy the tape to the hard drive, and then burn
the file, or try to go straight from tape to CD in real time?
c) pass along any tips or tricks
Thanks for any help.
-Chris Holm
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 15:21:18 -0500
From: "Mary Ann Allen" <wallen@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: Gene Nobles
Hello,
I placed Gene Nobles disc jockey in the [removed] search engines and
there were many hits. Maybe you can find out about him using google.
Mary Ann
---
Mary Ann Allen wallen@[removed]
The Gathering Place [removed]
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 16:26:18 -0500
From: "Gordon Gregersen" <gsgreg@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: Stephen Dunne as Sam Spade
In the past, several posters(most recently Mr. Osentowski on 10/10/02) have expressed
a displeasure with Stephen Dunne in the radio role of Sam Spade. I enjoy Dunne's
Spade but I wish to avoid any battle of opinions. I offer just a few comments:
Howard Duff did Spade for about 221 shows, beginning in the summer of 1946.
On 11/17/50, Dunne and new announcer Don Rickles (replacing Dick Joy, who had been
the announcer since the 1st show) joined Lurene Tuttle ("Effie") for a final run
of 24 shows. During this final run, San Francisco [removed] Lt. Dundy is portrayed at
various times by both Bill Conrad and Lou Merrill.
Although Miss Tuttle played Effie for all five seasons of the Spade broadcasts, there
were various times that her character was missing from the show.
Near the close of the 4/13/51 show, Lisle Rooks, Western editor of Radio-Television
Mirror magazine, presented Stephen Dunne with the American listeners "FAVORITE DETECTIVE
AWARD" as voted by the readers of their annual poll. This award was NOT given to
the show, and not to Duff, but to Dunne.
At the close of the 4/27/51 show (2 shows after Dunne got the award), Dunne and Tuttle
implied that this was the final show and that listeners should write (and complain,
I assume) to Sam Spade, 1 East 48th Street, New York. And that was the end of new
Spade broadcasts. I don't believe that the network ever did any reruns.
Gordon Gregersen
Portland, Oregon
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 16:26:42 -0500
From: PURKASZ@[removed]
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: GENE NOBLES
X-Converted-To-Plain-Text: from multipart/alternative
X-Converted-To-Plain-Text: Alternative section used was text/plain
Ed Howell really got me going with that mention of WLAC and Gene
Nobles, so I entered his name into Google and came up with this wonderful
page on what surely was one of the most influential stations of the mid-50s.
<A HREF="[removed]">WLAC, NASHVILLE</A>
I was 15 then, tuning in WLAC every night to hear dem blooze man and it
drove me right out of school and into radio so by 1963 I was on the air in
Natchez Mississippi, playing the blooze on WNAT.
They fired me after a month.
On to Mobile, CBS outlet, too middle-of-the-road, but fun. Fired me
there too. Long hair and too much jazz on afternoon show.
Arthur Godfrey must have complained.
On the road again and into the country.
Fresno gave me hell and I gave it back.
Monterey was next, KMBY, they loved the blooze there.
Honolulu called. All night show, big audience of Nam guys in '65.
Sitting in with ex-James Brown band members and a stint as the drummer
on the strip show circuit on Hotel Street, I was the happiest guy in
paradise.
Then, Island fever kicked in.
Back to Monterey. They remembered me.
PDs began to call
I ended up at KDIA San Francisco,
<A HREF="[removed]">Mike
Sheppard (Gwynne) on KDIA Oakland, 1967</A>
Then on to Honolulu, KPOI back to New York WWRL and thence to LA, KGFJ.
Man what a trip before I got into the movies.
It was all dat damn WLAC in the late
night-under-the-pillow-transistor-radio antics and I wanna thank you for the
memory jog.
Whew!
Living and writing screenplays in New York now and plenty of time for
musical reflection.
Wrote a script of them days and still have most of the 45s.
Can I get an entire John R show from someone?
Even a bit?
<A
HREF="[removed],+Michael+C.">Michael C. Gwynne</A>
*** This message was altered by the server, and may not appear ***
*** as the sender intended. ***
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 16:26:51 -0500
From: Kenneth Clarke <kclarke5@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: Logs for "Backstage Wife"
If anyone knows where I can get a log of "Backstage
Wife", I'd appreciate it. I've got some episode numbers,
but need the dates of the programs which correspond to them.
Kenneth Clarke
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 16:27:05 -0500
From: Howard Blue <khovard@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: WORDS AT WAR publication date
I just heard from my publisher: I will be receiving copies of WORDS AT
WAR to ship out next week. Anyone who made a prepublication order and
who did not hear from me in the last week or so should contact me right
away about payment procedures.
Howard Blue [removed]
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 16:28:30 -0500
From: Fred Berney <berney@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: Re: FOTR Videos
[ADMINISTRIVIA:
have no vested interest in these tapes/DVDs other than having been fortunate
enough to play with Fred's high-end equipment for a few panels, and being in
front of it for one recreation. (I don't think I broke [removed]) --cfs3]
That must explain why my camera keeps putting up the words "vas you der
Charlie"
Just kidding. Charlie, you and Harold did an excellent job of handling the
camera. And maybe now I can sit and watch your acting ability. I was too
busy with the camera to really pay attention.
Yea folks. Charlie was in a recreation.
Fred
[removed]
[ADMINISTRIVIA: Complaints should be sent to Gary Yoggy. --cfs3]
--------------------------------
End of [removed] Digest V2002 Issue #443
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