Friday, February 7, 2025

Mason Adams




Mason Adams (February 26, 1919 - April 26, 2005) was an American voice actor and actor.

Adams was born in Brooklyn, New York, and was of Jewish descent. He earned a master's degree in Performing and Speech Arts from the University of Michigan. He also studied Drama at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He made his debut in 1940 in a summer play at the Hilltop Theater in Baltimore.

Adams worked on many radio programs during the Golden Age of Radio. A notable recurring role was that of Pepper Young on Pepper Young's Family, which ran from 1947 to 1959. He also portrayed the deadly Nazi Atomic Man in a classic 1945 serial on the radio version of The Adventures of Superman.

During the 1970s, Adams was a co-star of the NBC soap opera Another World, and in 1976, he was in the original 1976 Broadway cast for Checking Out.

Adams is perhaps most famous for his role as editor-in-chief Charlie Hume in the television series Lou Grant, which ran from 1977 to 1982. During his work on Lou Grant, Adams performed perhaps his most important role, as the President of the United States in the film Omen III: The Final Conflict (1981), with Sam Neill.

During the 1960s he was ubiquitous in television commercials for food and other household products, most notably for Chiffon margarine and Crest toothpaste (“Helps stop cavities before they start”). He also did the voice part for television commercials for Smucker's canned goods (“With a name like Smucker's, it's got to be good!”). He resumed this work in his later years.

Beginning in the 1980s, Adams did the voiceover for the commercial for Cadbury Creme eggs, which were advertised on television with Adams' catchy catchphrase: “Nobody knows Easter better than him.” He was the announcer for Lysol disinfectant (in 1986). Adams also did radio commercials for the Salvation Army. In addition, Adams was the narrator for Kix commercials in the 1990s, as well as in some Dentyne and Swanson's commercials. He was also the television promotional news announcer for WCBS (in 1992).

In one of the first episodes of Sesame Street, he played the narrator and voiced a cartoon with a jazzy triangle, and a slightly “square” square (with jazz music in the background). This caricature would be repeated on the show for many years well into the 1980s.

In the HBO miniseries From the Earth to the Moon he portrayed Senator Clinton P. Anderson. During the 1970s he co-starred in the NBC soap opera Another World.

He was married to Margot Feinberg (1957-2005). They had a daughter, Betsy, and a son, Bill. Adams died on April 26, 2005 in Manhattan, of natural causes.

Friday, January 31, 2025

Franklin Pierce Adams




Franklin Pierce Adams (Chicago, November 15, 1881-New York, March 23, 1960) was an American journalist and writer, known as Franklin P. Adams, and for his newspaper columns Always in Good Humour and The Conning Tower were the titles of his daily columns in the New York press, signed FPA.
As a panelist on radio's Information Please (1938–48), Franklin P. Adams was the designated expert on poetry, old barroom songs and Gilbert and Sullivan, which he always referred to as Sullivan and Gilbert. A running joke on the show was that his stock answer for quotes that he didn't know was that Shakespeare was the author. (Perhaps that was a running gag: Information Please's creator/producer Dan Golenpaul auditioned Adams for the job with a series of sample questions, starting with: "Who was the Merchant of Venice?" Adams: "Antonio." Golenpaul: "Most people would say 'Shylock.'" Adams: "Not in my circle.") John Kieran was the real Shakespearean expert and could quote from his works at length.
A translator of Horace and other classical authors, F.P.A. also collaborated with O. Henry on Lo, a musical comedy.
He began working at the Chicago Journal in 1903, but in 1904 he moved to the New York Evening Mail, where he worked until 1913, when he moved to the New York Tribune.
During his time at the Evening Mail, Adams wrote what remains his best-known work, the poem “Baseball's Sad Lexicon,” a tribute to the Chicago Cubs' double-play combination, “Tinker to Evers to Chance.” In 1911, he added a second column, a parody of Samuel Pepys' Diary, with notes drawn from F.P.A.'s personal experiences. In 1914, he transferred his column to the New-York Tribune, where it was famously retitled “The Conning Tower” and was considered “the pinnacle of verbal wit.”
During World War I he worked on the U.S. Army newspaper Stars and Stripes in Washington D. C. and in France as a captain in the intelligence service, after the war he returned to New York. While serving in the army, he became a captain. After the war, the so-called “comma-hunter of Park Row”. In 1921 he worked for the New York World, in 1931 for the New York Herald Tribune, and in 1937 for the New York Post until 1941. In 1938 he appeared on the radio program Information, Please.
Much later, the writer E. B. White freely admitted his sense of wonder: “I used to walk quickly past the house on West 13th Street, between Sixth and Seventh, where F.P.A. lived, and the block seemed to shiver".

Friday, January 24, 2025

Jane Ace

Goodman Ace and Jane Epstein

Jane Epstein was born in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1897. American radio actress and comedian. She was best-known for her role in the radio comedy Easy Aces.
She met Goodman Ace while both attended the same Kansas City high school. The couple married in 1922; soon after they were married, Ace lost his reporter's job. The Aces found they could forget their worries when playing bridge. Ace was hired by the Kansas City Journal-Post as its drama critic.
He brought his wife Jane in for an impromptu discussion; the favorable response led Goodman to create and write a 15-minute domestic comedy, Easy Aces.Billed as “radio’s laugh novelty,” the low-key Easy Aces featured Goodman as a harried businessman and Jane as his scatterbrained wife, prone to malaprops like “She has a voice like a nightingown” and “Congress is still in season.” In 1931, Easy Aces joined the CBS radio lineup, moving to WBBM in Chicago. Ace kept the material fresh by only permitting a quick reading rehearsal just before air time. A special table with a hidden microphone was constructed to cure cast members of mike fright. Easy Aces left the air in 1945, but Goodman Ace remained one of radio’s most respected writers, crafting material for Danny Kaye, Perry Como and The Big Show.
While doing Easy Aces, Jane was offered other radio roles in addition to the one on the couple's show. A radio producer wanted her to play the lead in a production of Dulcy, but she declined, reportedly believing she was unable to play other roles, because she did not consider the radio work she did as acting.
The couple was also part of the NBC Radio Weekday show which made its debut not long after Monitor. It aired Monday through Friday and was intended to reach female radio listeners. They also began writing and performing in commercials.
Jane died on November 11, 1974. Goodman Ace died March 25, 1982.

Saturday, January 18, 2025

Warning

WARNING:
 
Due to issues with the streaming server, Classic Old Time Radio station will be offline for a while (it may be for the next coming weeks or months) but we'll try to make sure the issue is resolved soon and the stream working back again.
 
In the meantime, new posts about the history of old time radio shows, radio actors or actresses will continue to be published on this blog, mainly every Friday. 

Thanks and sorry for the inconvenience! 
 

 

Friday, January 10, 2025

Death Valley Days


One of the most respected shows of early radio, Death Valley Days was well written and endured throughout the decades. Ruth Cornwall Woodman was asked to write the show in 1930. Though she knew nothing of the desert and its people, New York Vassar graduate Ruth undertook the project with enthusiasm. 

Each year Ruth would spend several months traveling through the desert to explore ghost towns, saloons, backpacking just outside Death Valley, and interviewing old timers. She would talk to gas station men, bartenders, and small town newspapermen. She did her research well, pouring over old newspapers and visiting old west museums, scouring the west for anything that would inspire a good story. The result of all this hard work was rewarding - a highly successful show that lasted over two decades, and later became a television show with Ronald Regan as the host. Death Valley Days presents stories of the old west, with realism and drama virtually unmatched by other westerns of the day.

It was broadcast on the Blue Network/ABCCBS, and NBC from September 30, 1930, to September 14, 1951. It "was one of radio's earliest and longest lasting programs.

Each episode began with a bugle call, followed by an announcer's introduction of The Old Ranger ("a composite character who had known the bushwhackers, desperados, and lawmen of the old days by first name"). For nearly six years, the program also included Western songs by John White, known as "The Lonesome Cowboy."

Death Valley Days was sponsored by the Pacific Borax Company, manufacturer of 20 Mule Team Borax.

The 558 television stories, which had different actors, were introduced by a host. The longest-running was "The Old Ranger" from 1952-1965, played by Stanley Andrews when the series was produced by McGowan Productions, producer of the Sky King television series.

Friday, January 3, 2025

Jerry of the Circus

 

 
Jerry of the Circus is a wonderfully heartwarming and delightful children's series syndicated in 1937. The show is fifteen minutes in length and follows the adventures of Jerry Dugan and his dog, Rags. Jerry and Rags join Sam Randall's Circus after the death of his family. It was presented in 130 15-minute episodes of which 128 are in existence today. The series followed the adventures of Jerry Dougan and his dog Rags with the Randall Brothers Circus from the time of his father's death in the spring to the end of that year's performance season. 
 
In the premier episode, Jerry brings a note to Sam from his father saying that Jimmy "has the circus in his blood." Which is how Jerry and his dog, Rags become members of circus.

The characters are:
 
Jerry Dugan - orphan who joins the Randall Brothers Circus when his father dies.
Rags - Jerry's dog.
Mr. Randall - owner of the Randall Brothers Circus.
Bumps - the clown Jerry bunks with; recruits Jerry's dog Rags for his act.
Patsy - the trapeze artist of the circus.
Jason - the large cat trainer.
Carmen Bandini - tightrope walker who leaves the circus for Hollywood.
Major Mike - the little person who regards himself as the star attraction on the midway.
Decker/Dan Dougan - the kindly circus performer who turns out to be Jerry's big-game hunter uncle suffering from amnesia.
Lorenz - the knife-throwing performer who controls Decker through bribery.
Clara - the costumer.
Johnny Bradley - Shakespearean clown.
 
Jerry has a note from his father that he "has circus in his blood". Jerry is taken in by Mr. Randall, owner of the Randall Bros Circus. He rooms with Bumps the Clown who soon uses Rags in his act, and Jerry eventually finds his way into the ring as well. He becomes good friends with many of the Circus people, and eventually finds that Decker, the animal trainer, is in fact his long lost uncle, Big Game hunter Dan Dougan. Dan will return to hunting, where there is no place for a young boy, so Jerry's guardianship is formally transferred to Mr. Randall. Circus owner, Sam Randall decides the best thing for Jerry will be to attend an Military Academy which leads to further adventure: Jerry at Fair Oaks.
 
Syndicated by Bruce Eells, Jerry of the Circus made its mark in the golden age of radio as one of the most imaginative and delightful old time radio series geared towards the younger generation.

Friday, December 27, 2024

Orson Welles

 

 
Born in Kenosha, United States, 1915, American film director, producer, screenwriter and actor. Son of a businessman and a pianist, Welles was a child prodigy who began his theatrical career at the Gate Theatre in Dublin at the age of sixteen and five years later (1936) made his debut as an actor and director in New York. During his theatrical career he achieved notoriety thanks to various Shakespearean productions, such as Macbeth, a work performed entirely by black actors, or Julius Caesar, all of them produced by the Mercury Theatre, a company founded by Welles himself and his partner John Houseman in 1937.

His radio version of H. G. Wells' literary original The War of the Worlds (1938) was so realistic that it caused panic among thousands of listeners, convinced that an alien invasion was really taking place. Backed by this success, he signed a contract with the RKO production company that gave him complete creative freedom, a circumstance that he took full advantage of in his first film, Citizen Kane (1941).

Considered one of the most significant works in the history of cinema, this kind of imaginary biography of the press magnate William Randolph Hearst, starring Welles himself - also co-author of the script, which he wrote in collaboration with Herman J. Mankiewicz - was instrumental in laying the foundations of modern cinematic narrative language.
 
However, Hearst himself took advantage of the resources of his power to harshly criticize the film, which did not achieve the expected success in the United States, while it was not released in Europe until after the Second World War, where it immediately became a minority cult film.
 
His second film, The Fourth Commandment (1942), the only one he directed in which he did not appear as an actor, suffered considerable cuts from the production company, including a happy ending, before its release. The financial failure of these two films led RKO to cancel the contract; from then on, Welles would be forced to work under serious budgetary difficulties, which did not prevent him from filming another title considered key, The Lady from Shanghai (1947), a thriller starring Rita Hayworth, then his wife.

After filming the first of his versions of Shakespearean works, Macbeth (1945), he went into exile in Europe, tired of the pressures from the production companies and fearful of the House Un-American Activities Committee. In the Old Continent he returned to Shakespeare with his version of Othello (1952), a film whose chaotic shooting lasted three years and which, despite having been awarded the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival, represented another commercial failure.

Thanks to the insistence of actor Charlton Heston, the film's lead and producer, Welles was able to return to Hollywood to direct Touch of Evil (1958), a majestic black-and-white thriller in which the film's opening sequence stands out, the longest in the history of cinema. Back in Europe, he shot The Trial (1962), a version of the novel of the same name by Franz Kafka, and in 1965, with production by the Spaniard Emiliano Piedra, Chimes at Midnight, an amalgam of various Shakespearean texts (mainly The Merry Wives of Windsor and Henry V) articulated around the figure of John Falstaff, a role that he reserved for himself and which constituted, at all levels, one of the high points of his career.

The last stage of his career as a director was marked by ambitious and ultimately unfinished projects, such as Don Quixote, The Deep or The Other Side of the Wind. In parallel to his activities as a director and star of his own films, he developed an important acting career in which stand out titles such as Rebel Soul (1944), by Robert Stevenson, the unforgettable The Third Man, by Carol Reed, or Moby Dick, by John Huston. In 1975, she received a lifetime achievement award from the American Film Institute.
 
Between 1936 and 1941, Orson Welles was involved in more than a hundred radio drama productions as writer, actor and director. From this and his films, he is considered one of the outstanding figures in American creative arts. He continued on radio through the early 1950s.

Radio was the golden key to his rise to fame. In September of 1937, Welles became the initially uncredited lead in the popular radio series, The Shadow. Writer Walter E. Gibson had created the character for the pulps; it grew into nationwide popularity due to it's fine adaptation to radio. From the first, Welles did the scripts with no rehearsal which, along with his wonderful voice and acting, gave the overtly melodramatic scripts an intelligence and urgency that was very different from other adventures on the radio dial.

While doing radio shows during the day, Welles and John Houseman worked nights producing a dramatic scene in New York City - The Mercury Theater. The work was excellently received but some shows were so was politically charged that attempted governmental control was rumored. It seemed that Welle's outsider genius status was already effecting his radio prestige.

In spite of that, Welles was offered a slot on network radio for his fine creative radio theatre in 1938. Each week they would do a full hour of quality drama, with Pabst Beer sponsoring the show. The Mercury Theater embraced thrillers such as Dracula and War of the Worlds, and the classics of literature such as Pickwick Papers and Tale of Two Cities. The notoriety of War of the Worlds got Campbell Soups interested, and so the new Campbell Playhouse continued where The Mercury Theater left off, with the same great actors and quality treatments of dramatic classic and original radio material, some written by Welles himself.

Orson continued to be a famous radio star post-Mercury Theater, and made many appearances on almost all the major radio shows of the time, as well as continuing his dramatic work on such shows as Norman Corwin's prestigious Columbia Theater Workshop and Suspense.

Later in Welles career after the creation of his great role in the film The Third Man, he was offered the Lime character in a radio series based on the movie. The Adventures of Harry Lime, it was called, but it continued to be known to the public as The Third Man. Produced in 1951 - 52, and then transcribed for America, of course it featured the atmospheric music of Anton Karas. Welles is able to make Harry Lime suave yet duplicitous while always working some scam or other for a hasty profit. Lovers of noir and the hard boiled school will admire the show's subtle European variations on the themes of crime and (escape from) punishment.

During that same period, Orson found time to do another UK production, The Black Museum. This was Scotland Yard's "mausoleum of murder," a "repository of crime." As narrator, Welles walked through the echoing museum, picking an common object and relating its criminal past.

The legendary Orson Welles was a phenomenon in the radio and cinema worlds, but his individual genius and auteurism were inherently counter-establishment. While remaining a famous personality, he lived to see his creative clout slowly diminish, until he was known for doing American TV commercials.

Welles had a torrid romance between 1938 and 1942 with the Mexican actress Dolores del Río. According to his daughter, Rebecca Welles, Dolores was the love of his life. Welles was married to the actress Rita Hayworth.

His love for Spain was well known, so he filmed several of his movies in Spain, especially in Ávila. In an interview he confessed that he would like to retire there. He also cultivated the friendship of well-known figures from the world of bullfighting at the time, such as Antonio Ordóñez and Luis Miguel Dominguín.

Throughout his life he had a high work rate and many financial disputes, which would eventually lead to his death. Welles died of a heart attack in Los Angeles in 1985. His ashes were buried in the Malaga municipality of Ronda, on the San Cayetano recreational estate, owned by his friend, the bullfighter Antonio Ordóñez, as he had expressed. However, there are other versions in which it is said that Orson Welles did not leave any will expressing his wishes after his death, so both his daughter and his wife agreed that his ashes would be scattered in Spain, since they agreed that that was the place where Welles felt happiest during the course of his life.

Mason Adams

Mason Adams (February 26, 1919 - April 26, 2005) was an American voice actor and actor. Adams was born in Brooklyn, New York, and was of Jew...

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