Genre | Drama and suspense |
---|---|
Running time | 30 minutes or one hour |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
Home station | CBS Radio Network |
Written by |
|
Directed by |
|
Produced by |
|
Original release | June 17, 1942 – September 30, 1962 |
No. of episodes | 946 |
Suspense is a radio drama series broadcast on CBS Radio from 1940 through 1962. [1]
One of the premier drama programs of the Golden Age of Radio, was subtitled "radio's outstanding theater of thrills" and focused on suspense thriller-type scripts, usually featuring leading Hollywood actors of the era. Approximately 945 episodes were broadcast during its long run, and more than 900 still exist.
Suspense went through several major phases, characterized by different hosts, sponsors, and director/producers. Formula plot devices were followed for all but a handful of episodes: the protagonist was usually a normal person suddenly dropped into a threatening or bizarre situation; solutions were "withheld until the last possible second"; and evildoers were usually punished in the end.
In its early years, the program made only occasional forays into science fiction and fantasy. Notable exceptions include adaptations of Curt Siodmak's Donovan's Brain and H. P. Lovecraft's "The Dunwich Horror", but by the late 1950s, such material was regularly featured.
Alfred Hitchcock directed its audition show (for the CBS summer series Forecast). This was an adaptation of The Lodger [2] a story Hitchcock had filmed in 1926 with Ivor Novello. Martin Grams Jr., author of Suspense: Twenty Years of Thrills and Chills , described the Forecast origin of Suspense:
On the second presentation of July 22, 1940, Forecast offered a mystery/horror show titled Suspense. With the co-operation of his producer, Walter Wanger, Alfred Hitchcock received the honor of directing his first radio show for the American public. The condition agreed upon for Hitchcock's appearance was that CBS make a pitch to the listening audience about his and Wanger's latest film, Foreign Correspondent . To add flavor to the deal, Wanger threw in Edmund Gwenn and Herbert Marshall as part of the package. All three men (including Hitch) would be seen in the upcoming film, which was due for a theatrical release the next month. Both Marshall and Hitchcock decided on the same story to bring to the airwaves, which happened to be a favorite of both of them: Marie Belloc Lowndes' "The Lodger." Alfred Hitchcock had filmed this story for Gainsborough in 1926, and since then it had remained as one of his favorites.
Herbert Marshall portrayed the mysterious lodger, and co-starring with him were Edmund Gwenn and character actress Lurene Tuttle as the rooming-house keepers who start to suspect that their new boarder might be the notorious Jack-the-Ripper. [Gwenn was actually repeating the role taken in the 1926 film by his brother, Arthur Chesney. And Tuttle would work again with Hitchcock nearly 20 years later, playing Mrs. Al Chambers, the sheriff's wife, in Psycho.] Character actor Joseph Kearns also had a small part in the drama, and Wilbur Hatch, head musician for CBS Radio at the time, composed and conducted the music specially for the program. Adapting the script to radio was not a great technical challenge for Hitchcock, and he cleverly decided to hold back the ending of the story from the listening audience in order to keep them in suspense themselves. This way, if the audience's curiosity got the better of them, they would write in to the network to find out whether the mysterious lodger was in fact Jack the Ripper. For the next few weeks, hundreds of letters came in from faithful listeners asking how the story ended. Actually a few wrote threats claiming that it was "indecent" and "immoral" to present such a production without giving the solution
In the earliest years, the program was hosted by "The Man in Black" (played by Joseph Kearns or Ted Osborne) with many episodes written or adapted by the prominent mystery author John Dickson Carr.
One of the series' earliest successes and its single most popular episode is Lucille Fletcher's "Sorry, Wrong Number", about a bedridden woman (Agnes Moorehead) who panics after overhearing a murder plot on a crossed telephone connection but is unable to persuade anyone to investigate. First broadcast on May 25, 1943, it was restaged seven times (last on February 14, 1960) –each time with Moorehead. The popularity of the episode led to a film adaptation in 1948. Another notable early episode was Fletcher's "The Hitch Hiker" (aired September 2, 1942), in which a motorist (Orson Welles) is stalked on a cross-country trip by a nondescript man who keeps appearing on the side of the road; however, the first performance of "The Hitch-Hiker" actually took place on The Orson Welles Show the previous year. "The Hitch-Hiker" was later adapted for television by Rod Serling as a 1960 episode of The Twilight Zone .
After the network sustained the program during its first two years, the sponsor became Roma Wines (1944–1947), and then (after another brief period of sustained hour-long episodes, initially featuring Robert Montgomery as host and "producer" in early 1948), [3] Autolite Spark Plugs (1948–1954); eventually Harlow Wilcox (of Fibber McGee and Molly ) became the pitchman. William Spier, Norman Macdonnell and Anton M. Leader were among the producers and directors.
Suspense received a Special Citation of Honor Peabody Award for 1946. [4]
The program's heyday was in the early 1950s, when radio actor, producer and director Elliott Lewis took over (still during the Wilcox/Autolite run). Here the material reached new levels of sophistication.[ opinion ] The writing was taut,[ opinion ] and the casting, which had always been a strong point of the series (featuring such film stars as Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Henry Fonda, Humphrey Bogart, Judy Garland, Ronald Colman, Marlene Dietrich, Eve McVeagh, Lena Horne, and Cary Grant), took an unexpected turn when Lewis expanded the repertory to include many of radio's famous drama and comedy stars –often playing against type –such as Jack Benny. Jim and Marian Jordan of Fibber McGee and Molly were heard in the episode "Backseat Driver", which originally aired February 3, 1949.
The highest production values enhanced Suspense, and many of the shows retain their power to grip and entertain.[ opinion ] At the time he took over Suspense, Lewis was familiar to radio fans for playing Frankie Remley, the wastrel guitar-playing sidekick to Phil Harris in The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show . On the May 10, 1951 Suspense, Lewis reversed the roles with "Death on My Hands": A bandleader (Harris) is horrified when an autograph-seeking fan accidentally shoots herself and dies in his hotel room, and a vocalist (Faye) tries to help him as the townfolk call for vigilante justice against him.
With the rise of television and the departures of Lewis and Autolite, subsequent producers (Antony Ellis, William N. Robson and others) struggled to maintain the series due to shrinking budgets, the availability of fewer name actors, and listenership decline. To save money, the program frequently used scripts first broadcast by another noteworthy CBS anthology, Escape . In addition to these tales of exotic adventure, Suspense expanded its repertoire to include more science fiction and supernatural content. By the end of its run, the series was remaking scripts from the long-canceled program The Mysterious Traveler . A time travel tale like Robert Arthur's "The Man Who Went Back to Save Lincoln" or a thriller about a death ray-wielding mad scientist would alternate with more run-of-the-mill crime dramas.
The series expanded to television with the Suspense series on CBS from 1949 to 1954, and again in 1962. The radio series had a tie-in with Suspense magazine which published four 1946–47 issues edited by Leslie Charteris.
The final broadcasts of Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar and Suspense, ending at 7:00 pm Eastern Time on September 30, 1962, are often cited as the end of the Golden Age of Radio. The final episode of Suspense was Devilstone, starring Christopher Carey and Neal Fitzgerald. It was sponsored by Parliament cigarettes. [5]
There were several variations of program introductions. A typical early opening is this from April 27, 1943:
Suspense was inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame in 2011. [7]
Since 2007, Radio Classics (Sirius XM channel 148) has been airing episodes of Suspense. The show is also streamed nightly at 7 pm Pacific time on kusaradio.com from the original masters.
The familiar opening phrase "tales well-calculated to..." was satirized by Mad as the cover blurb "Tales Calculated to Drive You... Mad" on its first issue (October–November 1952) and continuing until issue #23 (May 1955).
Radio comedians Bob and Ray had a recurring routine lampooning the show called "Anxiety." Their character Commander Neville Putney told stories that were presented as dramatic but were intentionally mundane, with the opening line "A tale well designed to keep you in... Anxiety."
In the “Chicken Heart” sketch on his Wonderfulness album Bill Cosby relates radio programs during his youth “that were scary.” One is Suspense.
For PowPAC, San Diego actor-director Robert Hitchcox mounted a 2006 stage production recreating two episodes of Suspense, complete with commercials, in a stage set designed like a CBS radio studio. [8]
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
July 22 | "The Lodger" | Herbert Marshall and Edmund Gwenn (Audition program) [9] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
June 17 | "The Burning Court" | Charlie Ruggles [10] |
June 24 | "Wet Saturday" | Clarence Derwent |
August 19 | "The Cave of Ali Baba" | Romney Brent |
September 2 | "The Hitch-Hiker" | Orson Welles [9] |
September 16 | "The Kettler Method" | Roger Dekoven, John Gibson, Gloria Stuart |
September 23 | "A Passage to Benares" | Paul Stewart |
September 30 | "One Hundred in the Dark" | Eric Dressler and Alice Frost [11] |
October 27 | "The Lord of the Witch Doctors" | Nicholas Joy |
November 3 | "The Devil in the Summer House" | Martin Gabel |
November 10 | "Will You Make a Bet with Death?" | Michael Fitzmaurice |
November 17 | "Menace in Wax" | Joe Julian |
November 24 | "The Body Snatchers" | E. G. Marshall |
December 1 | "The Bride Vanishes" | Hanley Stafford, Lesley Woods |
December 15 | "Till Death Do Us Part" | Peter Lorre, Alice Frost |
December 22 | "Two Sharp Knives" | Stuart Erwin |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
January 5 | "Nothing Up My Sleeve" | Elissa Landi [12] |
January 12 | "The Pit and The Pendulum" | Henry Hull |
February 2 | "The Doctor Prescribed Death" | Bela Lugosi [13] |
February 16 | "In Fear and Trembling" | Mary Astor |
June 22 | "The Man without a Body" | John Sutton, George Zucco [14] |
July 6 | "The White Rose Murders" | Maureen O'Hara [15] |
July 20 | "Murder Goes for a Swim" | Warren William |
August 3 | "A Friend to Alexander" | Robert Young, Geraldine Fitzgerald [14] |
August 21 | "Sorry, Wrong Number" | Agnes Moorehead [9] |
August 28 | "The King's Birthday" | Dolores Costello, Martin Kosleck, George Zucco, Ian Wolfe [14] |
September 9 | "Marry for Murder" | Lillian Gish, Ray Collins, Bramwell Fletcher [14] |
November 2 | "Statement of Employee Henry Wilson" | Gene Lockhart [14] |
November 16 | "Thieves Fall Out" | Gene Kelly, Hans Conried, William Johnstone [14] |
November 23 | "The Strange Death of Charles Umberstein" | Vincent Price |
December 2 | "The Black Curtain" | Cary Grant |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
January 6 | "One Way Ride to Nowhere" | Alan Ladd [16] |
January 13 | "Dime a Dance" | Lucille Ball [14] |
January 20 | "A World of Darkness" | Paul Lukas [14] |
January 27 | "The Locked Room" | Virginia Bruce and Allyn Joslyn [17] |
February 3 | "The Sisters" | Ida Lupino and Agnes Moorehead [18] |
February 10 | "Suspicion" | Charlie Ruggles [19] |
February 24 | "Sorry, Wrong Number" (rebroadcast) | Agnes Moorehead [14] |
March 2 | "Portrait without a Face" | Michèle Morgan, Philip Dorn, George Coulouris [14] |
March 9 | "The Defense Rests" | Alan Ladd [20] |
March 23 | "Sneak Preview" | Joseph Cotten |
March 30 | "Cat and Mouse" | Sonny Tufts |
April 6 | "The Woman in Red" | Katina Paxinou [21] |
April 13 | "The Marvelous Barastro" | Orson Welles |
May 11 | "The Visitor" | Eddie Bracken [14] |
May 18 | "Donovan's Brain" (Part 1) | Orson Welles [22] : 35 |
May 25 | "Donovan's Brain" (Part 2) | Orson Welles [22] : 35 |
June 1 | "Fugue in C Minor" | Ida Lupino, Vincent Price |
June 8 | "Case History of Edward Lowndes" | Thomas Mitchell, Donald Crisp |
June 15 | "A Friend To Alexander" | Geraldine Fitzgerald |
June 22 | "The Ten Grand" | Lucille Ball [14] |
July 7 | "The Beast Must Die" | Herbert Marshall |
August 3 | "Banquo's Chair" | Donald Crisp |
August 10 | "The Man Who Knew How" | Charles Laughton |
August 17 | "The Diary Of Sophronia Winters" | Agnes Moorehead |
August 24 | "Actor's Blood" | Fredric March |
August 31 | "The Black Path of Fear" | Brian Donlevy |
September 7 | "Voyage Through Darkness" | Olivia de Havilland and Reginald Gardiner [23] |
September 14 | "You Will Never See Me Again" | Joseph Cotten |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
May 24 | "My Own Murderer" | Herbert Marshall [23] |
August 16 | "Short Order" | Joseph Kearns, Gerald Mohr and Conrad Binyon. [24] : 34 |
September 20 | "Library Book" | Myrna Loy [24] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
February 21 | "Consequence" | James Stewart |
March 21 | "The Lonely Road" | Gregory Peck [25] |
June 27 | "Return Trip" | Elliott Reid [26] |
August 8 | "Dead Ernest" | Wally Maher [9] |
October 17 | "The Man Who Thought He Was Edward G. Robinson" | Edward G. Robinson [27] |
October 24 | "Dame Fortune" | Susan Hayward [28] |
November 21 | "Drive-In" | Judy Garland |
December 5 | "The House in Cypress Canyon" | Robert Taylor [29] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
January 30 | "Three Blind Mice" | Van Heflin |
February 6 | "The End of the Road" | Glenn Ford |
February 13 | "The Thirteenth Sound" | Agnes Moorehead |
February 20 | "Always Room at the Top" | Anne Baxter |
April 28 | "Summer Storm" | Henry Fonda |
May 1 | "Lady In Distress" | Ava Gardner |
May 22 | "Her Knight Comes Riding" | Virginia Bruce [30] |
June 12 | "Stand-In" | June Havoc [31] |
June 19 | "Dead of Night" | Elliott Reid [32] |
August 28 | "Double Ugly" | June Havoc and Lloyd Nolan [33] |
October 2 | "The Story of Markham's Death" | Kirk Douglas |
October 30 | "Subway" | June Havoc [34] |
November 20 | "One Hundred in the Dark" | Howard Duff and June Havoc [35] |
December 19 | "Wet Saturday" | June Havoc and Boris Karloff [36] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
January 3 | "The Black Curtain" | Robert Montgomery [37] |
January 10 | "The Kandy Tooth" | Howard Duff [29] |
January 24 | "The Black Angel / Eve" | June Havoc and Prince Michael Romanoff [38] |
July 22 | "Deep Into Darkness" | Douglas Fairbanks Jr. |
September 2 | "The Morrison Affair" | Madeleine Carroll and Gerald Mohr |
November 4 | "Death Sentence" | John Garfield |
November 25 | "The Screaming Woman" | Ray Bradbury [39] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
February 3 | "Backseat Driver" | Jim and Marian Jordan [22] |
April 21 | "The Copper Tea Strainer" | Betty Grable, Raymond Burr, and William Conrad [9] |
May 5 | "Death Has A Shadow" | Bob Hope and William Conrad |
May 26 | "The Night Reveals" | Fredric March [40] |
January 24 | "Blind Date" | June Havoc and Charles Laughton [41] |
November 24 | "The Long Wait" | Burt Lancaster |
December 1 | "Mission Completed" | James Stewart [42] |
December 15 | "The Flame Blue Glove" | Lana Turner |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
February 9 | "The Butcher's Wife" | Kirk Douglas [43] |
March 2 | "Lady Killer" | Loretta Young [44] |
March 23 | "One and One's a Lonesome" | Ronald Reagan [45] |
September 7 | "The Tip" | Ida Lupino, Joseph Kearns, Jerry Hausner, Hy Averback, Henry Blair [46] |
November 16 | "On a Country Road" | Cary Grant [9] |
November 23 | "Going, Going, Gone" | Ozzie Nelson, Harriet Hilliard [47] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
January 4 | "Alibi Me" | Mickey Rooney, Peggy Webber, Wally Maher, Charlotte Lawrence, Leo Cleary [48] |
May 10 | "Death on My Hands" | Phil Harris and Alice Faye [49] |
September 17 | "Neal Cream, Doctor of Poison" | Charles Laughton, Charles Davis, Betty Harford, Jeanette Nolan, Georgia Ellis, Alma Lawton, Herb Butterfield, Joseph Kearns [50] [51] |
September 24 | "The McKay College Basketball Scandal" | Tony Curtis [52] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
June 2 | "A Good and Faithful Servant" | Jack Benny and Gerald Mohr [24] : 37 |
October 6 | "The Diary of Dr. Pritchard" | Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Paula Winslowe, Alma Lawton, Norma Varden, Ben Wright [53] |
October 20 | "The Death of Barbara Allen" | Anne Baxter |
December 22 | "Arctic Rescue" | Joseph Cotten [54] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
February 9 | "The Man Who Cried Wolf" | Joseph Kearns |
February 16 | "The Love And Death of Joaquin Murrieta" | Victor Mature |
May 4 | Othello | Elliott Lewis, Cathy Lewis, and Richard Widmark [55] |
May 11 | Othello | Elliott Lewis, Cathy Lewis, and Richard Widmark [55] |
December 21 | "'Twas the Night Before Christmas" | Greer Garson [56] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
March 8 | "Circumstantial Terror" | Ronald Reagan |
March 29 | "Somebody Help Me" | Cornel Wilde [57] |
April 12 | "Parole to Panic" | Broderick Crawford [42] |
August 3 | "Goodnight, Mrs. Russell" | Virginia Gregg and Vic Perrin [15] : 37 |
November 18 | "Blind Date" | Shirley Mitchell and Vic Perrin [58] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
April 5 | "Zero Hour" | John Dehner (narrator) [9] |
May 17 | "Lili and the Colonel" | Ramsay Hill, John Alderson, Paula Winslowe, Larry Thor (narrator) [59] |
July 26 | "Greatest Thief" | Ben Wright [60] |
October 25 | "To None a Deadly Drug" | Harry Bartell [61] |
November 15 | "Once a Murderer" | Ben Wright [60] |
December 13 | "A Present for Benny" | Jack Kruschen [62] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
March 1 | "The Waxworks" | William Conrad (narrator) [11] : 39 |
July 25 | "The Tramp" | Ben Wright [60] |
October 23 | "The Doll" | Patty McCormack [44] : 39 |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
June 30 | "The Yellow Wallpaper" | Agnes Moorehead, Joe De Santis |
August 18 | "Peanut Brittle" | Skip Homeier [63] |
August 25 | "Leinengen vs. the Ants" | William Conrad [60] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
April 20 | "Alibi Me" | Stan Freberg [42] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
January 4 | "Don't Call Me Mother" | Agnes Moorehead [64] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
December 17 | "Yuletide Miracle" | Larry Haines and Santos Ortega [65] |
December 31 | "The Old Man" | Leon Janney [66] |
Date | Title | Star(s) |
---|---|---|
September 30 | "Devilstone" | Christopher Carey and Neil Fitzgerald [9] |
This section needs to be updated.(September 2016) |
In 2012, John C. Alsedek and Dana Perry-Hayes of Blue Hours Productions revived Suspense for Sirius XM Radio, recording all-new scripts including originals and adaptations of works by the likes of H.P. Lovecraft, Cornell Woolrich, and Clark Ashton Smith. The Suspense revival is currently airing on nearly 250 radio stations worldwide, and nominated for a Peabody Award.
Ronald Charles Colman was an English-born actor, starting his career in theatre and silent film in his native country, then emigrating to the United States where he had a highly successful Hollywood film career. He starred in silent films and successfully transitioned to sound, aided by a distinctive, pleasing voice. He was most popular during the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. He received Oscar nominations for Bulldog Drummond (1929), Condemned (1929) and Random Harvest (1942). Colman starred in several classic films, including A Tale of Two Cities (1935), Lost Horizon (1937) and The Prisoner of Zenda (1937). He also played the starring role in the Technicolor classic Kismet (1944), with Marlene Dietrich, which was nominated for four Academy Awards. In 1947, he won an Academy Award for Best Actor and Golden Globe Award for Best Actor for the film A Double Life.
Martha Ellen Scott was an American actress. She was featured in major films such as Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments (1956), and William Wyler's Ben-Hur (1959), playing the mother of Charlton Heston's character in both films. She originated the role of Emily Webb in Thornton Wilder's Our Town on Broadway in 1938 and later recreated the role in the 1940 film version, for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress.
Sorry, Wrong Number is a 1948 American thriller and film noir directed by Anatole Litvak, from a screenplay by Lucille Fletcher, based on her 1943 radio play of the same name.
Agnes Robertson Moorehead was an American actress. In a career spanning five decades, her credits included work in radio, stage, film, and television. Moorehead was the recipient of such accolades as a Primetime Emmy Award and two Golden Globe Awards, in addition to nominations for four Academy Awards.
Alfred Hitchcock Presents is an American television anthology series created, hosted and produced by Alfred Hitchcock, airing on CBS and NBC, alternately, between 1955 and 1965. It features dramas, thrillers, and mysteries. Between 1962 and 1965, it was renamed The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. Hitchcock himself directed only 18 episodes during its run.
Sam Spade is a fictional character and the protagonist of Dashiell Hammett's 1930 novel The Maltese Falcon. Spade also appeared in four lesser-known short stories by Hammett.
Richard Weedt Widmark was an American film, stage, and television actor and producer.
Robert Alba Keith, known professionally as Brian Keith, was an American film, television, and stage actor who in his six-decade career gained recognition for his work in films such as the Disney family film The Parent Trap (1961); Johnny Shiloh (1963); the comedy The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming (1966); and the adventure saga The Wind and the Lion (1975), in which he portrayed President Theodore Roosevelt.
Edward Macdonald Carey was an American actor, best known for his role as the patriarch Dr. Tom Horton on NBC's soap opera Days of Our Lives. For almost three decades, he was the show's central cast member.
Edmund Gwenn was an English actor. On film, he is best remembered for his role as Kris Kringle in the Christmas film Miracle on 34th Street (1947), for which he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor and the corresponding Golden Globe Award. He received a second Golden Globe and another Academy Award nomination for the comedy film Mister 880 (1950). He is also remembered for his appearances in four films directed by Alfred Hitchcock.
Everett H. Sloane was an American character actor who worked in radio, theatre, films, and television.
Willard Lewis Waterman was an American character actor in films, TV and on radio, remembered best for replacing Harold Peary as the title character of The Great Gildersleeve at the height of that show's popularity.
Academy Award is a CBS radio anthology series, which presented 30-minute adaptations of plays, novels, or films.
Martin Grams Jr. is an American popular culture historian who wrote and co-wrote over thirty books about network broadcasting and motion-pictures. Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Grams is the son of a magician, Martin Grams Sr. and Mary Patricia Grams, a librarian. Grams is also the author of more than 100 magazine articles.
Cavalcade of America is an anthology drama series that was sponsored by the DuPont Company, although it occasionally presented musicals, such as an adaptation of Show Boat, and condensed biographies of popular composers. It was initially broadcast on radio from 1935 to 1953, and on television from 1952 to 1957. Originally on CBS, the series pioneered the use of anthology drama for company audio advertising.
The Screen Guild Theater is a radio anthology series broadcast from 1939 until 1952 during the Golden Age of Radio. Leading Hollywood stars performed adaptations of popular motion pictures. Originating on CBS Radio, it aired under several different titles including The Gulf Screen Guild Show, The Gulf Screen Guild Theater, The Lady Esther Screen Guild Theater and The Camel Screen Guild Players. Fees that would ordinarily have been paid to the stars and studios were instead donated to the Motion Picture Relief Fund, and were used for the construction and maintenance of the Motion Picture Country House.
William Hannan Spier was an American writer, producer, and director for television and radio. He is best known for his radio work, notably Suspense and The Adventures of Sam Spade.
Granby's Green Acres is a radio situation comedy from the United States. It was broadcast on CBS July 3, 1950 – August 21, 1950, as a summer replacement for Lux Radio Theatre.
On Stage is an American radio show also known as On Stage with Cathy and Elliott Lewis and Cathy and Elliott Lewis on Stage. It was an anthology program that aired on CBS for two seasons from 1953 to 1954.