Whispering Streets is an American radio romance drama that was broadcast from March 3, 1952, until November 25, 1960, first on ABC and later on CBS. [1]
Described as a series of "dramas played daily by professionals and laborers — by people who live in mansions — and by those who live across the tracks", [2] TV Radio Mirror magazine wrote in 1955 that each week offered "a new, dramatic story that takes us one step farther down life's path and helps us to understand more fully the whisperings we ourselves hear." [3]
Whispering Streets began as a 20-minute program on weekdays with each episode containing a complete story. From 1956 on, it ran 15 minutes on weekdays, and stories spanned five episodes. Fictional Hope Winslow was the show's hostess and the narrator of each episode. [1] She related the stories as if they had come from her experiences traveling the world as a writer. [4] Actresses who portrayed Winslow included Gertrude Warner, Cathy Lewis, Bette Davis, and Anne Seymour. [1] Jack Fitzmaurice was the announcer. [5]
In 1959, the program moved from ABC to CBS. Ted Lloyd was the producer, with Gordon Hughes and Bruno Zirato Jr. as the directors. Margaret Sangster was the writer. [1] When it was moved in late March 1958 to the 11:05-11:30 a.m. Eastern Time slot, it replaced a radio simulcast of Arthur Godfrey's television program. Its competition included My True Story on NBC. [6]
Sponsors included Bon Ami, [7] Whitney Frozen Foods, Doan's Pills, Union Pharmaceutical, [8] Carnation Evaporated Milk, Friskies dog food, [3] The Toni Company, [9] General Mills, [1] and Seaman Brothers. [10]
When the show debuted, it replaced The Betty Crocker Magazine of the Air on the ABC schedule, with that program moving to another time. [4]
A review of the premiere episode in the trade publication Variety called Whispering Streets "a choice hit of femme dialing bait." [11] It said that the narrator "knits the yarn together with finesse" and complimented the actors, the direction and the script. [11]
Guiding Light is an American radio and television soap opera. Guiding Light aired on CBS for 57 years between June 30, 1952, and September 18, 2009, overlapping a 19-year broadcast on radio between January 25, 1937, and June 29, 1956. With 72 years of radio and television runs, Guiding Light is the longest-running soap opera, ahead of General Hospital, and is the fifth-longest-running program in all of broadcast history; only the American country music radio program Grand Ole Opry, the BBC religious program The Daily Service (1928), the CBS religious program Music and the Spoken Word (1929), and the Norwegian children's radio program Lørdagsbarnetimen (1924–2010) have been on the air longer.
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