Young Love is a 30-minute American radio situation comedy that was broadcast on CBS from July 4, 1949, through May 13, 1950. [1]
Janet Shaw and James E. Lewis Jr. were secretly married students at a college that prohibited undergraduate marriages. [2] They were wed by a justice of the peace, celebrating afterward with soft drinks and peanut-butter sandwiches at a drug store. [3] Because of the secrecy of their relationship, James lived in a fraternity house, and Janet lived in a girls' dormitory, which added to "the usual problems of newlywed couples". [2] The two usually saw each other on a bench beside a lake on the campus. [1] One exception to the secrecy was Professor Mitch, a member of the college faculty who was James's best man in the wedding. [2] Other characters heard regularly on the program were Dean Ferguson, a "crusty" administrator at Midwestern University and Molly Belle, Janet's roommate. [1]
Other actors heard on the program included Jerry Hausner and Hal March. Roy Rowan was the announcer, [1] and Wilbur Hatch led the orchestra. The Judd Conlon Choristers ("a bop-style vocal group with plenty of zip") provided music between scenes. [3]
Jerry Lawrence and Bob Lee developed the concept for the series, which they also wrote, produced, and directed. [2] Many of the situations depicted on the program came from real-life experiences of Lee and Waldo (who were married at the time of the program). [4] Aspects of the series's campus were taken from Ohio State (Lawrence's alma mater) and Ohio Wesleyan (Lee's alma mater). [2]
The series began as the summer replacement for Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts [2] on Mondays at 8:30 p.m. Eastern Time. Initially it was sustaining; [3] Ford Motors began sponsoring the program in November 1949. [1] Beginning on January 7, 1950, it was moved to Saturdays at 7 p.m., E.T., replacing Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar . [5]
A review in the trade publication Billboard summarized Young Love as "a happy blend of commercial schmaltz, slick production work, and bright scripting." [3] The review complimented the pace of the script and the two stars' delivery, but it said, "sometimes the comedy punch lines were at odds with the story." [3]
The trade publication Variety called the program "a particularly charming show which should provide considerable divertissement to a hot summer's evening." [6] It complimented the performances of Lydon and Waldo and noted that Hiestand, in his role, "provides an ironic contrast" to the two stars. [6] Lawrence and Lee also received praise for their writing, directing, and producing. The review concluded, "All departments have been filled with good taste and proper regard for timing and structure." [6]
Media critic John Crosby wrote that the program's concept "is durable and, far as I know, original for radio." [7] He speculated that the show was intended to provide Waldo "something to grow into" after she had portrayed the approximately 14-year-old title character in Meet Corliss Archer . [7] However, he wrote, "She still sounds quite a lot like 14." [7] Similarly, although at one point, the young husband on the show said, "I'm not Henry Aldrich. I've got the thoughts and emotions of a mature man," Crosby wrote, "Jimmy doesn't behave much differently from Henry Aldrich." [7]