Radio and television mirror (Jan-June 1949)

Record Details:

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^. ^ Cr, or Mi spon "P-iVe^Z^^ff you fa eyijtt 'oucA, ouch ft eeds no 'ica7 ce ""Pply fovelj, and: off to ^Sh '«3, yourfi ' 'tlly >n, ace. ea fii, '''at, to er ejJdr JcA n.6 sh acfes "PS, ecret Jutys, r^'^oln TTj nte on you andi ve foQ ''^Af; ^ooI^^'^^^'.B-^^Pana the ever sizes, ake. ^ookh et Oiail ata ed Via, you Illi. at ooce. show, presumably for the benefit of those who can't manage to catch Lucky during the week. The show goes on at the same time as the weekday one — 6:30 to 6:45 P.M. EST, over CBS-TV. Oh yes, and Doris Brown, the pretty girl who every day tells you what the puppets are up to, makes a personal appearance on Saturdays too. Otherwise you'd hear a long loud squawk from the papas of the nation. Papas seem to prefer puppets with cute little emcees like Doris. The Admiral Corporation, plus NBC and DuMont, inaugurated the Friday evening Broadway Revue with a gala telecast from the stage of the International Theater on Columbus Circle, New York. The opening and the subsequent telecasts starred Sid Caesar, the funnyman who happily is coming into his own, after a movie success in "Tars and Spars" and a stage success in "Make Mine Manhattan." Featured prominently in the cast are Imogene Coca, one of the funniest gals that has hit our TV screens, and Mary McCarty, late of the play "Small Wonder," now getting ready to go into a Moss HartIrving Berlin musical come early summer. Roy Atwell, the tongue twisted comedian, mans the commercial and manages to fill it with static and interference, to everybody's delight, including presumably the sponsor's. Twenty-four TV stations in sixteen cities see the revue. In fact, in some places it's telecast simultaneously over both NBC and DuMont channels, so you can choose the one your set brings in most clearly. Fourteen cities in the South, the West and on the Pacific Coast get a delayed showing by tele-transcription. At the party following the opening telecast, two motion picture stars almost stole the show from the TV shiners. They were Dean Jagger, fast becoming well known to television too, and Lon McCallister, who had come east for exploitation on his newest Eagle Lion movie "The Big Cat," and a role in a Colgate Theater television play. 90 WINNER TAKE ALL {Continued from page 47) he is winning. Five or six contestants are used each week, chosen from the studio audience. If a champ and challenger are still in the running when the time runs out they're invited back the next week. Longest TV run for one champion to date has been five weeks. To bring the popular show to television, questions had to be made visual, with stunts like a song-anddance man starting to tell an old-time joke and asking for the punch line. Or blown-up cardboard cut-outs of three American military medals, one of which is to be identified as the highest decoration. There's never a chance for a tie, because if the champion's bell is pressed even a split second before the challenger's buzzer, or vice versa, the other signal is blocked off electronically. One of Bud's favorite contestants was a little Irishman named Patrick, who had been in this country only eight days when he got on the show. He stayed on for four weeks, routing all challengers. When he left, he took prizes that included bicycles for his three girls and two boys, complete football uniforms for the boys and pretty dresses for the girls. "America is certainly a wonderful place for kids," was Patrick's comment as he departed triumphantly. Two beautiful "Chevvie Girls" assist Bud in his pleasant and often hilarious duties. They are blonde Gloria Shannon and brunette Evelyn McBride, and their fan mail reaches from here to there, as you may well imagine. But the girls of his dreams are the three who live with Bud and son Michael, who's six, going on seven — in a 14-room French Norman farmhouse on a Greenwich, Connecticut hilltop. They are Patricia, almost eleven, Cynthia, seven; and wife Marian Shockley, a mighty good radio actress in her own right. the man who spreads the golden rule . . . Listen To Radio's Good Neighbor JACKBERCH and his human stories of human kindness Every Morning Monday-Friday NBC Stations Read Jack Berch's "Heart-To-Heart Hook-up" column in EXPERIENCES magazine now on newsstands.