Radio and television mirror (July-Dec 1948)

Record Details:

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'Mi. alone-paved old back sloop provides an excellent pluce in tin.' sun for Donald and his pretty wife Dorothy — for purposes of painting, labeling or — very seldom — just resting. WN OM gome Accmmen.. T>on<xtd "D^u DONALD'S FARM ctoei &U AiH^ut^cH t6e tun R.-si comes wiih evening— practice for Donald, crochollno, lor Dorothy. A radiator hides in ihui decommissioned stove s.. it w».n't spoil the farm's Early American flavor. WHEN city people go back to nature, they are likely to do it on a full-time scale. That was the ambition of Donald and Dorothy Dame from the first time they laid eyes on the beautiful farm home which they purchased near Tanglewood, New York— and they're busy living in that pattern Of course, Donald Dame has a weekly singing stint; he's the tenor star of the American Album of Familiar Music, heard at 9:30, EDT on NBC, Sunday nights. But on weekdays he's a farmer, heart and soul Donald and Dorothy — she was studying voice when they met at the Berkshire Music Festival — have been married eight years. The farm is their home, but they have an apartment in New York City for the worst of the winter weather so that there'll be no possibility of Donald's missing a program. The Dames do most of the chores on the farm themselves,, preserving and canning their crops for the winter. They raise everything suitable to the climate and soil of their part of the country, and they have the usual assortment of farm animals, too. (Donald says that there's nothing like musical training to get you in shape for hog-calling" II isn't nil Bowing and garnering. Yon need n touch of the stonemason and the plumber in you aa well! joke to soy thai farm work keeps Donald's nose to the grindstone.