Radio and television mirror (July-Dec 1951)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

PHOropuy YOU CAN BECOME STAR! for complete details on a new — exciting — exclusive PHOTOPLAY PASADENA SCHOLARSHIP CONTEST See JUNE 82 PHOTOPLAY at Newsstands NOW! If you've always dreamed of a chance to prove you can act — dreamed of becoming a star — here's the biggest opportunity of your life! June PHOTOPLAY tells you how to get a completely free scholarship to attend the famed PASADENA PLAYHOUSE — COLLEGE OF THEATRE ARTS, the stepping stone to stardom for many of Hollywood's glamorous stars. THE GARDNER-SINATRA JIGSAW by Elsa Maxwell What's the real story behind one of screenland's most talked-about romances? For the inside facts by a writer who gets her information "straight from the horse's mouth," you can't afford to miss this one — it's a beauty! HOLLYWOOD'S YOUNG UNMARRIEDS An exclusive feature on filmland's eligibles — guys and gals — and how they feel about marriage, dating, proposing, and all the romance of courtship — even dutch treat. PLUS many other exciting stories and pictures of HOLLYWOOD "'£' PHOTOPLAY On Sale at Your Newsstands TODAY! MILLIONAIRE McCOY (Continued from page 35) fond of children, and on Live Like a Millionaire he works with the small fry daily. On the program, youngsters introduce their talented parents, who then perform. The studio audience, by its applause, chooses a winning family each day on the radio show, and these winners return on Fridays to compete for the opportunity to Live Like a Millionaire. To the week's winners goes a trip to some swank resort, where they enjoy millionaires' vacations for a week. They also get an assortment of valuable prizes, ranging from a television set and a diamond ring to the cash interest for a week on one million dollars! Even the losers do ail right — all are paid and all get gifts. The youngsters, too, profit by their appearances. They receive such things as bicycles and talking dolls. Jack's rise to fame as a radio personality fulfills a life-long dream of his mother. An avid radio fan, she used to listen to bigname radio announcers and performers when Jack was a child. "Some day," she told him many times, "you'll be a big star in radio — bigger than they are." When Jack went to Kent State University, he made his radio debut as an undergraduate announcer for a college play on an Akron station. He did so well he was given a staff announcing job. A few months later, Jack felt he was ready for the big time, and quit his job to come to New York. Strangely, the big city radio stations weren't waiting for his appearance. He got an announcing job, all right, but not on the radio — he became announcer for the musical colored fountain at the World's Fair. When the fair ended its 1939 season, Jack stayed in the entertainment industry — he worked as a doorman for several theaters, his towering height (six feet four inches) making him an impressive sight in his scarlet cape. Manhattan's weather being what it is, Jack's ten-hour-a-day parade of duty eventually took its toll in the form of a de luxe case of double pneumonia. He went to Birmingham, where his folks were then living, to recuperate. When World War II started, Jack enlisted in the Marines and saw combat duty at Guam and Okinawa. After being mustered out of the service, Jack found a job as a disc jockey on Station WOIA, in San Antonio. One day, while a record was spinning on the turntable, he read a magazine article about John Masterson, discoverer of emcees. "Well," said Jack to himself. "Mr. Masterson is about to make a new discovery." Two days later, Jack was enroute to Hollywood in his battered old car. He arrived to find John Masterson was out of town. Besides, the firm of Masterson, Reddy & Nelson didn't need any masters of ceremony just then. So Jack began making the rounds. He found lots of friends in short order, but no jobs. Hollywood swarmed with ambitious radio announcers. Standing one day on a street corner,