RadioGram for February, 2014
Transcription
RadioGram for February, 2014
AND NOW A WORD FROM UNCLE SAM • BOOK REVIEW • FROM THE PRESIDENT • CONVENTION 2013 PHOTOS sperdvac Volume 38 • Number 9 February 2014 The Place Child Performers Called School graciously extends its gratitude to these individuals who have contributed $50 or more to sperdvac during the past 12 months. If you wish to be a sponsor of sperdvac and join this select group your tax-deductible donation to sperdvac can be mailed to Jerry Williams at P. O. Box 125 in Oroville, CA 95965. Thank you! sperdvac • ALICE AKINS in memory of Glen Akins • DAVE AMAREL in memory of Jim Harmon • ARTHUR J.M. ANDERSON in memory of Orson Welles • ERIC BAELEN • JUDIE BARTELL in memory of Harry Bartell, Ben Wright and Vic Perrin • PAUL M. BENNETT • OLIVER BERLINER in memory of John Guedel, Martha Tilton and Lena Romay • FRED BONDY in memory of the whole Gunsmoke gang • GEORGE BRECKENRIDGE • DAVID & LINDA BRENINGER • BUD BRESNAHAN in memory of Richard Crenna • RICHARD A. BROCKELMAN • DENNIS B. BURK in memory of Phil Harper • CHRIS M. BUZZARD • RICHARD CHANDLEE in memory of Truda Marsen Chandlee • GEROLD M. CLEMENSEN • WARD L. COCHRAN • BERT H. COHEN • RICHARD F. COLAVECHIO in memory of Bryna Raeburn, Craig McDonnell, Bill Zuckert and Florence Robinson • JOHN COLLINS • THOMAS W. COLLINS in memory of William Conrad • TOMMY COOK in memory of Arch Oboler • IVAN CURY in memory of Bob Novak • DIX DAVIS • LLOYD DE LLAMAS • ROSEMARY DOBBS • JUNE FORAY DONAVAN in memory of Hobart Donavan • WIL DUFOUR • BOB DUNCAN, JR. • HERB ELLIS in memory of Larry Dobkin, Harry Bartell and Parley Baer • JAY ELZWEIG in honor of the Long Island Radio & TV Historical Society, the WCWPFM Alumni Association and Staff, John “The Movie Man” Carpenter and Eddie “The Old Philosopher” Lawrence • HENRY C. ENGELHARDT III in memory of Michael Meredith • CARMEN FINESTRA • DAVID FOLKMAN • ART FORSTER in memory of Gil Stratton and William Conrad • JACK FRANCE • LISA FROUG-HIRANO in memory of Wil- liam Froug • BARBARA FULLER in memory of John Newland, Peggy Knudsen and Laughter • JACK GAGNE • BARRY GERBER • STANLEY D. GINSBURG • RICHARD GLASBAND in honor of Bobb Lynes and Barbara Watkins • KATHLEEN GRAMS-GIBBS in memory of Mary Grams • TOM J. GRIMSLEY in memory of Rosemary Dobbs, Art Linkletter and Stuart Lubin • JOHN F. HALLEY • BARBARA HARMON in memory of Art Hern, Jack Lester and Curley Bradley • HELPING HANDS FOR THE BLIND • BOB HICKS • GORDON HIGBEE • DR. MICHELE HILMES • STEPHEN E. HOLDEN • GERALD A. HOLZMAN • JAMES F. HORNER in memory of The KNX Radio Drama Hour • SEAMAN JACOBS in memory of Fred S. Fox • ROBERT JANOVICI • SALLY JANUS • DENNIS C. JOHNSON • RALPH M. JOHNSON • SAM KAMLER • CASEY KASEM • GLENDA KELLY in memory of Stuart Lubin • NILAN L. KINCAID • ALBERT J. KOPEC • DENIS KRAY in memory of my beloved parents, Norbert and Florence Kray, and in memory of Glenn, Ray, Marion, Tex and all the boys in the band • RON LANGSETH • JEFFREY J. LEBRUN in memory of all departed voice artists • ALFRED LUCAS • LON McCARTT in memory of Smilin’ Ed (Froggy the Gremlin) McConnell • ROBY & JOYCE McHONE • ESTHER GEDDES McVEY in memory of my leading man, Tyler McVey • JAN MERLIN in memory of Frankie Thomas and Mona Bruns Thomas • MELVIN MOREHOUSE in memory of Brace Beener • MIKE MORITZ in gratitude for all of old-time radio • JAMES L. MORRISON • MILLIE MORSE in memory of Jim Harmon N A K H T 2 RADIOGRAM • FEBRUARY 2014 • BOB MOTT to all the SFX artists when radio was still radio • GEORGE (BOB) & VIRGINIA NEWHART in memory of Bill Quinn • JAN ELLIS O’HARE in loving memory of Antony Ellis • ROBERT OLSEN • DR. WAYNE OTT • FORREST F. OWEN • GARRY PAPERS • DAVE PARKER in memory of Fred Foy • PHIL PROCTOR • BRIAN E. RAMSEY • CHESTER RAWSKI in memory of Carrolyn Rawski • MARIE RAYMOND • RONALD M. REISNER, M.D. • DICK RICHARDS • D.W. RICHARDSON • STEPHEN K. SHUTTLEWORTH • STUART & JANIS SIMON • CHUCK SIVERTSEN • LOREN SLAFER • KENNETH L. SLEEPER • LEE SMITH • MICKEY SMITH • C. W. STAUFENBERG in memory of Paul Rhymer and members of the “Vic and Sade” cast • RICHARD STONE • ROBERT A. SUMMERS • JON D. SWARTZ in memory of Jim Harmon • RICHARD & MADELENE TEPERSON in memory of Gil Stratton • JOAN TREMAYNE in memory of Les Tremayne • EDMUND TOTMAN • EUGENE J. WARD • WASHINGTON OLD TIME RADIO CLUB in memory of Jim Harmon • EDWARD C. WEAVER • BETSY L. WEINBERG • LESLIE C. WEST • JERRY & BARBARA WILLIAMS in memory of Michael Rye • JAMES C. WORDEN U O Y sperdvac Volume 38 • Number 9 • February 2014 The Society to Preserve and Encourage Radio Drama, Variety and Comedy BOARD OF DIRECTORS president Larry Gassman ••• Glenda Kelly • Barbara Harmon John Gassman • Jerry Williams Jerry Haendiges • Walden Hughes Officers Treasurer...................................................... Jerry Williams Secretary........................................................ Glenda Kelly Activities Chair.........................................Barbara Harmon Acquisitions Chair...................................... John Gassman Membership Chair......................................... Barry Opliger Elections Chair............................................ Neil J. Mitchell Catalogs...................................................... Bob Steinmetz New Members................................................... Rex Quinn Editor PATRICK LUCANIO RADIOGRAM is published monthly except December by sperdvac, the Society to Preserve and Encourage Radio Drama, Variety and Comedy, a California nonprofit public benefit corporation, P.O. Box 125, Oroville, California 95965. Dues are $25 for first year and $15 for renewals; $30 American currency for Canadian members. Annual subscriptions to Radiogram only are $15 in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, and $20 in all other countries. Editorial submissions are welcome, but the publisher assumes no responsibility for the return of unsolicited material. All editorial-related photographs and artwork received unsolicited become the property of sperdvac. Opinions expressed are not necessarily the opinions of sperdvac All rights to letters sent to Radiogram will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication unless otherwise stated. The publishers make every effort to ensure the accuracy of information published in editorial and advertising material but assume no responsibility for inconveniences or damages resulting from editorial error or omissions. Publisher is not responsible for typographical errors. All photographs and illustrations are believed authorized for reproduction as set forth within. Entire contents are copyright © 2014 by the Society to Preserve and Encourage Radio Drama, Variety and Comedy. All rights reserved. Nothing contained in this issue may be reproduced, in whole or in part, by any means, including the Internet, without prior written permission from the publisher. EDITORIAL SUBMISSIONS should be sent to Radiogram, Patrick Lucanio, Editor, 1097 Janus Street, Springfield, Oregon 97477; e-mail: [email protected]. E-mail attachments in Microsoft Word are encouraged for all articles submitted. Articles sent by U.S. Mail should be Microsoft Word formatted compact disk accompanied by hardcopy. ADVERTISING RATES. Full page $125; half-page $70; quarter page $40. Rates subject to change without notice. ADDRESS CHANGE. Send address change to Barry Opliger, 435 Garfield Avenue Apt. 306, South Pasadena, CA 91030-2241 AUDIO RADIOGRAM is available by sending a C-90 cassette in a returnable mailer to Russell S. Hudson, 3836 Harper Court, Bethlehem, PA 18020-7570. Telephone 610-866-0386. (This service is for blind members only). e-mail [email protected] sperdvac “And now a word from your Uncle Sam” ne of the most overlooked of all radio genres has always been the military recruitment broadcast. This was a type most prominently aired during the 1950s and 1960s. For rather obvious reasons, many of us have never developed a nostalgic attachment toward these shows like we have forged for the great comedies and dramas of times past. However, there was a time when it was impossible to channel surf the kilocycle dial without running across at least one of these full-throated pitches for the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines or National Guard. These syndicated shows survive today not only as intriguing artifacts of the Cold War but also as highly listenable entertainment—if given a chance. In their day, military recruiting programs served several purposes, foremost which was to sell branches of the military to prospective recruits in much the same manner that Madison Avenue was selling toothpaste and frozen dinners. The target audience was composed of young men of draft age and young women who might conceivably be persuaded by a life of travel and adventure in the armed forces. Typically a successful radio recruitment broadcast was built on either a musical or sports theme. Such programs ran for varying lengths but most commonly for five or fifteen minute installments, neither taxing the listening span of its audience nor overstaying its welcome on the airwaves. The participating radio stations benefited as well, receiving credit for airing these public service programs, a decided benefit when license renewal time rolled around. Participating stations also received free programming which just happened to include some of the biggest names in entertainment and sports of the day. Unlike today, when many if not most entertainment and sports figures are loath to be seen or heard promoting the military, the 1950s to mid-1960s was not only a different era but seemingly a different world. Programs like Army Bandstand, The Air Force Hour, Broadway in Review, Country Style USA, Navy Star Time, The Eddy Duchin Show, Navy Hoedown, Theatre of Hits and Stars on Parade were just a few of the almost limitless supply of syndicated titles the various services fed to commercial radio. The old 16” transcription discs used by the Armed Forces Radio Service during World War II and immediately afterward were supplanted by the Long Playing 33 1/3 microgroove records in the 1950s. Military syndication usurped the LP as the principle means of distributing its shows but also made use of 45s and audio tape recordings when applicable to deliver recruitment messages. As already mentioned, sports programs also figured into the military programming schedule. One short-lived but prominent series was Tops in Sports and was an Air Force production. The series premiered on October 19, 1960, and managed to co-opt the services of three top professional sports announcers at various stages in the run of the series.. First up was Harry Wismer whose announcing career dated back to the 1930s. Wismer may possibly have accepted the Tops in Sports role in part because of his just acquired ownership of the newly minted Titans of New York. But if Wismer had hoped that his stint on Tops in Sports would help boost the fortunes of the Titans he was soon proved wrong. The Titans soon morphed into the New York Jets and Wismer gave up his franchise due to financial problems. When Wismer left Tops in Sports, Kyle Rote Sr. took over the announcer’s role for a few months and then Bud Palmer came on board for the duration of the series. Tops in Sports was only a five minute series and thus the format had to be simple and straight forward. After a quick introduction the program would turn to a well-crafted recruitment message extolling the many advantages of joining the Air Force team and what the potential recruit and the Air Force could do for each other. The show was then handed back to the announcer who would conduct a two and a half minute interview with one of the leading sports figures of the day. Guests over the course of the Continued Page 14 FEBRUARY 2014 • RADIOGRAM 3 by Jim Cox cFarland recently released what’s believed to be the first compendium of frontier-and-plains radio series published in a single volume. Radio Rides the Range: A Reference Guide to Western Drama on the Air 1929-1967 was compiled by two vintage radio journalists of venerated repute. Jack French and David S. Siegel cor- An August 14, 1950, trade advertisement extols the popularity of The Cisco Kid, one of many westerns covered in Radio Rides the Range. 4 RADIOGRAM • FEBRUARY 2014 ralled the manuscripts of more than a score of contemporary scribes whose own achievements attest to the elevated caliber of research in this 232-page edition. “Westerns are eternal,” notes Hollywood thespian Will Hutchins in the tome’s foreword. “There will always be a fascination for the wide open spaces,” he allows. French and Siegel follow in the preface citing the cowboy as “the most romanticized, and possibly most misrepresented, character in American popular culture.” They acknowledge that his playing time on history’s stage was pithy, 1870 to 1890. Out of those decades came enough scintillating ideas to captivate millions of listeners when radio emerged not long afterward. The medium beckoned with a voracious appetite, having lots of time to fill. Legions of narrative wordsmiths responded by turning to the not-too-distant past to install intriguing figures, emblematic settings and gripping accounts to engage juveniles, youth and adults in adventurous tales of yesteryear. The editors, who determined the West begins at the Mississippi River (for their book, anyway), compartmentalized the series into five patterns: anthologies, juvenile adventure, legend and lore (both educating and amusing adolescent fans), adult-oriented yarns, and western-themed soap operas. While the encyclopedic volume will be priceless to researchers, its topics will fascinate and inform readers for pleasure. Many patrons will gravitate toward more familiar features (The Cisco Kid, Gene Autry’s Melody Ranch, Gunsmoke, The Lone Ranger, The Roy Rogers Show, Sky King, et al.). Yet there is a wealth of lesser known series which aired in radio’s incubation era or on regional hookups, in syndication, or with limited runs that will also appeal to some (The Black Ghost, Frontier Fighters, Hoofbeats, Horizons West, Saunders of the Circle X, Tales from the Diamond K, et al.). There’s plenty to savor within. The casual eye picks up the fact that during the 1950-51 radio season—with nearly 4 million adherents—Hopalong Cassidy drew crowds larger than any other western. And this was in an era when U.S. domiciles began to abandon radio! At that juncture, the aural series’ hero, depicted by author William Nadel as “the 19th century embodiment of the medieval knight, righting wrongs and fighting for truth and justice,” aired in a primetime Saturday evening slot over CBS. That would have easily boosted the audience by adding a respectable adult deputation to Cassidy’s habitual adolescent gang. Radio Rides the Range paints some of the foibles of acclaimed author O. Henry, the pen name of ex-journalist William S. Porter. While that scribe may be recalled best for a Christmas narrative, The Gift of the Magi, his fabrication of special interest here is The Cisco Kid. Once again Nadel weaves an absorbing tale of a writer with a beguiling backstory: Porter (Henry) spent three years in jail after embezzling funds from an Austin, TX bank that employed him after he quit publishing a satiric newspaper. This engaging character—as much so as the romantic “adventurer, friend, avenger of wrongs perpetrated by the greedy or wicked on the helpless and unsuspecting” that came from his typewriter— produced all his great works within the first decade of the 20th century. The profuse creator’s passing in 1910 in poverty, riddled with tuberculosis and diabetes while on drugs and alcohol, lends a mesmerizing account. Contributor Martin Grams, Jr., shared a poignant memory of just how abruptly the departures of the last radio yarns were. Quoting actor John Dehner, lead figure Paladin of Have Gun, Will Travel, Grams reported that the tale met a screeching end in November 1960 sans notice in the trade columns. Said Dehner: “It dwindled away to nothing—like a dead leaf in the wind. . . . We as actors were aghast at the brutality of the networks. . . . All of a sudden the powers that were in charge of the industry just said ‘The hell with it. We don’t need you. Good-bye and go home.’ And they closed the doors and it was that fast. It was a shock to all of us.” And to many in the aural audience as well. One of the fine inclusions in the write-ups is that episodes, series and jobs in sundry mediums are cross-referenced by contributors. This helps readers grasp the immense significance of an individual or show as action spills over from one place to another. Few additions would have made the text better but we would like to have seen more detail on the personal lives of several (Brace Beemer, William Boyd, William Conrad, Fran Striker come to mind with engaging backstories). Continued Page 14 sperdvac From the President Hello all. Well, it has been almost a year since I was elected along with the rest of the sperdvac board. We have made several promises and you will see another one confirmed and fulfilled later this month. Some hard work has gone into planning, typing and completing catalog pages. It has been some time since the organization has released a page but that is about to end. Thanks to so many people including Jerry Haendiges, Roger Rittner, Barbara Williams, Barbara Watkins, Sandi Hughes and others who have worked towards creating and forming this new data base which you will shortly begin seeing. Jerry and Roger were instrumental in creating the data base. It took many hard hours of work and we are indebted to them for their efforts. We plan to have a new catalog page out to you and many more in the months to come. So when you have a moment, take some time to send off a thank you note to those who volunteer. I apologize in advance if I have forgotten anyone. Quite a bit of the material you will see is uncirculated. So enjoy! We still need some on-site volunteer help with our storage building. If you can spare a few hours please let sperdvac know and we’ll let you know when we will need you. Continued Page 14 sperdvac FEBRUARY 2014 • RADIOGRAM 5 CONVENTION 2013 PHOTOS CAMDEN SINGER is made a “friend of sperdvac.” LANA NUTTER performs in The Velveteen Rabbit. SOUND EFFECTS for Jeff Regan, Investigator by Penny Swanberg and Jerry Williams. WALDEN HUGHES presents awards during the Jack Benny Beverly Hills Beavers panel. RADIO DEEJAY PANEL with Shotgun Kelly, Wink Martindale, Don Barrett and Walden Hughes. 6 RADIOGRAM • FEBRUARY 2014 sperdvac sperdvac FEBRUARY 2014 • RADIOGRAM 7 8 RADIOGRAM • FEBRUARY 2014 sperdvac The Place Child Performers Called School ilton Berle attended this school. So did Helen Mack, Dick Van Patten, Penny Singleton, and Anne Francis. Its other famous alumni include Donald O’Connor, Beverly Sills, Ruby Keeler, and Joan Blondell. Plus Huntz Hall and some of “The Bowery Boys” as well as most of the supporting casts of radio’s Coast to Coast on a Bus and Let’s Pretend. This year marks the 100th Anniversary of the Professional Children’s School (PCS), a respected Manhattan institution dedicated to educating juvenile radio performers, Broadway thespians and TV and movie actors, in addition to musicians, dancers and athletes. Its long standing tradition of academic excellence, combined with flexible scheduling, has made it a life-saver to young performers with unusual work hours complicated by auditions, rehearsals, and even performances on tour. While its creation date, January 6, 1914, is firm in history, as well as the identity of its two founders (both of them church ladies), the actual impetus for its beginnings is somewhat muddled in time. Most versions involve several children in the cast of the “1913 Broadway hit” Daddy Long Legs. The PCS yearbook states that Jane Harris Hall (at far right) noticed a group of children, who were rehearsing this play, come into the Rehearsal Club on West 45th Street for lunch. Hall discovered that the youngsters, while bright and animated, could barely read or write as their school attendance was minimal. To alleviate this, Hall with close friend Jean Greer Robinson (near right) organized PCS a few months later. In a feature article about PCS, which appeared in the October 28, 1951, issue of the New York Times Magazine, it told of Jane Hall, a deaconess from the Little Church Around the Corner, meeting the young cast members of Daddy Long Legs and determining that, although talented youngsters, their reading and writing skills showed lack of education. At that time performing juveniles were not required to attend school. The article stated that months later, in early 1914, Hall began PCS with six young cast members of Daddy Long Legs. Arthur Anderson, a child radio actor who has spent a lifetime in the performing arts, relates a different and more colorful beginning. Anderson relates that Jean Greer was backstage to visit a friend performing in Daddy Long Legs when she came upon a group of children in the wings who were playing poker for money. Greer asked them where they went to school and they replied, “Oh, we don’t go to school; we’re in a show.” Anderson cleverly terms this a “Well! We’ll see about that” moment for Greer who then with the help of friends founded PCS and began holding classes in space borrowed from the Rehearsal Club. It should be noted in the interest of historical accuracy that Jean Webster’s stage play, Daddy Long Legs, debuted at the Gaiety Theatre in New York City on September 28, 1914, which would be nine months after PCS was founded. The play ran for a total of 264 performances, closing in May 1915. This would strongly suggest that the original students at PCS must have been in a different Broadway play. But whichever version that one is inclined to believe, the rest of PCS’s progress and history are better documented. After a few months at the Rehearsal Club, the school was moved to a new location in the Union Methodist Church on 48th Street, west of Broadway. By 1915 it had over 100 students and as the curriculum expanded the school moved to larger rented quarters. The year 1917 marked its relocation to a spacious private home on 72nd Street. Grades 1-12 were taught (in our recent era, it was streamlined to grades 6-12). High School commencement exercises, which had begun in 1916, were traditionally held in a Broadway theatre, with a prominent actor or theatre official presenting the diplomas. Only four students were in the senior class which graduated on June 8, 1916, with commencement ceremonies being held in the Princess Theatre. The graduates were presented with their diplomas by popular actress Elsie Ferguson, and the honored guests included the prominent actor John Drew. The next move, in 1927, took the school into three rented floors in a new commercial high rise at 1860 Broadway at 61st Street where it would remain for the next three decades. It was here that 13-year-old Arthur Anderson enrolled in 1936 in grammar school; the curriculum included English, French, mathematics, history, and civics. He recalls the academic work was demanding but the educational environment was both supportive and congenial. Tuition in the 1930s was $100 annually; today its yearly costs are greater than some colleges: $35,200. Referring to the 1860 Broadway location, the Associated Press said: “You would never dream that the stern-faced skyscraper was Broadway’s little red school house.” But thanks in part to PCS, juveniles were then re- Jack French is an otr historian, researcher, and author. His book Private Eyelashes: Radio’s Lady Detectives won the Agatha Award for Best Non-Fiction. A new book just released by McFarland Publishers, which he compiled with David S. Siegel, is titled Radio Rides the Range. It is an encyclopedia covering over 100 western radio drama series from 1929 to 1967 (see review on page 4). sperdvac FEBRUARY 2014 • RADIOGRAM 9 Yearbook page shows Ivan Cury, Joy Nathan, Gay Nathan, Alan Lindgren and Maggie Huber enjoying fellowship at PCS. spected members of the acting profession and, moreover, roles for youngsters were becoming routine on the legitimate stage. Playbill in 1949 praised the school by stating: “One suspects that the chief reason for this general excellence is the existence of an organization known as the Professional Children’s School.” Joy Nathan, now a Washington, DC actress, remembers the building at 1860 Broadway in the 1950s was called the “Daddy Browning Building” by some students; PCS occupied floors four through six. The fourth floor contained grades 1-4, the auditorium with full stage, and the lunchroom where food was prepared; however, most of the students packed their own lunches. There was no recess as such but according to Nathan, “Our wonderful science teacher, Ed Preble, organized and taught the square dancing at our fabulous lunch hours.” On other days, a classmate would play the piano while other students sang and danced. The fifth floor encompassed grades 5-8, the business offices, and the principal’s office. On the 6th floor were the high school, science lab, and the French room. Students were not allowed to use the building’s elevators during school hours. Anderson and his PCS fellow students, Buddy Mangan, Sidney Lumet, Vivian Block, Estelle Levy (who later adopted the professional name, Gwen Davies) and Elliott Reid, attended classes from 10 a.m. to 2:15 p.m. so those actors in a play could make the matinee. If their show went on tour their schooling continued by 10 RADIOGRAM • FEBRUARY 2014 correspondence until they returned to New York City. Graduation from grammar school was a big deal in the thirties. Anderson graduated in May 1936 and prominent actor Alfred Lunt signed his diploma and presented it to him during the graduation ceremony. The lad continued in the professional arts, primarily radio acting, and he ultimately graduated from PCS high school in May 1941. He candidly admits that it took him five years to complete high school as he had to repeat some academic subjects (probably because of his heavy performing schedule). PCS high school graduation that year was held in the John Golden Theatre and Golden himself presented the diplomas. While PCS was certainly the best established private school for students in the performing arts in the New York City area, it was not the only one. Ivan Cury, Mutual’s first Bobby Benson who went on to Portia faces Life and other network shows and is now a popular guest at otr conventions, attended three other private schools in the 1950s prior to enrolling in PCS. The Dorothy E. Kane School had originally been a training school for stenography but morphed into a high school which tried to attract show-biz kids by hiring a few more teachers who were accredited. Cury recalled so-called “seminar classes” from his brief time there. He next attended Leonard Quintano’s School for Young Professionals, a private school in the vicinity of Carnegie Hall. It did attract a few professional youngsters as students over the years, including Diane Lane, Sal Mineo, and Patty Duke, but like the Kane School it was not up to PCS’s quality and both went out of business decades ago. Cury’s next educational institution was Rhodes, a prep school which also attracted some juvenile actors. But he (and his parents) were not satisfied until he entered PCS. Manhattan also had a public high school geared toward theatre and dance students called Performing Arts High School (think in terms of Fame on television). However, Performing Arts HS was not structured to permit students to leave classes for their jobs. Pat Ray, who attended PCS in the early 1950s, switched to Performing Arts HS and was happy at first with her choice. But after winning a role on Martin Kane, Private Eye (a radio and television series) Performing Arts wouldn’t give her the time off for rehearsals or performances and so she withdrew from Performing Arts and re-enrolled at PCS so she could do the role. Top flight actors giving the high school commencement speech and passing out the diplomas was a time-honored custom at PCS. In June 1942, the graduation speaker was Howard Lindsay. At the time, Lindsay had been playing the title role in Life with Father for the past three years, during which time he had logged 1,100 performances. Acclaimed actress Gertrude Lawrence at one of PCS’s commencements reviewed the history and financial fragility of that school by telling her audience: “There is nothing haphazard or slipshod about the scholastic program of the Professional Children’s School. It is chartered by the New York State Board of Regents and ranks with the best schools in the country—carrying its pupils from first grade through high school and conducting a correspondence course for those who go on the road. Because of the uncertainty of theatrical incomes, the school keeps its tuitions low, so low that they do not meet the cost of operation. For the remainder, and it is a considerable sum, it is dependent on gifts from outside. I urge that those of you who have found enjoyment on the stage, television, and radio performances of those talented children will help out the school.” Joy Nathan attended PCS one year behind Ivan Cury. In his senior year, he was the editor of the yearbook while she was its art director. However, unlike Cury, who had been to sperdvac several schools in the New York City area, Nathan had been enrolled in first grade at PCS by her parents and she completed the full 12 years. As a grade-schooler, she began acting on radio and television and also did some modeling. She had leading roles on Daffy Time Playhouse, a juvenile drama on radio, and she also did The Bell Telephone Hour commercials live on the Carnegie Hall stage. Joy performed the live weekly TV commercials for Little Lady Cosmetics. She told me that “PCS was a magical place with excellent teachers and terrific students. I was accepted at Barnard College because of the thorough academic preparation that PCS gave me.” She had many great teachers there, some of them still clear in her memory after 50 years. Edna Cosgrove taught her impeccable English in the 8th grade. Ruth Lavy not only taught history brilliantly but she was also Nathan’s 12th grade homeroom teacher, college advisor, and mentor. Cury attested to the fact that the school was rigorous. French was taught from grade one through the last year of high school. The last year of French had the students reading a novel a week in French and then discussing it in French. Three to five page English papers were a weekly assignment. Mrs. Lavy’s Senior English class called Backgrounds of Literature explored man’s desire to explain natural phenomenon from Greek Mythology through Roman, Norse, and Native American beliefs and how that was expressed in literature. The second semester dealt with the same subject with regard to the Bible. Cury termed it: “One of the best classes I’ve ever taken.” Joy’s earliest grade years at PCS are tied to her memories of Don McNeill’s The Breakfast Club, a radio show that aired from Chicago over the ABC network. Nearly every school day morning the Nathan family listened to this one hour show, which McNeill broke up into four 15 minute segments or “calls for breakfast.” If they were ready to go by 3rd call to breakfast, her father would walk her the short distance from 57th Street to 1860 Broadway. But if they heard 4th call to breakfast (9:45!), that meant hailing a taxi and a race to school, hoping she wouldn’t have to wait for the elevator when they got there. Until she was old enough to get there by herself her father took her every morning and her mother picked her up. The disparity between the total expenses of running PCS and the tuition revenues (to which Gertrude Lawrence referred above) sperdvac made continuing fund-raising a vital part of keeping the school solvent. Even in the early twenties, fund raisers were important. The July 14, 1922, issue of The Huntington (NY) Long Islander reported that a PCS significant fund raiser was being held at the local Crescent Theater. Nathan recounts the activities of the beloved student organization called SUFOLLA (“All of us” spelled backwards) that put on fundraising bazaars, parties, and exceptional talent shows. They even took the talent shows on the road, calling themselves “The Gertrude Lawrence Players” in honor of her patronage. Class sizes were always small. The graduation totals of each succeeding senior class was typically from 12 to 15. In the fifties, most of the show-biz students were active on stage, in radio, and in the emerging television industry. Page from Ivan Cury’s 1955 yearbook shows classmates along PCS students in this decade with top illustration by Joy Nathan. included Ronnie Lee, who was in the cast of both Plain and Fancy and Peter Pan. Lee also played in 1956 and was the ladies singles figure-skatthe part of the Crown Prince in the original ing champion in 1960. Like most skaters her King and I production with Yul Brynner and age, she practiced under her coach’s eye for Gertrude Lawrence. hours before and after school classes. Another Other students in the 1950s included Re- skater, one of the youngest to be accepted gina Jouvin, who voiced Barbara in radio’s into the Ice Follies, was 15-year-old Janet long running CBS soap opera Hilltop House. Champion, who in 1961 was a PCS student. Her stage credits include Finian’s Rainbow Alan Tobias was a good friend of Ivan Cury as well as A Young Man’s Fancy. Cliff Sales for their respective years at PCS. Tobias won was playing the pesky little brother on A Date several boys’ lawn tennis championships, With Judy, airing on WJZ-TV. Yet another regionally and nationally. At that time, he PCS student, Betty Jane Seagle, had a role was being coached by All-Pro Tennis champ in Seventeen, a musical comedy produced by Pancho Segura. Not often was a PCS student Milton Berle, which was based upon Booth both a superb athlete and show-biz success, Tarkington’s 1916 novel of the same name. but this was the case of Bobby Gusikoff, the The large percentage of show-biz students son of musical parents. Bobby was a successful at PCS was prevalent through the forties actor and singer who also played a drum set; although by the fifties, young athletes and in addition, he was a champion table-tennis sports stars began joining their ranks. This player and was inducted into the Table Tennis was logical since their practice sessions and Hall of Fame. He was in the Broadway play performances also necessitated a school with Miss Liberty and was chosen as “The Star of flexible scheduling. Carol Heiss, a superb ice Tomorrow” based upon his imitation of Al skater, was a junior at PCS when she won the Jolson during an appearance on the Tex and North American figure skating championship Jinx Falkenburg show. The lad went on to win FEBRUARY 2014 • RADIOGRAM 11 several table-tennis championships in the U.S. and abroad. Ivan recalled that Bobby would spot him 20 points in a table-tennis game and still beat him. In describing the after-school social activities, Cury recounted that “parties often began and ended late because classmates in Broadway shows didn’t get out until after the final curtain. Many of the kids were professional dancers and musicians so that the level of dancing or singing at a party was enviable. Timmy Everrett, who was the sensational lead dancer in the film version of The Music Man, was a treat to see and regularly exhausted all other dancers at any party. Josh White’s kids, Beverly and Josh Jr., came to the parties so when their dad came to pick them up after his last show at Café Society, we’d get a spectacular private show.” Regarding the social side of PCS, Joy Nathan recalled that, “yes, there were parties and my parents loved all of our friends, so often the parties were at our apartment. We were a very close knit group, in and out of school. To this day, I count some of my schoolmates from PCS among my closest friends.” New York state has long had the most protective laws regarding children in the performance workplace. Every youngster had to obtain a valid work permit every year and several things had to be documented annually before it was issued. The child’s age had to be verified, documents had to certify to the youngster’s health, it had to be established Two members of the PCS student body, Billy Halop and Huntz Hall. that the child was attending an accredited school, and that a trust fund was in place to safeguard all their earnings. Apart from all of that, Cury noted that some of the kids were allowed to retain a significant portion of their earnings so that contributed to an unusual sense of what was the norm for a typical high school student. The year 1956 marked the end of PCS renting space, for it had purchased its own sevenstory building at 132 West 60th Street, near the location of what would become the new Where it all began: The Rehearsal Club, a non-profit residential home for young actresses founded by Jane Harris Hall and Jean Greer Robinson. On January 6, 1914, PCS admitted its first two students in a rented room upstairs. 12 RADIOGRAM • FEBRUARY 2014 Lincoln Center, within walking distance of both Julliard School of Music and the School of American Ballet. The close proximity of these institutions changed the student body of PCS from primarily actors in the performing arts to students studying ballet and classical music. Prominent musicians such as Yo-Yo Ma and Marvin Hamlisch were but a few of these new students. Being a graduate, or even a student, at PCS was and still is a mark of achievement frequently mentioned in the regional press. In January 1965, a NY newspaper noted that Philip Caplan Fox, the senior class president of PCS, had had recent featured roles on the series The Doctors and The Eternal Light. Over four years later, in March 1969, the same newspaper, in announcing Fox’s scheduled marriage, again made mention of his graduation from PCS. Improvements continued to be made to the PCS building on West 60th and in 2004, on the 90th anniversary of the institution, work was completed on a $9 million renovation and expansion. Additional classrooms and office space were put in place, as was a new cafeteria, a two-story auditorium, and a new top floor (the 8th) which boasted a gymnasium. The two church ladies, Jane Harris Hall and Jean Greer Robinson, who had founded “Broadway’s Little Red School House” in 1914, could certainly not have imagined this structure in their boldest dreams. Today PCS has an enrollment of ap- Continued Page 14 sperdvac CONVENTION 2013 PHOTOS A CHRISTMAS CAROL features Bart Williams, Kate McKnight, Larry Gassman, Camden Singer, John Gassman and Terry Moore. JAN MERLIN examines his script. LUIS LUNA performing in The Velveteen Rabbit. THE BYRON KANE AWARD is given to a surprised Janet Waldo as daughter and son Lucy Lee and Jonathan Lee look on. GREGG OPPENHEIMER directs I Love Lucy: The Untold Story Continues. BEVERLY WASHBURN JEFF REGAN, INVESTIGATOR features Ivan Cury and Tommy Cook. ENGINEER CHRIS KNUDSEN at the console. CAMDEN SINGER in The Bickersons. sperdvac TOMMY COOK leads the cast in The Velveteen Rabbit. FEBRUARY 2014 • RADIOGRAM 13 Uncle Sam From the President series would include such luminaries as Gene Tunney, Eddie Arcaro, Ted Williams, Wilt Chamberlain, Vince Lombardi, Stan Musial, Sandy Koufax and Duke Snider. After the interview the Air Force would receive a final parting nod and the program would sign off. The public seemed to lose interest in old time radio and many of its messages at about the same time. That will always be the public’s loss.[ Thanks to John Tefteller who recently guested with George Noory on Coast To Coast AM. They divided up his time and he spent one hour for old Blues music excerpts and talk and one hour for call-ins from the audience. John plugged sperdvac and we have received some calls for membership information as a result. Our sperdvac web site continues to grow. If you haven’t had a chance to visit, go to:www. sperdvac.com. Sperdvac also wishes to thank all of you who attended our most recent convention. It was a rousing success. We also would like to thank the many who donated money to “Kickstarter.” We raised $5000 which helped us pay for hotel rooms and airfares for our out of town radio guests. If you have questions, call me: sperdvac (877) 251-5771 or home: (714) 449-1958; e-mail: [email protected].[ OTR Oaters Pictorial content and a few appendices add to the work. Among the latter we most liked a timeline of western programming plus sources for audio copies and scripts of western shows. The softcover Radio Rides the Range is available at $49.95 by calling 800-253-2187 or from www.mcfarlandpub.com. It will earn a spot on many otr buffs’ shelves.[ Educating the Stars June 3, 1950 • June 10, 1950 Mutual Broadcasting System Orchestra Conducted by George S. Howard with vocals by Sgt. Glen Darwin and featuring Robert Landers, Maj. Wes McPheran and Lt. John Hollowell. Sgt. Cass Fieldsky is announcer. Produced and Directed by Capt. Mark D. Miranden. ARCHIVES LIBRARY MASTER REEL 71 Our giant printed catalog containing thousands of the best of old-time radio is available for $25. Order today from: Bob Steinmetz P. O. Box 669 Manhattan Beach, CA 90266-0669 Barry Opliger 435 Garfield Ave. Apt. 306 South Pasadena, CA 91030-2241 proximately 200 students who attend grades 6 through 12. The student body is very diverse, with students from 17 different states and 11 foreign countries. As it has been for many decades, the student body includes talented actors and musicians, world-class athletes, successful dancers, models, and recording artists.[ The author wishes to thank Joy Nathan and Ivan Cury for their generosity in sharing their memories and memorabilia of their years at PCS. In addition he acknowledges the resources and assistance from: Anderson, Arthur: An Actor’s Odyssey: Orson Welles to Lucky the Leprechaun (Bear Manor Media, 2010); Cury, Ivan: Personal Correspondence (Nov 2013-Jan 2014); Dunning, John: On the Air; The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio (Oxford University Press, 1998); Brooklyn Daily Eagle, June 20, 1942; Huntington (NY) Long Islander, July 14, 1922; Internet Broadway Database: http://www.ibdb.com/; Lakeport Union Sun & Journal, February 18, 1961; Nathan, Joy: Personal Correspondence (Nov 2013-Jan 2014); New York Labor Law website: http://labor.ny.gov/workerprotection/ laborstandards/secure/child_index.shtm; New York Times Magazine, October 28, 1951 (Author: Lewis Funke); Professional Children’s School Website: http://www.pcs-nyc. org/; Professional Children’s School, “The Spotlight” (1955 Yearbook) ; Rockaway Beach (NY) Wave, January 7, 1965 and March 6, 1969. ACQUISITIONS Cleaning out the closet of otr discs, tapes and printed materials? Then contact sperdvac. We may be interested. John Gassman 249 South Jensen Way #1 Fullerton, CA 92833 (714) 449-1958 McGee’s Closet is a free service to our members and honorary members. Send your wants in OTR-related material to [email protected] (the preferred method) or write to McGee’s Closet, P.O. Box 125, Oroville, CA 95965. Please specify desired taping format (cassette, open reel, recordable CD, or DAT). Also, please include your membership number with your advertisement. February 8 Mid-Valley Library • North Hills • March 8 (Annual Meeting) Mid-Valley Library • North Hills • May 10 Mid-Valley Library • North Hills • September 13 Mid-Valley Library • North Hills • October 11 Mid-Valley Library • North Hills • November to be Determined ALL MEETINGS ARE SATURDAYS 12 NOON TO 2 SPERDVAC PRINTED MATERIALS LIBRARY SCRIPTS and TRANSCRIPTS $1 with minimum order of $6 Bobb Lynes P.O. 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