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Showing posts with label NBC University Theater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NBC University Theater. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2019

Friday's Favorite OTR

NBC University Theater: "The Red Badge of Courage" 5/8/49

The Civil War on Old-Time Radio (Part 7 of 17)




The Army of the Potomac and the Army of Northern Virginia met in battle again and again throughout 1962. It was the battle of Chancellorville, fought from April 30 through May 6, that provided the setting for Stephan Crane’s classic novel about a young soldier who struggles to find the courage to fight. The University Theater adaptation is excellent, featuring a faithful script and many of radio’s finest character actors (such as John Dehner and Parley Baer) as it brings the novel to life.

Click HERE to listen or download. 

This is the seventh of 17 episodes from various series that will take us through the Civil War and its immediate post-war legacy. I'll be posting another Civil War episode every three or four weeks.

Friday, August 14, 2015

Friday's Favorite OTR

NBC University Theater: "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" 7/9/49

Hebert Marshall is excellent in this faithful and heartfelt adaptation of James Hilton's novel.

Click HERE to listen or download.


Friday, July 22, 2011

Friday's Favorite OTR

NBC University Theater: "For Whom the Bell Tolls"--11/20/49


This show and Orson Welles' Mercury Theatre on the Air both did pretty much the same thing--one hour-long adaptations of classic novels.


Both were excellent series, which is an amazing accomplishment when you consider the challenge of jamming a novel-length story into an hour time slot. Sometimes, this would lead the writers to rush through a story a little too quickly for it to be completely satistfying. But sometimes, the episode would work because it draws on one aspect or plot-line from the original novel and concentrates almost exclusively on that.


That's what the creative staff of NBC University Theater did when they turned to Ernest Hemingway's classic story set during the Spanish Civil War. The main character is an American named Robert Jordan, who is fighting for the Republicans. Traveling behind enemy lines to blow up an important bridge, he hooks up with a band of guerilla fighters led by a man named Pablo.


And it is this dynamic--the clash of wills between Jordan and Pablo (and the uncomfortable possibility that Jordan might have to assassinate Pablo)--that the radio adaptation concentrates on. And it does a great job, especially a sequence in which Pilar, Pablo's woman, recounts the story of how Pablo once led an attack on a particular town and had all the captured facist leaders executed afterwards.


Of course, this leaves out a lot of cool stuff. Jordan's romance with Maria is absent (Maria is there, just not as an important character). The last stand of El Sordo and his band is gone. Jordan's internal thoughts about the morality of war are gone. Anyone familar with the book will miss all this, but the show does such a good job with what it does keep that there's really no reason to complain. It's an excellent hour of drama, demonstrating just how good a storytelling medium radio can be.

Click HERE to listen or download.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Friday's Favorite OTR

NBC University Theater: “Tales of Edgar Allen Poe” 3/6/49

NBC University Theater dramatized classic literature and important modern novels, provided a commentator to discuss the novel/author at the halfway mark and provided listeners a chance to earn college credits for listening. Not a bad deal, really, since their dramatizations were really, really good.

This particular episode adapts three Edgar Allen Poe stories. In my last book (Radio by the Book), I remark several times how the various anthology shows were fond of Poe. His stories seemed tailor-made for radio. They were just the right length to fit into a show’s time slot and if you could preserve the beauty and rhythm of the original prose, you were bound to do something worthwhile.

University Theater was an hour-long, so they manage to fit three Poe stories pretty comfortably into their time slot. They begin with one of Poe’s lesser-known work. “Lionizing” (renamed “Noseology” for the radio adaptation) is about a man who pretty much makes his living by having the most prominent nose in Europe, something that earns him an endless supply of invitations to the homes of the best families. It’s a reminder that Poe wasn’t always morbid and did actually have a sense of humor.

“The Cask of Amontillado” is marred slightly by the addition of a little too much extra dialogue, but is still pretty good. “The Fall of the House of Usher” is very well-done and appropriately creepy.

The Literature professor doing the commentary loses a point for describing “The Tell-Tale Heart” as a lesser work, but otherwise gives us some thoughtful insights into Poe’s canon.

Click HERE to listen or download.
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