Academy Award 1946 (ep17) Prisoner of Zenda (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.)
Academy Award (also listed as Academy Award Theater) is a CBS radio anthology series, which presents 30-minute adaptations of plays, novels, or films.
Dramas in which actors recreated their original film roles included Henry Fonda in Young Mr. Lincoln, Humphrey Bogart in The Maltese Falcon, Cary Grant in Suspicion, Gregory Peck in The Keys of the Kingdom, and Ronald Colman in Lost Horizon. Only six actors recreated their own Oscar-winning roles: Fay Bainter, Bette Davis, Paul Lukas, Victor McLaglen, Paul Muni, and Ginger Rogers.
Format
Rather than adaptations of Oscar-winning films, as the title implied, the series offered "Hollywood's finest, the great picture plays, the great actors and actresses, techniques and skills, chosen from the honor roll of those who have won or been nominated for the famous golden Oscar of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences."
With that as a guideline, any drama could be presented if the cast included at least one Oscar-nominated performer. For example, Robert Nathan's 1940 novel Portrait of Jennie was not released as a film until 1949. David O. Selznick, having acquired the rights to Nathan's novel in 1944, spent much time and money in his efforts to bring it to the screen. Thus, Academy Award's December 4, 1946, adaptation of Portrait of Jennie, with John Lund and Oscar-winner Joan Fontaine, had a promotional aspect, concluding with host/announcer Hugh Brundage revealing, "Portrait of Jennie is soon to be a Selznick International picture starring Jennifer Jones and Joseph Cotten."
Production
Frank Wilson scripted the 30-minute adaptations for producer-director Dee Englebach, and Leith Stevens provided the music. Frank Wilson was the script writer. The sound effects crew included Gene Twombly, Jay Roth, Clark Casey, and Berne Surrey.
Broadcast
The series began March 30, 1946, with Bette Davis, Anne Revere and Fay Bainter in Jezebel. On that first show, Jean Hersholt spoke as president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, welcoming the E.R. Squibb & Sons pharmaceutical company {"The House of Squibb"} as the program's sponsor. It was an expensive show to produce, since the stars cost $4000 a week, and another $1,600 went each week to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the use of their name in the show's title. This eventually became a factor in Squibb's decision to cancel the series after only 39 weeks.
The program initially aired on Saturdays at 7 pm (ET) through June, then moved to Wednesdays at 10 pm.
The series ended December 18, 1946, with Margaret O'Brien and one of the series' frequent supporting players, Jeff Chandler (appearing under his real name, Ira Grossel) in Lost Angel.
-
2:17:41
Tucker Carlson
6 hours agoGlenn Greenwald: Antisemitism, Attacks on Free Speech, and Everything You Need to Know about Brazil
148K500 -
1:15:05
The Big Mig™
22 hours agoNASA Exposed w/ NASA Expert Bart Sibrel
9.87K12 -
1:28:39
Battleground with Sean Parnell
7 hours agoExposing J6 w/ Brian Lupo & Alfredo Luna
36K38 -
2:01:21
Revenge of the Cis
6 hours agoEpisode 1340: Filler Up
44K10 -
1:41:12
Michael Franzese
6 hours agoWhat's in the mind of a MASTER con artist? | Sitdown with Matthew Cox
43.4K42 -
1:17:07
Awaken With JP
10 hours agoBeing a True American: The Dumber the Better - LIES Ep. 45
105K104 -
1:59:26
LFA TV
14 hours agoTRUMP RALLY LIVE COVERAGE! | RACINE, WI 6.18.24 4pm
47.2K5 -
19:52
Dr David Jockers
5 hours agoThe Surprising Truth About Magnesium Deficiency
41.3K8 -
1:30:30
The Michelle Moore Show
21 hours ago‘Nothing Is More Dangerous Than The Truth’ Guest, Mike Gill: The Michelle Moore Show (June 18, 2024)
51.9K61 -
2:45:18
Barstool Yak
11 hours agoTate and Kelly Keegs Finally Square Off in an All-Out WAR | The Yak 6-18-24
53.2K1