Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Old time radio -- name dropper

No I wouldn't wish to go back to those days of old time radio broadcasts because you just can't pick and pluck out a bit of time in history without getting the whole deal.  I don't want to give up my cell phone or big screen TV and you wouldn't either.  But it is fun to reminisce and live those good ole days in your mind, isn't it?

Now the name dropping. Advanced Radio broadcasting class at Indiana State about the mid 50's or so. Our class was responsible for a daily radio show which was broadcast live on WBOW in Terre Haute.  It was a young kids show designed for after school listening.  Our class wrote all the scripts and performed the voices and did all the sound effects.  We were the whole show.  The characters included the Story Princess who set the stage for the adventures of all the animals in the woods.  There was Judge Owl who was the voice of reason and the main character. Then we created characters as we needed them for the story. Sammy Squirrel, Chippy Chipmonk, Rudy Rabbit and numerous others as long as the name was alliterate (same letter for each name). Then there was Sniffy Skunk who was the obligatory minority and often left out of the group for obvious reasons -- they thought he smelled bad but he really didn't.  Sniffy was often the hero and probably represented either an African american or Mexican american or who knows what else. The others were used according to their characteristics.  It made for some interesting ideas and scripts.

The class was small and very close and amiable. We set about each day to write a new script and rehearse and then wait for the station to, "Take you now to the Indiana State campus for the Story Princess"  And we were live -- no screw ups to retake -- no sir -- it was live radio.  

I frequently got the job of Judge Owl because of my deeper voice which I deepened even more for the part.  Jerry Baker (of Pacers sports and Indy 500 fame) shared that with me.  But probably our most famous celebrity was often the Story Princes.  She was a young lady named Marvella Bayh -- recently married to a lawyer in Terre Haute called Birch Bayh.  During these classes Marvella kept us up to date about Birch --- announcing his upcoming run for the U S Senate.  She also surprised us all one day when she announced she and Birch were going to have a baby -- we all suspected as much when she began to gain a little weight in the wrong place.  She said if it was a boy (we didn't know back then until it was born) It would be called by Birch's middle name -- Evans -- Which later became Evan). His name was actually Birch Evans Bayh the 3rd.  Yes I sat in a radio class years ago next to unborn Evan Bayh -- Governor and Senator from the Hoosier state.

But the point of this blog is not the name dropping -- it is the triggering of the imagination of those little kids who waited each day for their own little make-believe world of animals with which they could identify through their imagination.  It made them think!  Each one had his or her idea of what was going on in this make believe world with no pictures to spoil their thoughts.  We adults had long had the same experience especially on Sunday afternoon with The Thin Man and Fibber McGee and Molly.  Or "Who knows what lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows"...  Boy that bring back some memories.  Let us not forget Lum 'n Abner and their neighborhood "Jot 'em down" store.  

And after school we ran home so we could listen to Superman, Captain Midnight, Tom Mix and lots of other 15 minute kids radio shows, which pitched breakfast cereals other kid stuff at us while we dreamed about solving crimes and the wild west. We could be right there --  just by listening -- we didn't need a picture, did we? And don't forget the special message that could only be known with the code-breaker ring that could only be gotten with a box top from Ralston cereal and a quarter.  I'll bet one of those rings would be worth a fortune to a collector now-a- days.

Mom listened to the radio while she worked -- Ma Perkins, Stella Dallas, Dr. Malone, Mary Nobel in Backstage Wife and scores more all afternoon, every day.  Our mother's imaginations were going full blast and they could work while they listened -- no pictures to get in the way.  They made up their own pictures in their minds.

Yes we have forgotten how a kid's imagination is so important. And ours were sparked every day by listening to that old radio. I wonder how many famous authors or screen writers or musicians got their childhood imaginations tickled from listening to radio dramas?  Have we lost something really valuable?  What can I say???  Let's hear it for old time radio.....

From the heart of Olaf Hart .....

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