MUST SEE! Prime Time Television…1948 And 49 With My Detailed Notes


MUST SEE! Prime Time Television…1948 And 49 With My Detailed Notes

This is just amazing, so please…Share this! At the start, an NBC VO announces that the Midwest network links will be open and operating by Christmas, 1948. I would love to see the ‘Eye Witness’ series…it was all about television behind the scenes.

‘The Gay Nineties’ show was on ABC on Wednesday nights from 8 – 8:30. At 1:50 we see some of an early ‘Texaco Star Theater’ with Milton Berle from NBC’s newly converted Studio 6B. This was the first show to come from 6B after it was converted from radio to television June 8, 1948. The woman with the great laugh is Milton’s mother who was at every show.

Just after that is ‘The Ed Wynn Show’ and came from either NBC Studio 8G or 6B. At 3:32, ‘The Admiral Broadway Revue’ was the first television show produced by Max Leibman and starred Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca…this is the forerunner of ‘Your Show Of Shows’ and both were done at The International Theater at 5 Columbus Circle.

Ultra rare footage starts at 4:44 with the intro of ‘The Fireball Fun For All’ starring Olsen and Johnson. This only ran one season and was one of the first shows to come from CBS Studio 52. The assistant director is the legendary CBS director Ralph Levy in his second ever TV job. Levy went on to direct Jack Benny, Burns And Allen and the Lucy pilot. Levy’s first AD job was at the first show done at Studio 52, a summer show called ‘The 54th Street Revue’ that ran eight weeks.

There’s more history at 6:10…’The Chesterfield Supper Club’ starring Perry Como was the first television show to broadcast from NBC Studio 6A. The studio was not converted officially till May 19, 1950. When this was shot, 6A was still a radio studio with a three camera remote unit and very few lights, which you notice here.

More history at 6:50! This is ‘The Fred Waring Show’ from NBC Studio 8H. Like 6A, it too was still a radio studio when this was done with a three camera remote unit set up. 8H became an official TV studio January 30, 1950.

Remember the opening announcement about the midwest network link up? ‘Your Show Time’ had premiered on NBC’s East Coast stations in September 1948, and began to include NBC’s Midwest stations on January 21.

I think ‘Armchair Detective’ a Dumont show done at WABD. At 9:06 notice the producer title…William Boyd was Hopalong Cassidy, and a very smart showman! This show was an hour long and aired on NBC Friday nights at 8, starting in 1949.

‘The Lone Ranger’ debuted on ABC in September of 1949 and aired at 7:30 Wednesday nights.

Remember the Hungry Jack Biscuit commercials with the “Hungry…Hungry Jack” call? Here’s where it came from…the opening of ‘The Aldrich Family’ at 10:23. This was on NBC at 7:30 Sundays.

At 10:55, one of television’s biggest shows appears…’The Goldbergs’ which was on CBS and probably came from Liederkranz Hall. This started in 1949 and aired Monday nights at 9:30, just after ‘Candid Camera’. Just after that is another huge CBS show, ‘Mama’ which also started in 1949 and aired Friday nights at 8 against ‘Hopalong Cassidy’ on NBC.

‘The Ruggles’ began on ABC, November 3, 1949 – a month after the radio hit ‘The Life of Riley’ had moved to television on NBC and interestingly, that is the next clip…but if you were expecting William Bendix as Riley, surprise…Riley is played by Jackie Gleason! This was his first starring role.

At 13:10 we see the open for ‘Suspense’ which aired on CBS from ’49 till ’54. It was on Tuesday night opposite ‘The Life Of Riley’.

Finally, the last clip is from ‘Studio 1’. It was a big hit and important early anthology series on CBS that followed ‘The Goldbergs’ at 10 on Tuesday nights. I think this originally came from CBS Studio 41 at Grand Central. This debuted in September of 1948 and ran 10 seasons ending in 1958. Enjoy and PLEASE SHARE! -Bobby Ellerbee

Source

3 Comments

  1. Gordon Cummings October 27, 2014

    I remember Seeing William Bendix in the Life OF Riley, was he before or after Jackie Gleason?

  2. Maureen Carney October 25, 2014

    More background on “Armchair Detective”. In addition to KTLA and WBKB (both owned by Paramount at the time), the show was seen on WNAC Boston, WCBS New York, WMAR Baltimore and WCAU Philadelphia, WXEL Cleveland and other stations.

  3. Maureen Carney October 25, 2014

    “Armchair Detective” wasn’t a DuMont show. It was part of an attempt by Paramount to create their own TV network.