The final curtain went down on a
dazzling era when the last broadcast
of the Lux Radio Theater signed off on June 7, 1955. The final program was an adaptation of MGM’s 1949 melodrama Edward
My Son with Walter Pidgeon in
the part played by Spencer Tracy on
the big screen. For more than twenty
years the show had brought the biggest stars first of Broadway and then of Hollywood
into American living rooms. At the peak of its popularity that star power
attracted audiences on a par with the hyper-popular radio comedians like Jack
Benny, Fred Allen, Edgar Bergan and Charlie McCarthy, and Bob Hope.
The program originated on the NBC Blue Network from the studios of WJZ in New York City on October 14, 1934.
Conceived as a prestige production and frankly aimed at women with
cultural interests and aspirations, it was aired on Sunday afternoons. Lever
Brothers’ top tier product Lux Soap was
the sole sponsor and would remain so
throughout the long run.
The idea was to air one hour
adaptations of well-known stage plays
staring the top actors from Broadway and
supported by a stable of reliable radio performers. Each show would begin with a casual
discussion between a fictional Douglass
Garrick—the name a play on the famous 18th
Century English actor/producer David
Garrick and the stars of that week’s episode introducing and setting up the
production. His equally fictitious
assistant Peggy Winthrop
conversationally managed to deliver monologues extoling the virtues of the
sponsor’s soap.
The first program was Seventh
Heaven, a hit 1927 romantic melodrama
set among the Paris lower classes
during World War I.
Miriam Hopkins and John Boles
starred. The story was also familiar
to movie audiences—the silent
version starring Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell reaped the first ever Academy Awards for Gaynor and director Frank Borzage.
The program was a success, but Lever
Brothers decided that the audience would be even bigger if the show moved to
the West Coast and switched emphasis
to film adaptations and the movie stars who were house hold names
even in small towns far from the lights of Broadway.
The program jumped to CBS and began airing from Los Angeles on June 1, 1936. The Garrick character was jettisoned and
instead legendary director Cecil B.
DeMille, with his carefully cultivated, clipped speech, was brought on as
host. It was the beginning of shows take
off to top rung popularity.
Flamboyant Cecil B, DeMille in his jodhpurs and riding boots looked every inch the director when he took over Lux Radio Theater hosting duties in Hollywood,
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The first production set the
tone. The Legionnaire and the Lady,
starred Marlene Dietrich in the role
she first played in the 1930 film Morocco and Clark Gable, played the part originated by Gary Cooper. The next week
both of the stars of 1934 The Thin Man, William Powell and Myrna Loy
were on hand to recreate their most famous parts.
At first some of the studios were reluctant to release their
titles for adaptation. But they soon
discovered that the big radio audiences translated to cash at the box office
when the stars were able to plug their current films. Several films also got a boost in re-release.
Lever Brothers was prepared to lay
it big money to lure even the biggest stars to its microphone. $5,000 was the
standard fee for big stars and major supporting players were also generously
compensated. In Depression Era that was a lot of money for two days work—a table
reading and full rehearsal one day and the live broadcast the next—even for the
biggest stars. Hardly anyone ever turned
them down.
James Stewart, Joan Blondel, and William Keightley in a radio version of Destry Rides Again.
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Whenever possible the show cast the original actors from the films in the
radio version. But if someone was
unavailable, other stars were pulled in, giving audiences a kind of alternative
version of their favorite films. Joan Crawford, for instance, took Katherine Hepburn’s part in Mary
of Scotland and real reporter Walter
Winchell and reliable character actor James
Gleason starred in a version of The Front Page. And
sometimes actors got to stretch, playing parts outside of their usual genres or
type casting like Robert Montgomery with
his New York accent in The Count of Monte Cristo.
Some shows broke the mold like This
Is the Army, Irving Berlin’s musical
with no stars but an all GI cast
or Walt Disney presenting Snow
White with the cast uncredited.
Several films, including Seventh
Heaven were done more than once over the shows long run with entirely
different casts.
A short list of just some of the
stars who appeared on the show included, Lauren
Bacall, Wallace Beery, Jack Benny,
Humphrey Bogart, James Cagney, Joan Crawford,
Cary Grant, Jean Harlow, Bing Crosby,
Bette Davis, Irene Dunne, Deanna Durbin,
Judy Garland, Betty Grable, Carole Lombard,
Rita Hayworth, Bob Hope, Betty Hutton, Fredric March, Robert
Mitchum, Paul Muni, Tyrone Power, Mickey Rooney, Barbara
Stanwyck, Robert Taylor, John Wayne, and Orson Welles.
The Lux Radio Playhouse in the heart of Hollywood attracted big crowds every week for live readings of favorite movies.
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The show was broadcast in front of a
live audience at the Lux Radio Playhouse
at 1615 North Vine Street in
Hollywood, a theater building owned by Howard
Hughes.
DeMille’s long tenure as host came
to an acrimonious end, a result of class politics and the post-World War II Red Scare. DeMille was one of Hollywood’s most
outspoken conservatives and an anti-communist who not only cooperated
with the House Un-American Activities
Committee but led the charge to get leftists out of the industry and
especially out of the unions. In order to appear on the radio DeMille
had to be a member in good standing of the
American Federation of Radio Artists (AFRA). The union was part of a campaign to convince
the California Assembly to pass closed shop legislation which DeMille
voraciously opposed. The union assessed
each member for a one-time payment of $1 to support the campaign. DeMille refused to pay and was suspended by the union. By contract with CBS he could not continue on
the air. DeMille later claimed that
whole thing was a Communist sham to
get him off the air.
Robert Taylor, Jean Harlow, Claude
Rains and C. Henry Gordon in a Lux Radio Theater 1937 production of Madame
Sans-Gene which aired shortly before Harlow's death.
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The show continued with other hosts,
but was soon facing other challenges, chiefly the rise of television which was disrupting both the radio and movie
businesses. With ratings falling, the
show left CBS and returned to NBC in the fall of 1954, going off the air at the
end of its second season there.
Meanwhile Lever Brothers launched Lux
Video Theater as a half hour program on CBS-TV in 1950 broadcasting
from New York. In ’53 it, too, relocated
to California and the next year expanded to an hour and jumped to NBC. That show competed with other Golden Age of Television anthology shows
like Playhouse
90, and the U.S. Steel Hour until it went off the air in 1957.
Today many episodes of the Lux Radio Theater have been packaged on CDs and are available by download to I-Pods and computers.
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