The Charlotte Greenwood Show

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The Charlotte Greenwood Show
Other names The Hallmark Charlotte Greenwood Show
Genre Situation Comedy
Running time 30 minutes
Country United States
Language(s) English
Syndicates NBC
CBS
Starring Charlotte Greenwood
Announcer Wendell Niles
Writer(s) Ray Singer
Phil Leslie
Jack Hasty
Don Johnson
Producer(s) John Guedel
Thomas Freebairn Smith
Arnold McGuire
Air dates June 13, 1944 to January 6, 1946
Sponsor(s) Pepsodent (1944)
Hallmark Cards (1945-46)

The Charlotte Greenwood Show was a radio situation comedy in the United States. It was broadcast on ABC from June 13 - September 5, 1944, and on NBC from October 15, 1944 – January 6, 1946.[1]

Background

The program began as a summer replacement for The Bob Hope Show.[2] Newspaper columnist Hedda Hopper reported, "The interesting thing is that she [Charlotte Greenwood] got the job on a couple of scripts written by her husband, Martin Broones, who's never before written for radio."[3]

Format

The 1944 version of the show had Greenwood in the role of a cub reporter who worked for a small newspaper while she harbored dreams of becoming a Hollywood star. When the program resurfaced in 1945, Greenwood's character had the responsibility of raising three children, teenagers Jack and Barbara and little Robert[1] after her good friend died, making her executor of the estate. The setting was the fictional town of "Lakeview".[4]

An old time radio reference commented that Greenwood's character "managed to be single, moral, and peppy."[5]

Characters, cast and personnel

The main characters of the program and the actors portraying them are shown in the table below.[1][4]

Character Actor/actress
Jack Barton Edward Ryan
Barbara Barton Betty Moran
Robert Barton Bobby Larson
Judge Cronin Charles Cantor
William Anderson John Brown
Mr. Reynolds Edward Arnold

Others in the cast were Shirley Mitchell, Arthur Q. Bryan, Harry Bartell and Will Wright.[1] Wendell Niles was the announcer.[6] The writers included Jack Hasty, Don Johnson,[4] Ray Singer, and Phil Leslie.[7]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Dunning, John. (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. Oxford University Press; ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. P. 150.
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External links

Episodic log

Streaming audio