Includes typescripts from Van Valkenburgh's program, Sheriff's Story, a weekly program produced by KTUC, 1948-1951, concerning law enforcement, crime and criminals in Pima County.
Contains papers relating to Sullivan's involvement with the production of Blue and Gray, Fall, 1946-May 26, 1951 and Radio Forum from its origins in 1946. Includes scripts and correspondence. Both programs were coordinated by the campus radio station WGTB and WARL, Arlington, VA.
Primarily scripts of Swing's radio broadcasts, including those presented on the Voice of America. Also includes correspondence, lectures, addresses, articles and other papers. See Recorded Sound section for audio recordings of Swing's broadcasts.
Personal and official correspondence, diary, orders to duty, awards, citations, transcripts of radio broadcasts, memoranda and clippings relating to Wilkinson's duties as deputy commander, South Pacific area.
Contains correspondence, speeches and writings, lectures, business records, family papers, scripts, programs, playbills, publicity material, photographs and other papers relating to Price's career and other interests.
Prose manuscripts, related correspondence, notes, printed material, and audio tapes of Thomson. Included are notes and drafts of many of Thomson's early articles, and numerous manuscripts of columns published in the HERALD TRIBUNE in the 1940s. Thomson's special interests reflected in these writings are modern music, American hymns, and the performance of music in Europe. Also, 125 reels of tapes of Thomson's program on radio station WNCN (New York), 1969-1970.
Formats:
Open reel tape (unknown material)
Extent:
17 boxes, 1 oversize folder, 125 audio tape reels
Repository/Collector:
Rare Book and Manuscript Collections, Butler Library
The collection consists of 5 folders of mimeographs of Ralph W. Sockman's addresses from the National Broadcasting Company's (NBC) radio program the National radio pulpit.
Extent:
0.25 linear feet
Repository/Collector:
Rare Book and Manuscript Collections, Butler Library
Susan Stamberg is best known as a co-host on National Public Radio's All Things Considered from 1971 to 1986 and as the host of Weekend Edition Sunday from its inception in 1987 to 1989. In her later career in the 1990s, she worked as a cultural reporter on various NPR newsmagazines. The bulk of the collection documents Stamberg's career at WAMU in Washington, DC and her career at NPR from 1971 until 2011. It also contains materials from numerous other projects, including her books Every Night at Five, The Wedding Cake in the Middle of the Road, Talk, and her other writings
Repository/Collector:
Special Collections in Mass Media & Culture, University of Maryland
Includes manuscripts for mystery stories written by Wilson as well as scripts for radio shows she did on WHYY, Philadelphia, including Story Teller's Holiday, Poet's Place and other papers.
Repository/Collector:
Temple University Libraries, Special Collections Research Center
Includes two audio tapes of Stone's radio interviews of 10 producers and actors, including Cecil B. De Mille, Ed Wynne and Eddie Cantor, and other papers relating to her acting and producing careers. Stone was a radio personality in the 1940s. The catalog lists the names of the 10 interviewees but not the dates of the interviews.
Contains mainly scripts for radio and television programs written by Singer, 1944-1969. Includes scripts for The Phil Harris/Alice Faye Show and The Sealtest Village Store.
Contains mainly scripts for radio, television, theater and motion pictures written by Stark along with miscellaneous other materials, 1942-1986. Includes scripts for American School of the Air and Straight Arrow. Stark also wrote for The Lone Ranger and Escape.
Papers documenting Trout's career as a radio and television news broadcaster, 1931-1992. The "Broadcasting Files, bulk 1931-1974," include material relating to Trout's career with CBS, NBC, ABC, WSJV, WCBS and National Public Radio. Includes material relating to Franklin D. Roosevelt, political conventions, presidential elections, fireside chats, D-Day, World War II-European theater, United Nations, Dwight D. Eisenhower, King George, Queen Elizabeth and the following programs: Perspectives, Political Broadcasts, World News Round-Up, Professor Quiz and Who Said That?
Repository/Collector:
Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin
Contains correspondence, financial records, manuscripts, subject files and sound recordings of his programs Notre Dame Authors and The Story of Notre Dame, ca. 1940s. Check online finding aid for details.
Repository/Collector:
University of Notre Dame Archives, University of Notre Dame du Lac
The bulk of the papers pertains to Weaver's professional career, beginning with his employment as an advertising executive at Young & Rubicam in the late 1940s. His subsequent years at NBC are also represented although the majority of the collection relates to Weaver's various endeavors after resigning as chairman of the network.
Papers of the radio and television writer best known for Vic and Sade. Scripts for this radio program comprise the bulk of the collection but there are also materials pertaining to Keystone Chronicles, The Public Life of Cliff Norton and other programs which Rhymer wrote either as an NBC staff member or as a freelance writer. Also includes a few recordings of Vic and Sade, general correspondence, articles about Rhymer and Mrs. Rhymer's book about the Vic and Sade program.
Papers relating to Wolff's career as a writer and producer of award-winning television documentaries best known for his work for CBS News. Also includes some WBBM scripts and material on documentary radio programs.
Includes correspondence, scripts, speeches, articles, reports, press releases and clippings. Half of the collection consists of files on his produced and unproduced writings for television, motion pictures, radio and the theater.
A script writer for radio. The bulk of the collection consists of the scripts she wrote between 1943-1978, including Merlin the Storyteller, Eye Witness, Cavalcade of America and Let's Meet the Ladies. Some of the scripts include notes, research or memos relating to them. Also includes personal papers and tape recordings of some of the programs.
Consists of scripts, clippings, pressbooks, scrapbooks, programs, photographs, awards, records, correspondence and miscellaneous material related to Russell's career. Also includes papers related to Russell's husband, Frederick Brisson, who served as chief of radio propaganda and special consultant to the Secretary of War during World War II. Includes radio sketches on which Russell appeared for the Special Services Division, A.S.F. and also material related to the Office of Radio Production.
Repository/Collector:
Arts Library, Special Collections, University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)
Consists mostly of scripts for films and television, but also includes radio scripts he wrote for WLW, Cincinnati, OH, 1950-1951, and some unidentified radio scripts, 1947-1950. Also includes correspondence and business records, primarily 1966-1968.
Repository/Collector:
Department of Special Collections, University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)
Consists of literary manuscripts, correspondence, cassette tapes and other printed material. Includes the radio play "40-40" co-written with Studs Terkel for a WPA broadcast with related correspondence and a second play, "Columbus," for an unidentified program. Neither play script is dated.
Repository/Collector:
Department of Special Collections, University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)
After World War II, Sakai hosted the radio program Amerika Dayori (News from America). The collection consists of Sakai's correspondence, manuscripts, published works, notebooks and diaries.
Repository/Collector:
Department of Special Collections, University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)
Transcripts and other material related to the series of 17 radio discussion programs sponsored by the War Information Center of the University of Rochester in the fall of 1942 and broadcast over WHAM.
Contains correspondence, minutes of meetings, project reports, contest entries, radio scripts, photographs and scrapbooks collected or prepared by Warfield, Chairman of the Six Federated Clubs of Clarkston, for the club's entry in the "Build Freedom with Youth" contest sponsored by the General Federation of Women's Clubs.
Repository/Collector:
Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University
Transcription discs of local radio broadcasts, 1946-1964, primarily of contemporary classical music performances and including some broadcasts of premieres (world premieres, first radio broadcasts, and first Washington performances), recorded by Rothschild, and some live recordings from Chamber Music Society of Baltimore concerts. Radio stations recorded include WBAL, WJZ, WCAO, WFBR, WITH, and WRC. The collection also includes several popular and jazz recordings, commercial releases, and some private home performances. Recordings of Chamber Music Society of Baltimore concerts and local radio broadcasts on reel-to-reel tapes, 1955-1991. The collection includes several world premieres from CMS concerts and other notable performances in broadcasts (first Washington performances, etc.). Radio recordings are concentrated in earlier recordings while CMS performances are concentrated later. The collection also includes a large subsection of recordings from Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz.
Content types:
Notated music, Performed music, Still image, and Text
Formats:
Lacquer disc, Analog audiocassette, Polyester open reel tape, and Acetate open reel tape
Papers document Stanton's private life and radio and film activities as they relate to Ireland and the Irish-American community, including his career as an announcer at WIAD where he created the Irish Hour and his later ownership of WJMJ. Includes correspondence, speeches, radio scripts, newspaper clippings, scrapbooks, certificates, photographs and a large amount of material on Irish history and culture.
Contains papers related to Regan's career as a broadcaster in Philadelphia, including correspondence, clippings, printed materials, a scrapbook, uncataloged photographs and sound recordings.
Martin Bookspan interviews American composer, pianist, and writer on music Phillip Ramey. Ramey comments on his studies composition at DePaul University in Chicago; on his teacher, composer Alexander Tcherepnin; and about musical traditions in Chicago. He talks about his career as a pianist and composer. He discusses each of the following works, which are then played in their entirety: Piano sonata no. 1, Night music (for percussion), Commentaries (for flute and piano), Leningrad rag (freely based on Scott Joplin's Gladiolus rag), 5 Epigrams for piano, 3 Epigrams for violin and piano, and Piano fantasy.
Content types:
Sounds
Formats:
CD
Extent:
1 recording
Repository/Collector:
New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center