The Lost OTR Show with Joe Bev: A Date with Judy #3 Mother Runs Away and Cisco Kid #24: Poet of the Prairies
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A weekly omnibus of spoken word audio by veteran award winning radio producer and host Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev), featuring a rotating lineup which includes The Comedy-O-Rama, The Joe Bev Experience, Cartoon Carnival, and The Joe Bev Audio Theater, The Lost OTR Show, Audio Classics Archive, The J-OTR Show, The Voice Actor Show, and Lorie's Book Nook.
The Lost OTR Show - Lost, now found Old Time Radio programs, not heard in more than 60 years, hosted by Joesph Bevilacqua.
Wikipedia:
A Date with Judy is a comedy radio series aimed at a teenage audience which had a long run from 1941 to 1950.
The show began as a summer replacement for Bob Hope's show, sponsored by Pepsodent and airing on NBC from June 24 to September 16, 1941, with 14-year-old Ann Gillis in the title role. Dellie Ellis portrayed Judy Foster when the series returned the next summer (June 23 – September 15, 1942).
Louise Erickson, then 15, took over the role the following summer (June 30 – September 22, 1943) when the series, with Bristol Myers as its new sponsor, replaced The Eddie Cantor Show for the summer. Louise Erickson continued in the role of Judy over the next seven years as the series, sponsored by Tums, aired from January 18, 1944 to January 4, 1949. Ford Motors and Revere Cameras were the sponsors for the final season of the radio series on ABC from October 13, 1949 to May 25, 1950. Richard Crenna costarred on the series.
The series was so popular CBS developed a rival program Meet Corliss Archer starring Janet Waldo, which also enjoyed a long run and proved to be equally successful.
As the popularity of the radio series peaked, Jane Powell starred as Judy in the 1948 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer movie A Date with Judy. Wallace Beery, Elizabeth Taylor, Robert Stack, and Carmen Miranda also headed the cast.
A television version of the show ran on ABC on Saturdays during daytime hours beginning on June 2, 1951. It originally starred Pat Crowley as Judy. The series moved to prime time during the summer of 1952 and was brought back again midway through the 1952-53 season. The series ended its run on September 30, 1953. This version featured Mary Linn Beller as Judy, John Gibson and Flora Campbell as her parents, Peter Avramo as her brother, and Jimmy Sommers as her sort-of boyfriend Oogie.
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The Cisco Kid is a fictional character found in numerous film, radio, television and comic book series based on the fictional Western character created by O. Henry in his 1907 short story "The Caballero's Way", published in the collection Heart of the West. In movies and television, the Kid was depicted as a heroic Mexican caballero, even though he was originally a cruel outlaw.
Numerous movies featured the character, beginning in the silent film era with The Caballero's Way (1914). There is a discrepancy as to who actually played the part of the Cisco Kid.[citation needed] In the cemetery records[clarification needed] of Stanley Herbert Dunn it states that he played the part, but at IMDb.com it states that William Robert Dunn played the part.[citation needed]
For his portrayal of the Kid in the early sound film In Old Arizona (1928), Warner Baxter won the second Best Actor Oscar. This film was a revised version of the original story, in which the Kid is portrayed in a positive light. It was directed by Irving Cummings and Raoul Walsh, who was originally slated to play the lead until a jackrabbit jumping through a windshield cost him an eye while on location.[1] In 1931, Fox Film Corporation produced a sound version with Baxter, Conchita Montenegro, and Edmund Lowe.
The movie series began with The Return of the Cisco Kid (1939), featuring Baxter in the title role with Cesar Romero as his sidekick, Lopez, Chris-Pin Martin as the other sidekick, Gordito ("Fatty"), Lynn Bari as his mistaken love interest, Ann Carver, Henry Hull as her wayward grandfather, and Ward Bond in the lowest-billed role as "Tough", whose one scene shows him beaten into unconsciousness by the unscrupulous Sheriff McNally (Robert Barrat).
Romero took over the lead role of Cisco and Martin continued to play Gordito in six further films before the series was suspended with America's entry into World War II in 1941. Duncan Renaldo took over the reins as the Kid when Monogram Pictures revived the series in 1945 with The Cisco Kid Returns, which also introduced the Kid's best-known sidekick, Pancho, played by Martin Garralaga. Pancho also became established as his sidekick in other media. Neither Gordito nor Pancho is in the original story. After three Renaldo/Cisco films, Gilbert Roland played the character in a half-dozen 1946-1947 movies beginning with The Gay Cavalier (1946). Renaldo then returned to the role with Leo Carrillo as Pancho. They made five films, with Renaldo assuming the flowery "Cisco" outfit in the final film. He would wear that throughout the TV series that followed.
This program is streamed every Sunday at 7 am,
3 pm and 11 pm ET at radiobookchannel.com
and podcast on demand at joebev.com and all podcasts sites.
New & Old Time Length: 8 hours 8 CD Set or Download A tribute to the golden age of radio from veteran producer Joe Bevilacqua, The New Stories of Old Time Radio is a collection of radio dramas and parodies featuring beloved radio characters and shows. The New Stories of Old Time Radio: Volume One, Set One The New Stories of Old Time Radio: “Fibber McGee” and “Duffy’s Tavern” |
A Joe Bev Audio Theater Sampler, Volume 1 By various authors Length: 6.0 hours "The Joe Bev Audio Theater is a half-hour anthology representing more than 40 years of storytelling by Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev), the veteran, award-winning actor, writer, producer, director. Each half-hour is beautifully produced with original a cast of professional actors, sound effects and music. Cast: © 2014 by Joe Bevilacqua, Waterlogg Productions . | Plays included: |
The Complete Length:15.2 hrs CD Set | © 2014 by Joe Bevilacqua, Waterlogg Productions |
Comedy-O-Rama Hour - a weekly improvised radio theater produced and directed by Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev)
and performed by Bevilacqua, Lorie Kellogg, Kenny Savoy and Jim Folly.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/id572142422
JAZZ-O-RAMA
The Jazz-O-Rama Hour is a weekly music show hosted by Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev) and featuring 78 RPM and early LP recordings remastered from his own personal collection spanning the 1920s to the 1960s.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/id611001393CARTOON CARNIVAL
Cartoon Carnival is a weekly hour of rare and classic cartoon audio, children’s records, cartoon music and sound effects, new radio cartoons, interviews and mini-documentaries about the wonderful world of animation, hosted by Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev).
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/id624696898JOE BEV X
The Joe Bev Experience is a weekly omnibus of the forty plus year career in audio of Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev), including documentaries, interviews, comedy and drama.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/id627773341JOE BEV AUDIO THEATER
The Joe Bev Audio Theater is a weekly one-hour anthology representing more than forty years of storytelling by Joe Bevilacqua (Joe Bev), the veteran, award-winning actor, writer, producer, director.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/id723057551More about Waterlogg Productions at http://www.waterlogg.com
and check out Rick Oveton's podcast too! Overview with Rick Overton http://goo.gl/OM2mD
59 episodes