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* Lux Radio Theater: Desire opposite Herbert Marshall ( 22 July 1937 )
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Lux and Radio
From 1936 to 1944, DeMille hosted and acted as pitchman for Cecil B. DeMille's Lux Radio Theater, a popular dramatic radio show of the time.
Crawford worked in the radio series The Screen Guild Theater on January 8, 1939 ; Good News ; Baby, broadcast March 2, 1940 on Arch Oboler's Lights Out ; The Word on Everyman's Theater ( 1941 ); Chained on the Lux Radio Theater and Norman Corwin's Document A / 777 ( 1948 ).
During this time she began acting for CBS ' popular Lux Radio Theater, making 22 appearances between 1935 and 1954.
Captain Blood was adapted as a radio play on the February 22, 1937 broadcast of Lux Radio Theater with Flynn, de Havilland and Rathbone all reprising their film parts.
Ruggles of Red Gap was adapted as a radio play on the July 10, 1939 episode of Lux Radio Theater, the December 17, 1945 episode of The Screen Guild Theater and the June 8, 1946 episode of Academy Award Theater, all with Charles Laughton and Charlie Ruggles reprising their film parts.
Paul Muni reprised his role in two radio play versions of the film: the November 23, 1936 episode of Lux Radio Theater and the April 13, 1946 episode of Academy Award Theater.
* The Internet Archive holds a radio adaptation of the film, originally broadcast on November 23, 1936 by Lux Radio Theater.
Lost Horizon was adapted as a radio play starring Ronald Colman and Donald Crisp for the September 15, 1941 broadcast of Lux Radio Theater.
A 1939 radio adaptation of the story, starring Laurence Olivier and Edna Best, was presented by Cecil B. DeMille on Lux Radio Theatre, Hollywood.
* Our Town ( 1940 radio ), on May 6, 1940, a radio version was performed by many of the same film actors for Lux Radio Theater.
It was also adapted to Lux Radio Theater on the 29 November 1948 episode with Van Heflin and Greer Garson and on the 14 May 1951 episode with Olivia de Havilland and Richard Basehart.
Lux and opposite
Originally scheduled for nine weeks, the network extended the run into the autumn, moving the show from its Monday night slot, where it was the summer substitute for the Lux Radio Theater, to a Sunday night slot opposite Edgar Bergen's popular variety show.
Judy Garland also performed the role of Liza ( opposite John Lund ) in the CBS Lux Radio Theater adaptation of the show on on February 16, 1953.
DeCamp played Peg Riley in the first television version of The Life of Riley opposite Jackie Gleason in the 1949-1950 season, then reprised the role on radio with original star William Bendix for an episode of Lux Radio Theater in 1950.
Lux and Herbert
Some saw The Old Gold Comedy Theater as being a lighter version of Lux Radio Theater, and it featured some of the best-known film and radio personalities of the day, including Fred Allen, June Allyson, Lucille Ball, Ralph Bellamy, Linda Darnell, Susan Hayward, Herbert Marshall, Dick Powell, Edward G. Robinson, Jane Wyman, and Alan Young, among others.
The Petrified Forest was performed on CBS's Lux Radio Theater in 1937, with Herbert Marshall, Margaret Sullavan, and Donald Meek in the principal roles ; and again on the same program in 1945, with Ronald Coleman, Susan Hayward, and Lawrence Tierney .< ref >
Lux and Marshall
Franklin and Marshall College took as its motto the Latin phrase " Lux et Lex ", which translates in English to " Light and Law ".
Lux and 22
It was also adapted as an hour-long play on Lux Radio Theater with Ginger Rogers and Fredric March ( January 22, 1940 ) and on Screen Director's Playhouse with Lucille Ball and Robert Cummings ( March 8, 1951 ).
Angels With Dirty Faces was dramatized as a radio play on the May 22, 1939 broadcast of Lux Radio Theater, with James Cagney and Pat O ' Brien reprising their film roles.
Abe Lincoln in Illinois was dramatized as an hour-long radio play on the April 22, 1940 broadcast of Lux Radio Theater, again starring Raymond Massey as Lincoln.
Leave It to Joan ran from on July 4 to August 22, 1949 as a summer replacement for Lux Radio Theater and continued from September 9, 1949 to March 3, 1950.
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