Genre | Dramatic anthology |
---|---|
Running time | 30 minutes |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
Syndicates | NBC |
TV adaptations | Four Star Playhouse |
Starring | Fred MacMurray Loretta Young Rosalind Russell Robert Cummings |
Written by | Milton Geiger |
Original release | July 3 – September 18, 1949 |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Four Star Playhouse is a radio dramatic anthology series in the United States. The 30-minute program was broadcast on NBC beginning in July 1949 and was sustaining.[1] It lasted only three months.[2]
Four Star Playhouse was one of "at least 10" new programs developed for that summer by NBC's [West] Coast programming department. A story in the July 2, 1949, issue of The Billboard reported that NBC "is now keyed to the recent programming drive, launched to offset Columbia Broadcasting System's (CBS) talent raids, and is anxious to use summer hiatus periods to develop shows worthy of fall bankrolling. Hence, the new raft of airers will not be treated as fill-in shows, but produced with an eye to long-term web tenancy."[3] The trade publication Variety called Four Star Playhouse "NBC's answer to CBS' Family Hour of Stars".[4]
Radio historian John Dunning put the production surge in context:
The Four Star Playhouse was a 1949 NBC effort ... quickly put together as part of the network's barrage against CBS. During the previous summer, CBS had raided the top of NBC's comedy line, luring Jack Benny, Amos 'n' Andy, and others into a network jump. NBC's reaction was almost frantic: a battery of new shows like this one, featuring glamor and lots of big names.[5]
Other NBC shows developed as a part of that effort included Hollywood Calling, Screen Directors Playhouse, Dragnet, Richard Diamond and The Trouble with the Truitts.[3]
Despite the star power of the show's four featured artists, Dunning noted, "the new NBC lineup just couldn't compete against the old, which CBS stacked into the same time slots on Sunday. Most of the new shows vanished from the air within months, and the Four Star Playhouse was one of them."[5] Three years after Four Star Playhouse's demise on radio, the same format was used -- with different stars -- for a TV version that ran for four years. See Four Star Playhouse.