Anthology series
Welcome to MedLibrary.org. For best results, we recommend beginning with the navigation links at the top of the page, which can guide you through our collection of over 14,000 medication labels and package inserts. For additional information on other topics which are not covered by our database of medications, just enter your topic in the search box below:
An anthology series is a radio or television series that presents a different story and a different set of characters in each episode. These usually have a different cast each week, but several series in the past, such as Four Star Playhouse, employed a permanent troupe of character actors who would appear in a different drama each week. Some anthology series, such as Studio One, began on radio and then expanded to television.
Contents |
Radio []
Many popular old-time radio programs were anthology series. On some series, such as Inner Sanctum Mysteries, the only constant was the host, who introduced and concluded each dramatic presentation. One of the earliest such programs was The Collier Hour, broadcast on the NBC Blue Network from 1927 to 1932. Radio's first major dramatic anthology, it adapted stories and serials from Collier's Weekly in a calculated move to increase subscriptions and compete with The Saturday Evening Post. Airing on the Wednesday prior to each week's distribution of the magazine, the program soon moved to Sundays in order to avoid spoilers with dramatizations of stories simultaneously appearing in the magazine.
Radio drama anthology series include:
- Academy Award Theater
- Arch Oboler's Plays
- The Campbell Playhouse
- Cavalcade of America
- CBS Radio Workshop
- Earplay
- Lux Radio Theater
- The Mercury Theatre on the Air
- The Screen Guild Theater
Genre series []
Radio anthology series provided a format for science fiction, horror, suspense and mystery genres (all produced in the USA, unless noted):
- Mystery House (1929-c.1944)
- The Witch's Tale (1931–38) (written by Alonzo Deen Cole)
- Lights Out (1934–47) (written by Wyllis Cooper / Arch Oboler)
- The Hermit's Cave (1935-c.1945)
- Dark Fantasy (1941–42) (written by Scott Bishop)
- Inner Sanctum Mysteries (1941–52) (created by Himan Brown)
- The Whistler (1942–55)
- Suspense (1942–62)
- The Mysterious Traveler (1943–52) (written by Robert Arthur, Jr. and narrated by Maurice Tarplin)
- Mystery Playhouse (1944) (hosted by Peter Lorre)
- The Strange Dr. Weird (1944–45) (15-minute shorts, written by Robert Arthur, Jr. and narrated by Maurice Tarplin)
- The Haunting Hour (1944–46)
- The Sealed Book (1945) (written by Robert Arthur, Jr.)
- Mystery in the Air (1945–47) (starring Peter Lorre)
- The Weird Circle (1946–47)
- Quiet, Please! (1947–49) (written by Wyllis Cooper, starring Ernest Chappell)
- Escape (1947–54)
- The Unexpected (1948) (15-minute shorts)
- Hall of Fantasy (1949–53)
- 2000 Plus (1950–52) (the first adult science fiction series on radio)[1]
- Dimension X (1950–51) (featured adapted stories by authors including Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury and Kurt Vonnegut)
- Sleep No More (1952–56) (featured Nelson Olmsted narrating his own adaptations of stories)
- Theater 10:30 (1955) (Canadian)
- X Minus One (1955–58) (revival and continuation of Dimension X)
The final episode of Suspense was broadcast on September 30, 1962, a date that has traditionally been seen as marking the end of the old-time radio era.[2] However, genre series produced since 1962 include:
- The Black Mass (1963–67)
- The Creaking Door (1964–65) (South African)
- Beyond Midnight (1968–69) (South African)
- The Zero Hour (1973–74) (hosted by Rod Serling)
- Mystery Theater (1974–82) (created by Himan Brown of Inner Sanctum Mysteries)
- Nightfall (1980–83) (Canadian)
- The Cabinet of Dr. Fritz (1984–85) (broadcast in "3D-Sound" stereo)
- 2000X (2000) (literary adaptations)
- The Twilight Zone (2002- )
Television []
In the history of television, live anthology dramas were especially popular during the Golden Age of Television of the 1950s with series such as The United States Steel Hour and The Philco Television Playhouse.
Dick Powell came up with an idea for an anthology series, Four Star Playhouse, with a rotation of established stars every week, four stars in all. The stars would own the studio and the program, as Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz had done successfully with Desilu studio. Powell had intended for the program to feature himself, Charles Boyer, Joel McCrea and Rosalind Russell. When Russell and McCrea backed out, David Niven came on board as the third star. The fourth star was initially a guest star. CBS liked the idea, and Four Star Playhouse made its debut in fall of 1952. It ran on alternate weeks only during the first season, alternating with Amos 'n' Andy. It was successful enough to be renewed and became a weekly program from the second season until the end of its run in 1956. Ida Lupino was brought on board as the de facto fourth star, though unlike Powell, Boyer and Niven, she owned no stock in the company.
American television networks would sometimes run summer anthology series which consisted of unsold television pilots.[3] Beginning in 1971, the long-run Masterpiece Theatre drama anthology series brought British productions to American television.
Television drama anthology series included
- Academy Theatre
- Alcoa Premiere
- Armstrong Circle Theatre
- The Barbara Stanwyck Show
- The Danny Thomas Hour
- Disneyland
- Dramarama
- Espionage
- Fireside Theater
- General Electric Theater
- Goodyear Theatre
- Kraft Television Theater
- Lux Video Theater
- Masterpiece Theatre
- MGM Parade
- The Millionaire
- Orient Express
- The Philco Television Playhouse
- Playhouse 90
- Police Call
- Police Story
- Producers' Showcase
- Thriller
- The Twentieth Century-Fox Hour
- The United States Steel Hour
- Warner Bros. Presents
- Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse
Science fiction, horror, suspense and mystery anthology TV series:
- Alfred Hitchcock Presents
- American Horror Story
- Amazing Stories
- Are You Afraid of the Dark?
- Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction
- Fear Itself
- Ghost Stories
- Ghost Story
- Goosebumps
- The Hitchhiker
- Journey to the Unknown
- Lee Martin's The Midnight Hour
- Masters of Horror
- Masters of Science Fiction
- Monsters
- Mystery!
- Night Gallery
- Night Visions
- Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond
- The Outer Limits
- Perversions of Science
- Ray Bradbury Theatre
- R.L. Stine's The Haunting Hour
- Science Fiction Theatre
- Scene of the Crime
- Tales of Tomorrow
- Tales from the Crypt
- Tales from the Darkside
- Tales of the Unexpected
- The Twilight Zone
- Way Out
- Black Mirror
Anthology comedy TV series:
Anthology animated series:
- Acme Hour
- Cartoon Alley
- Cartoon Sushi
- Ciné si
- Cream Lemon
- Disney's House of Mouse
- Donald Duck Presents
- Donald's Quack Attack
- Dragons et princesses
- Force Five
- Good Morning, Mickey!
- Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics
- Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child
- KaBlam!
- Liquid Television
- Mickey Mouse Works
- Mickey's Mouse Tracks
- O Canada!
- Off the Air
- Oh Yeah! Cartoons
- Princes et princesses
- Random! Cartoons
- Raw Toonage
- Rumic Theater
- Short Circutz
- Shorts in a Bunch
- Shorty McShort's Shorts
- Spicy City
- Sunday Pants
- Super Sunday
- The Bob Clampett Show
- The Bugs Bunny Show
- The Cartoon Cartoon Show
- The Catoonstitute
- The Harveytoons Show
- The Looney Tunes Show
- The Pink Panther Show
- The Popeye Show
- The Porky Pig Show
- The Tex Avery Show
- The Woody Woodpecker Show
- ToonHeads
- Wake, Rattle, and Roll
References []
- ^ Page 20: Widner, James F & Frierson III, Meade. Science Fiction on Radio: A Revised Look At 1950-1975. Birmingham, Alabama: A.F.A.B. Publishing.
- ^ Chimes, Art. "Last Radio Drama". National Public Radio. Retrieved 2010-01-22.
- ^ Ray Bradbury on Film and TV: Starlight Summer Theater (1954)