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Radio drama

Radio drama (or audio drama, audio play, radio play,[1] radio theatre, or audio theatre) is a dramatized, purely acoustic performance. With no visual component, radio drama depends on dialogue, music and sound effects to help the listener imagine the characters and story: "It is auditory in the physical dimension but equally powerful as a visual force in the psychological dimension."[2] Radio drama includes plays specifically written for radio, docudrama, dramatized works of fiction, as well as plays originally written for the theatre, including musical theatre, and opera.

Recording a radio play in the Netherlands (1949)

Radio drama achieved widespread popularity within a decade of its initial development in the 1920s. By the 1940s, it was a leading international popular entertainment. With the advent of television in the 1950s radio drama began losing its audience. However, it remains popular in much of the world.

Recordings of OTR (old-time radio) survive today in the audio archives of collectors, libraries and museums, as well as several online sites such as Internet Archive.

By the 21st century, radio drama had a minimal presence on terrestrial radio in the United States, with much American radio drama being restricted to rebroadcasts of programmes from previous decades. However, other nations still have thriving traditions of radio drama. In the United Kingdom, for example, the BBC produces and broadcasts hundreds of new radio plays each year on Radio 3, Radio 4, and Radio 4 Extra. Like the US, Australia ABC has abandoned broadcasting drama but in New Zealand RNZ continues to promote and broadcast a variety of drama over its airwaves.

Thanks to advances in digital recording and Internet distribution, radio drama experienced a revival around 2010.[3] Podcasting offered the means of inexpensively creating new radio dramas, in addition to the distribution of vintage programs.

The terms audio drama[4] or audio theatre are sometimes used synonymously with radio drama; however, audio drama or audio theatre may not necessarily be intended specifically for broadcast on radio. Audio drama can also be found on CDs, cassette tapes, podcasts, webcasts, or other digital downloads as well as broadcast radio.

History

The Roman playwright Seneca has claim as a forerunner of radio drama because "his plays were performed by readers as sound plays, not by actors as stage plays... [I]n this respect Seneca had no significant successors until 20th-century technology made possible the widespread dissemination of sound plays."[5]

1880–1930: Early years

Radio drama traces its roots back to the 1880s: "In 1881 French engineer Clement Ader had filed a patent for 'improvements of Telephone Equipment in Theatres'" (Théâtrophone).[6] English-language radio drama seems to have started in the United States.[7] A Rural Line on Education, a brief sketch specifically written for radio, aired on Pittsburgh's KDKA in 1921, according to historian Bill Jaker.[8] Newspaper accounts of the era report on a number of other drama experiments by America's commercial radio stations: KYW broadcast a season of complete operas from Chicago starting in November 1921.[9] In February 1922, entire Broadway musical comedies with the original casts aired from WJZ's Newark studios.[10] Actors Grace George and Herbert Hayes performed an entire play from a San Francisco station in the summer of 1922.[11]

An important turning point in radio drama came when Schenectady, New York's WGY, after a successful tryout on August 3, 1922, began weekly studio broadcasts of full-length stage plays in September 1922,[12] using music, sound effects and a regular troupe of actors, The WGY Players. Aware of this series, the director of Cincinnati's WLW began regularly broadcasting one-acts (as well as excerpts from longer works) in November.[13] The success of these projects led to imitators at other stations. By early 1923, original dramatic pieces written specially for radio were airing on stations in Cincinnati (When Love Wakens by WLW's Fred Smith),[13][14] Philadelphia (The Secret Wave by Clyde A. Criswell)[15] and Los Angeles (At Home over KHJ).[16] That same year, WLW (in May) and WGY (in September) sponsored scripting contests, inviting listeners to create original plays to be performed by those stations' dramatic troupes.[13][17]

Listings in The New York Times[18] and other sources for May 1923 reveal at least 20 dramatic offerings were scheduled (including one-acts, excerpts from longer dramas, complete three- and four-act plays, operettas and a Molière adaptation), either as in-studio productions or by remote broadcast from local theaters and opera houses. An early British drama broadcast was of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream on 2LO on 25 July 1923.[19]

Serious study of American radio drama of the 1920s and early 1930s is, at best, very limited. Unsung pioneers of the art include: WLW's Fred Smith; Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll (who popularized the dramatic serial); The Eveready Hour creative team (which began with one-act plays but was soon experimenting with hour-long combinations of drama and music on its weekly variety program); the various acting troupes at stations like WLW, WGY, KGO and a number of others, frequently run by women like Helen Schuster Martin and Wilda Wilson Church; early network continuity writers like Henry Fisk Carlton, William Ford Manley and Don Clark; producers and directors like Clarence Menser and Gerald Stopp; and a long list of others who were credited at the time with any number of innovations but who are largely forgotten or undiscussed today. Elizabeth McLeod's 2005 book on Gosden and Correll's early work[20] is a major exception, as is Richard J. Hand's 2006 study of horror radio, which examines some programs from the late 1920s and early 1930s.[21]

Another notable early radio drama, one of the first specially written for the medium in the UK, was A Comedy of Danger by Richard Hughes, broadcast by the BBC on January 15, 1924, about a group of people trapped in a Welsh coal mine.[22] One of the earliest and most influential French radio plays was the prize-winning Marémoto ('Seaquake'), by Gabriel Germinet and Pierre Cusy, which presents a realistic account of a sinking ship before revealing that the characters are actually actors rehearsing for a broadcast. Translated and broadcast in Germany and England by 1925, the play was originally scheduled by Radio-Paris to air on October 23, 1924, but was instead banned from French radio until 1937 because the government feared that the dramatic SOS messages would be mistaken for genuine distress signals.[23]

In 1951, American writer and producer Arch Oboler suggested that Wyllis Cooper's Lights Out (1934–47) was the first true radio drama to make use of the unique qualities of radio:

Radio drama (as distinguished from theatre plays boiled down to kilocycle size) began at midnight, in the middle thirties, on one of the upper floors of Chicago's Merchandise Mart. The pappy was a rotund writer by the name of Wyllis Cooper.[24]

Though the series is often remembered solely for its gruesome stories and sound effects, Cooper's scripts for Lights Out were later recognized as well written and offered innovations seldom heard in early radio dramas, including multiple first-person narrators, stream of consciousness monologues and scripts that contrasted a duplicitous character's internal monologue and his spoken words.

The question of who was the first to write stream-of-consciousness drama for radio is a difficult one to answer. By 1930, Tyrone Guthrie had written plays for the BBC like Matrimonial News (which consists entirely of the thoughts of a shopgirl awaiting a blind date) and The Flowers Are Not for You to Pick (which takes place inside the mind of a drowning man). After they were published in 1931, Guthrie's plays aired on the American networks. Around the same time, Guthrie himself also worked for the Canadian National Railway radio network, producing plays written by Merrill Denison that used similar techniques. A 1940 article in Variety credited a 1932 NBC play, Drink Deep by Don Johnson, as the first stream-of-consciousness play written for American radio. The climax of Lawrence Holcomb's 1931 NBC play Skyscraper also uses a variation of the technique (so that the listener can hear the final thoughts and relived memories of a man falling to his death from the title building).

There were probably earlier examples of stream-of-consciousness drama on the radio. For example, in December 1924, actor Paul Robeson, then appearing in a revival of Eugene O'Neill's The Emperor Jones, performed a scene from the play over New York's WGBS to critical acclaim. Some of the many storytellers and monologists on early 1920s American radio might be able to claim even earlier dates.

1930–1960s: Widespread popularity

Perhaps America's most famous radio drama broadcast is Orson Welles' The War of the Worlds (a 1938 version of H. G. Wells' novel), which inspired stories of a mass panic that, though greatly exaggerated, signaled the power of the form.[25] By the late 1930s, radio drama was widely popular in the United States (and also in other parts of the world). There were dozens of programs in many different genres, from mysteries and thrillers, to soap operas and comedies. Among American playwrights, screenwriters and novelists who got their start in radio drama are Rod Serling and Irwin Shaw.

 
Radio program written and performed in Phoenix, Arizona by children of Junior Artists Club (Federal Arts Program, 1935).

In Britain, however, during the 1930s BBC programming, tended to be more high brow, including the works of Shakespeare, Classical Greek drama, as well as the works of major modern playwrights, such as Chekhov, Ibsen, Strindberg, and so forth. Novels and short stories were also frequently dramatised.[26] In addition the plays of contemporary writers and original plays were produced, with, for example, a broadcast of T. S. Eliot's famous verse play Murder in the Cathedral in 1936.[27] By 1930, the BBC was producing "twice as many plays as London's West End" and were producing over 400 plays a year by the mid-1940s.[28]

Producers of radio drama soon became aware that adapting stage plays for radio did not always work, and that there was a need for plays specifically written for radio, which recognized its potential as a distinct and different medium from the theatre. George Bernard Shaw's plays, for example, were seen as readily adaptable.[29] However, in a lead article in the BBC literary journal The Listener, of 14 August 1929, which discussed the broadcasting of 12 great plays, it was suggested that while the theatrical literature of the past should not be neglected the future lay mainly with plays written specifically for the microphone.

In 1939–40, the BBC founded its own Drama Repertory Company which made a stock of actors readily available. After the war, the number was around 50. They performed in the great number of plays broadcast in the heyday of BBC radio drama of the 40s–60s.[30]

Initially the BBC resisted American-style 'soap opera', but eventually highly popular serials, like Dick Barton, Special Agent (1946–51), Mrs Dale's Diary (1948–69) and The Archers (1950–), were produced. The Archers is still running (as of October 2017) and is the world's longest-running soap opera with a total of over 18,400 episodes.[31] There had been some earlier serialized drama including, the six episode The Shadow of the Swastika (1939), Dorothy L. Sayers's The Man Born To Be King, in twelve episodes (1941), and Front Line Family (1941–48), which was broadcast to America as part of the effort to encourage the US to enter the war. The show's storylines depicted the trials and tribulations of a British family, the Robinsons, living through the war. This featured plots about rationing, family members missing in action and the Blitz. After the war in 1946 it was moved to the BBC Light Programme.[32]

The BBC continued producing various kinds of drama, including docu-drama, throughout World War II; amongst the writers they employed were the novelist James Hanley[33] and poet Louis MacNeice, who in 1941 became an employee of the BBC's. MacNeice's work for the BBC initially involved writing and producing radio programmes intended to build support for the US, and later Russia, through cultural programmes emphasising links between the countries rather than outright propaganda. By the end of the war MacNeice had written well over 60 scripts for the BBC, including Christopher Columbus (1942), which starred Laurence Olivier, The Dark Tower (1946), and a six-part radio adaptation of Goethe's Faust (1949).[34]

Following World War II the BBC reorganized its radio provision, introducing two new channels to supplement the BBC Home Service (itself the result of the fusion in September 1939 of the pre-war National and Regional Programmes). These were the BBC Light Programme (dating from 29 July 1945 and a direct successor to the wartime General Forces Programme) and the BBC Third Programme (launched on 29 September 1946).

The BBC Light Programme, while principally devoted to light entertainment and music, carried a fair share of drama, both single plays (generally, as the name of the station indicated, of a lighter nature) and serials. In contrast, the BBC Third Programme, destined to become one of the leading cultural and intellectual forces in post-war Britain, specialized in heavier drama (as well as the serious music, talks, and other features which made up its content): long-form productions of both classical and modern/experimental dramatic works sometimes occupied the major part of its output on any given evening. The Home Service, meanwhile, continued to broadcast more "middle-brow" drama (one-off plays and serializations) daily.

The high-water mark for BBC radio drama was the 1950s and 1960s, and during this period many major British playwrights either effectively began their careers with the BBC, or had works adapted for radio. Most of playwright Caryl Churchill's early experiences with professional drama production were as a radio playwright and, starting in 1962 with The Ants, she wrote nine productions with BBC radio drama up until 1973, when her stage work began to be recognised at the Royal Court Theatre.[35] Joe Orton's dramatic debut in 1963 was the radio play The Ruffian on the Stair, which was broadcast on 31 August 1964.[36]

Tom Stoppard's "first professional production was in the 15-minute Just Before Midnight programme on BBC Radio, which showcased new dramatists".[36] John Mortimer made his radio debut as a dramatist in 1955, with his adaptation of his own novel Like Men Betrayed for the BBC Light Programme. However, he made his debut as an original playwright with The Dock Brief, starring Michael Hordern as a hapless barrister, first broadcast in 1957 on BBC Third Programme, later televised with the same cast and subsequently presented in a double bill with What Shall We Tell Caroline? at the Lyric Hammersmith in April 1958, before transferring to the Garrick Theatre. Mortimer is most famous for Rumpole of the Bailey, a British television series which starred Leo McKern as Horace Rumpole, an aging London barrister who defends any and all clients. It has been spun off into a series of short stories, novels, and radio programmes.[37]

Giles Cooper was a pioneer in writing for radio, becoming prolific in both radio and television drama. His early successes included radio dramatisations of Charles Dickens's Oliver Twist, William Golding's Lord of the Flies,[38] and John Wyndham's classic science fiction novel Day of the Triffids.[39] He was also successful in the theatre. The first of his radio plays to make his reputation was Mathry Beacon (1956), about a small detachment of men and women still guarding a Top Secret "missile deflector" somewhere in Wales, years after the war has ended.[40] Bill Naughton's radio play Alfie Elkins and his Little Life (1962) was first broadcast on the BBC Third Programme on 7 January 1962. In it Alfie, "[w]ith sublime amorality... swaggers and philosophises his way through" life.[41] The action spans about two decades, from the beginning of World War II to the late 1950s. In 1964, Bill Naughton turned it into a stage play which was put on at London's Mermaid Theatre. Later, he wrote the screenplay for a film version, Alfie (1966), starring Michael Caine.

Other notable radio dramatists included Henry Reed, Brendan Behan, Rhys Adrian, Alan Plater; Anthony Minghella, Alan Bleasdale, and novelist Angela Carter. Novelist Susan Hill also wrote for BBC Radio, from the early 1970s.[39] Henry Reed was especially successful with the Hilda Tablet plays. Irish playwright Brendan Behan, author of The Quare Fellow (1954), was commissioned by the BBC to write a radio play The Big House (1956); prior to this he had written two plays for Irish radio: Moving Out and A Garden Party.[42]

Among the most famous works created for radio, are Dylan Thomas's Under Milk Wood (1954), Samuel Beckett's All That Fall (1957), Harold Pinter's A Slight Ache (1959), and Robert Bolt's A Man for All Seasons (1954).[43] Beckett wrote a number of short radio plays in the 1950s and 1960s, and later for television; his radio play Embers was first broadcast on the BBC Third Programme on 24 June 1959 and won the RAI prize at the Prix Italia awards later that year.[44]

Robert Bolt's writing career began with scripts for Children's Hour.[45] A Man for All Seasons was subsequently produced on television in 1957. Then in 1960, there was a highly successful stage production in London's West End and on New York's Broadway from late 1961. In addition there have been two film versions: in 1966 starring Paul Scofield and 1988 for television, starring Charlton Heston.[46]

While Alan Ayckbourn did not write for radio many of his stage plays were subsequently adapted for radio. Other significant adaptations included, dramatised readings of poet David Jones's In Parenthesis in 1946 and The Anathemata in 1953, for the BBC Third Programme,[47] and novelist Wyndham Lewis's The Human Age (1955).[48] Among contemporary novels that were dramatised were the 1964 radio adaptation of Stan Barstow's A Kind of Loving (1960); there had also been a 1962 film adaption.[49]

1960–2000: Decline in the United States

After the advent of television, radio drama never recovered its popularity in the United States. Most remaining CBS and NBC radio dramas were cancelled in 1960.[50] The last network radio dramas to originate during American radio's "Golden Age", Suspense and Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar, ended on September 30, 1962.[51]

There have been some efforts at radio drama since then. In the 1960s, Dick Orkin created the popular syndicated comic adventure series Chicken Man. ABC Radio aired a daily dramatic anthology program, Theater Five, in 1964–65. Inspired by The Goon Show, "the four or five crazy guys" of the Firesign Theatre built a large following with their satirical plays on recordings exploring the dramatic possibilities inherent in stereo. A brief resurgence of production beginning in the early 1970s yielded Rod Serling's The Zero Hour for Mutual, National Public Radio's Earplay, and veteran Himan Brown's CBS Radio Mystery Theater and General Mills Radio Adventure Theater. These productions were later followed by the Sears/Mutual Radio Theater, The National Radio Theater of Chicago, NPR Playhouse, and a newly produced episode of the former 1950s series X Minus One. Works by a new generation of dramatists also emerged at this time, notably Yuri Rasovsky, Thomas Lopez of ZBS and the dramatic sketches heard on humorist Garrison Keillor's A Prairie Home Companion. Brian Daley's 1981 adaptation of the blockbuster space opera film Star Wars for NPR Playhouse was a notable success. Production costs on this serial were mitigated by the support of Lucasfilm, who sold the rights to NPR for a nominal $1 fee, and by the participation of the BBC in an international co-production deal. Star Wars was credited with generating a 40% rise in NPR's ratings and quadrupling the network's youth audience overnight. Radio adaptations of the sequels followed with The Empire Strikes Back in 1983 and Return of the Jedi in 1996.[52][53]

Thanks in large part to the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities, public radio continued to air a smattering of audio drama until the mid-1980s. From 1986 to 2002, NPR's most consistent producer of radio drama was the idiosyncratic Joe Frank, working out of KCRW in Santa Monica. The Sci Fi Channel presented an audio drama series, Seeing Ear Theatre, on its website from 1997 to 2001. Also, the dramatic serial It's Your World aired twice daily on the nationally syndicated Tom Joyner Morning Show from 1994 to 2008, continuing online through 2010.

2000–present: Radio drama's "New Media" revival

Radio drama remains popular in much of the world, though most material is now available through Internet download rather than heard over terrestrial or satellite radio.[54] Stations producing radio drama often commission a large number of scripts. The relatively low cost of producing a radio play enables them to take chances with works by unknown writers. Radio can be a good training ground for beginning drama writers as the words written form a much greater part of the finished product; bad lines cannot be obscured with stagecraft.

The BBC's sole surviving radio soap is The Archers on BBC Radio 4: it is, with over 18,700 episodes to date,[55] the world's longest-running such programme. Other radio soaps ("ongoing serials") produced by the BBC but no longer on air include:

In September, 2010 Radio New Zealand began airing its first ongoing soap opera, You Me Now, which won the Best New Drama Award in the 2011 New Zealand Radio Awards.

On KDVS radio in Davis, California there are two radio theater shows, Evening Shadows, a horror/fantasy show paying tribute to classic old-time radio horror, and KDVS Radio Theater which commonly features dramas about social and political themes.

The audio drama format exists side by side with books presented on radio, read by actors or by the author. In Britain and other countries there is also quite a bit of radio comedy (both stand-up and sitcom). Together, these programs provide entertainment where television is either not wanted or would be distracting (such as while driving or operating machinery). Selected Shorts, a long-running NPR program broadcast in front of a live audience at Symphony Space in New York, originated the driveway moment for over 300,000 people listeners each week during readings of contemporary and classic short stories by well-known professional actors.[57]

The lack of visuals also enable fantastical settings and effects to be used in radio plays where the cost would be prohibitive for movies or television. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy was first produced as radio drama, and was not adapted for television until much later, when its popularity would ensure an appropriate return for the high cost of the futuristic setting.

On occasion television series can be revived as radio series. For example, a long-running but no longer popular television series can be continued as a radio series because the reduced production costs make it cost-effective with a much smaller audience. When an organization owns both television and radio channels, such as the BBC, the fact that no royalties have to be paid makes this even more attractive. Radio revivals can also use actors reprising their television roles even after decades as they still sound roughly the same. Series that have had this treatment include Doctor Who, Dad's Army, Thunderbirds[dubious ] and The Tomorrow People. In 2013 BBC Radio 4 released a radio adaptation of Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, featuring a cast of well known television and film actors.[58] Neil Gaiman has said he was excited about the radio drama adaptation as it allowed the work to be presented with a greater deal of special effects than was possible on television.[59] In the United States, an adaptation of The Twilight Zone aired to modest success in the 2000s (decade) as a syndicated program.

Regular broadcasts of radio drama in English can be heard on the BBC's Radio 3, Radio 4 and Radio 4 Extra (formerly Radio 7), on RTÉ Radio 1 in Ireland, and RNZ National in New Zealand. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation produced notable radio plays in Calgary and Toronto in the postwar decades, from which many actors and directors proceeded to international careers, but abolished its radio drama department in the 1970s and finally ceased production of radio dramas in 2012.[60] BBC Radio 4 in today noted for its radio drama, broadcasting hundreds of new, one-off plays each year in such strands as The Afternoon Play, as well as serials and soap operas. Radio 4 Extra broadcasts a variety of radio plays from the BBC's vast archives and a few extended versions of Radio 4 programmes. The British commercial station Oneword, though broadcasting mostly book readings, also transmitted a number of radio plays in instalments before it closed in 2008.

In the United States, contemporary radio drama can be found on broadcasters including ACB radio, produced by the American Council of the Blind; on the Sirius XM Book Radio channel from Sirius XM Satellite Radio (previously Sonic Theater on XM); and occasionally in syndication, as with Jim French's production Imagination Theater. Several community radio stations carry weekly radio drama programs including KBOO, KFAI, WMPG, WLPP and WFHB.

A growing number of religious radio stations air daily or weekly programs usually geared to younger audiences, such as Focus on the Family's Adventures in Odyssey (1,700+ syndicated stations), or Pacific Garden Mission's Unshackled! (1,800 syndicated stations – a long-running radio drama), which is geared to adults. The networks sometime sell transcripts of their shows on cassette tapes or CDs or make the shows available for listening or downloading over the Internet. Transcription recordings of many pre-television shows have been preserved. They are collected, re-recorded onto audio CDs and/or MP3 files and traded by hobbyists today as old-time radio programs. Meanwhile, veterans such as the late Yuri Rasovsky (The National Radio Theater of Chicago) and Thomas Lopez (ZBS Foundation) have gained new listeners on cassettes, CDs and downloads. In the mid-1980s, the nonprofit L.A. Theatre Works launched its radio series recorded before live audiences. Productions have been broadcast via public radio, while also being marketed on compact discs and via download.[61] Carl Amari's nationally syndicated radio series Hollywood 360 features four old-time radio shows during his four-hour weekly broadcasts. Amari also broadcasts old-time radio shows on The WGN Radio Theatre heard every Saturday night beginning at 10 pm on 720-WGN in Chicago.

In addition to traditional radio broadcasters, modern radio drama (also known as audio theater, or audio drama), has experienced a revival, with a growing number of independent producers who are able to build an audience through Internet distribution.[3] While there are few academic programs in the United States that offer training in radio drama production, organizations such as the National Audio Theatre Festival teach the craft to new producers.

The digital age has also resulted in recording styles that differ from the studio recordings of radio drama's Golden Age. Not from Space (2003) on XM Satellite Radio was the first national radio play recorded exclusively through the Internet in which the voice actors were all in separate locations. Other producers use portable recording equipment to record actors on location rather than in studios.[3]

Podcasts are a growing distribution format for independent radio drama producers. Podcasts provides an alternative to mainstream television and radio which does not necessarily require a pitching process to be made and distributed (as these aspects of production can be learned by the creator) and which have no restrictions regarding programme length or content.[54]

Radio drama around the world

Australia

In Australia, as in most other developed countries, from the early years of the medium almost every radio network and station featured drama, serials, and soap operas as staples of their programming; during the so-called "Golden Years" of radio these were hugely popular. Many Australian serials and "soapies" were copies of American originals (e.g., the popular soap Portia Faces Life or the adventure series Superman, which featured future Australian TV star Leonard Teale in the title role), although these were typically locally produced and performed live to air, since the technology of the time did not permit high-quality pre-recording or duplication of programs for import or export.

In this period radio drama, serials and soap operas provided a fertile training ground and a steady source of employment for many actors, and this was particularly important because at this time the Australian theatre scene was in its infancy and opportunities were very limited. Many who trained in this medium (such as Peter Finch) subsequently became prominent both in Australia and overseas.

It has been noted that the producers of the popular 1960s Gerry Anderson TV series Thunderbirds were greatly impressed by the versatility of UK-based Australian actor Ray Barrett, who voiced many roles in Anderson's TV productions. Thanks to his early experience on Australian live radio (where he often played English and American roles), Barrett was considered better than his English counterparts at providing a convincing Mid-Atlantic English ("transatlantic") accent, and he could perform a wide range of character voices; he also impressed the Anderson team with his ability to quickly and easily switch from one voice/accent to another without the sound engineers' having to stop the recording.[62]

The effect of the introduction of television there in the late 1950s had the same devastating effects as it did in the US and many other markets, and by the early 1960s Australian commercial radio had totally abandoned radio drama and related programming (including comedy, soapies, and variety) in favour of music-based formats (such as Top 40) or talk radio ("talkback"), and the once-flourishing Australia radio production industry vanished within a few years. One of the few companies to survive was the Melbourne-based Crawford Productions, which was able to make the successful transition into TV production.

Despite the complete abandonment of drama and related programming by the commercial radio sector, the government-funded Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) maintained a long history of producing radio drama. One of its most famous and popular series was the daily 15-minute afternoon soap opera Blue Hills, which was written for its entire production history by dramatist Gwen Meredith. It featured many well-known Australian actresses and actors, ran continuously for 27 years, from 28 February 1949 to 30 September 1976, with a total of 5,795 episodes broadcast, and was at one time the world's longest-running radio serial. It was preceded by an earlier Meredith serial The Lawsons, which featured many of the same themes and characters and itself ran for 1299 episodes.

In the 1960s and later, the ABC continued to produce many original Australian radio dramas as well as works adapted from other media. In recent years original radio dramas and adapted works were commissioned from local dramatists and produced for the ABC's Radio National network program Airplay, which ran from the late 1990s until early 2013. In late 2012 ABC management imposed budget cuts and axed a number of long-running arts programs, thereby ending the national broadcaster's decades-long history of producing radio drama (as well as its equally long history of providing daily serialised book readings).

Cyprus

Since around the early sixties the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (RIK) features radio plays in the Cypriot Greek dialect. They are called Cypriot (radio drama) sketches and they are mainly about Cyprus's rural life, traditions and customs, its history and its culture. The works are written by established writers, but also from new writers through the Writing Contest of Cypriot Sketches issued annually by CyBC (RIK) [63]

Germany

The first German radio drama was produced in 1923. Because of the external circumstances in postwar Germany in which most of the theaters were destroyed,[citation needed] radio drama boomed. Between 1945 and 1960 there were more than 500 radio plays every year. The German word for radio drama or audio play is Hörspiel. Today Germany is a major market for radio plays worldwide.[64] In particular, audio plays on CD are very popular. A popular audio play serial of Germany and of the world is Die drei ??? [de] (Three Investigators).

Berlin's Prix Europa includes a Radio Fiction category.[citation needed]

India

Vividh Bharati, a service of All India Radio, has a long running Hindi radio-drama program: Hawa Mahal.

Republic of Ireland

RTÉ Radio Drama is one of the oldest audio theatre departments in the radio world.[65]

Japan

Radio dramas began in Japan in 1925, and enjoyed a great level of popularity after the hit of Tankou no Naka.[66][67][68] This resulted in the NHK hiring famous writers to write radio drama scripts for 500 yen, which in 1930 was equivalent to 1 million yen in the present day.[69]

Due to voice acting in Japan having its own distinct culture, audio dramas continue to be popular in Japan, where they are now primarily released on disc as "drama CDs" (ドラマCD). They are also referred to in Japanese as "voice dramas" (ボイスドラマ). Many such audio dramas are based on anime, manga, novels and video games, but there are also many that are completely original.[70] Though most drama CDs are commercial products made by corporate entities, there has been a growing number of doujin audio dramas in recent years due to it being easier for hobbyists to obtain the equipment required to make recordings, and the Internet making distribution easier.

Norway

Radioteatret (Radio drama in Norway) has existed since 1926.[71]

Poland

In Poland, radio dramas are sometimes called "the theater of the imagination" (Polish: teatr wyobraźni). The first Polish radio drama, Warszawianka based on Stanisław Wyspiański's play, was produced in 1925 while the first radio drama written for radio was produced in 1929. Polish Radio has been successfully producing radio dramas since then – between 1925 and September 1939, over 2,500 were made.[72] In 1956, Polish Radio started broadcasting Matysiakowie, which is currently one of the longest-running radio plays in the world.[73] Audio plays based on literature are also popular in Poland, this is how the sound adaptations of George R. R. Martin's A Game of Thrones, Mario Puzo's The Godfather, Ken Follett's The Pillars of the Earth or Robert Kirkman's The Walking Dead were created.[74][75] Since 1988, the Polish Radio Theater has awarded the Wielki Splendor [pl] awards to actors and authors of radio dramas.[76]

Thailand

A low power radio station "M.C.O.K. Radio 2" (formally Pira FM) introduces a new programming block called M.C.O.K. Television – aims to replace the regular evening music programmes. The programming block is composed of British radio dramas and an Audio-Described version of British TV programmes such as Doctor Who, EastEnders and Horrible Histories.

Since 1 November 2021, Radio dramas were scrapped and replaced with more (Audio-Described) programmes – All At Sea, Dad's Army, Mrs. Brown's Boys and The Outlaw. The radio station broadcasts on 87.2 MHz every evening / late night. Due to the nature of low-power VHF propagation, the coverage is very limited, the radio station can be heard only in Lat Luang (Bangkok / Samut Prakan area). It is the first radio station in Thailand to broadcast both English radio / TV programmes on FM.

See also

References

  1. ^ LC subject heading.
  2. ^ Tim Crook: Radio drama. Theory and practice 2014-07-01 at the Wayback Machine. London; New York: Routledge, 1999, p. 8.
  3. ^ a b c Wall Street Journal; Newman, Barry (2010-02-25). "Return With Us to the Thrilling Days Of Yesteryear – Via the Internet". Wall Street Journal.
  4. ^ Compare the entry to Hörspiel e.g. in: dict.cc – Deutsch-Englisch-Wörterbuch
  5. ^ Martin Banham (ed.). The Cambridge Guide to Theatre. Cambridge, NY: Cambridge University Press, 1995, "Radio drama", p. 896.
  6. ^ Tim Crook: Radio drama. Theory and practice. London; New York: Routledge, 1999, p. 15.
  7. ^ Historian Alan Beck reports in The Invisible Play: B.B.C. Radio Drama 1922–1928 that "The first English experiment in radio drama" took place October 17, 1922, in Great Britain. But U.S. stations were broadcasting drama prior to this. See following.
  8. ^ Bill Jaker, March 27, 1998, email post to the OTR Digest
  9. ^ "OPERA CARRIES 1,500 MILES BY RADIO PHONES," November 12, 1921 Chicago Tribune; "Radi-Opera" November 17, 1921 Chicago Tribune
  10. ^ "TWO PLAYS BY WIRELESS," February 4, 1922, New York Times; "MILLION TO HEAR MUSICAL COMEDY," February 12, 1922 Los Angeles Times; "YOU CAN HEAR ENTIRE SHOW BY RADIO PHONE," February 19, 1922 Mansfield (OH) News.
  11. ^ July 1922 wire service story which appeared in the July 19, 1922 Lima (OH) News (under headline: "ACTING BY RADIO IS A WEIRD SENSATION") and the July 23, 1922 Charleston (SC) Daily Mail (under headline: "PRESENTING A PLAY OVER THE WIRELESS IN NEWEST WRINKLE")
  12. ^ New York Times and Hartford (CT) Courant radio listings, August 3, 1922; New York Times radio listings, September 11, 19, and 25, 1922; "Will Give Dramatic Productions By Radio" September 2, 1922 The (Fort Wayne, IN) News-Sentinel; LOCAL RADIO FANS TO HEAR "OFFICER 666" November 3, 1922 Fayetteville (AR) Democrat; "MADAME X" FROM WGY THURSDAY NIGHT, November 21, 1922 Fayetteville (AR) Democrat.
  13. ^ a b c Lawrence Lichty, "Radio Drama: The Early Years" in Lawrence Lichty and Malachi Topping (eds): American Broadcasting (New York, Hastings House, 1975).
  14. ^ April 2, 1923 Hamilton (OH) Evening Journal radio listing.
  15. ^ "WRITING RADIO PLAYS IS LATEST," May 27, 1923 Oakland (CA) Tribune.
  16. ^ April 22, 1923 Los Angeles Times radio listings; "KHJ TRAVELS IN PRETENSE LAND," April 23, 1923 Los Angeles Times.
  17. ^ "Contest for Prize Radio Drama Opens September 1," August 19, 1923 Washington Post; "G. E. COMPANY HAS PRIZE FOR RADIO DRAMA," September 7, 1923 Waukesha (WI) Daily Freeman.
  18. ^ Compare The New York Times – Archive 1851–1980
  19. ^ "SHAKESPEARE". www.britishdrama.org.uk.
  20. ^ Elizabeth McLeod, The Original Amos 'n Andy: Freeman Gosden, Charles Correll, and the 1928–1943 Radio Serial. McFarland & Co, 2005.
  21. ^ Richard J. Hand, Terror on the Air!: Horror Radio in America, 1931–1952 McFarland, 2006.
  22. ^ Richard Hughes, 'A Comedy of Danger' in 'The Invisible Play': B.B.C. Radio Drama 1922–1928 by Alan Beck.
  23. ^ "Maremoto, a radio play (1924)," Réseaux, 1994, Volume 2, Numéro 2 p. 251–265
  24. ^ "Theatre Arts (July 1951):"Windy Kilocycles" by Arch Oboler". richsamuels.com.
  25. ^ Kristen Hare, "Threatened by radio, newspapers exaggerated ‘War of the Worlds’ panic," Poynter Institute, 29 Oct. 2013.
  26. ^ See reviews in The Listener
  27. ^ "The Poetic Quality", Grace Wyndham Goldie. The Listener (London, England), Wednesday, January 8, 1936; p. 78; Issue 365.
  28. ^ "Radio broadcast recordings". The British Library.
  29. ^ See, for example, "A Listener's Commentary", R. D. Charques. The Listener (London, England), Wednesday, October 23, 1929; p. 553; Issue 41.
  30. ^ "Soundstart – The Radio Drama Company". BBC.
  31. ^ The Archers airs 15,000th episode, BBC News, 2006-11-07
  32. ^ Crook, Tim (1999). . p. 3. Archived from the original on June 11, 2011.
  33. ^ Linnea Gibbs, James Hanley: A Bibliography. (Vancouver: William Hoffer, 1980), p. 165.
  34. ^ Poets.org
  35. ^ "Caryl Churchill". www.doollee.com.
  36. ^ a b "International radio drama". www.irdp.co.uk.
  37. ^ "John Mortimer Radio Plays": [1]; filmreference.com/film/69/John-Mortimer.html John Mortimer Biography (1923–2009)
  38. ^ The Listener (London, England), Thursday, September 1, 1955; p. 349; Issue 1383.
  39. ^ a b Deacon, Alison Deacon, Nigel. "RADIO DRAMA, APPLES, EKEGUSII, POTATOES, EARLY MUSIC, Mandy Giltjes". www.suttonelms.org.uk.
  40. ^ "Critic on the Hearth", J. C. Trewin. The Listener (London, England), Thursday, June 28, 1956; p. 903; Issue 1422.
  41. ^ Deacon, Alison Deacon, Nigel. "Bill Naughton radio drama – DIVERSITY WEBSITE". www.suttonelms.org.uk.
  42. ^ The Columbia encyclopedia of modern drama, by Gabrielle H. Cody; "Brendan Behan" – RTÉ Archives [2]
  43. ^ J. C. Trewin, "Critic on the Hearth." Listener [London, England] 5 Aug. 1954: 224.
  44. ^ Prix Italia "PAST EDITIONS – WINNERS 1949 – 2007" 2012-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ British Radio Drama – A Cultural Case History by Tim Crook
  46. ^ A Man for All Seasons (1966) – IMDb [3]; A Man for All Seasons (TV 1988) – IMDb [4]
  47. ^ "Critic on the Hearth", Philip Hope-Wallace. The Listener (London, England), Thursday, November 28, 1946; p. 767; Issue 933; "Critic on the Hearth", Martin Armstrong. The Listener (London, England), Thursday, May 14, 1953; p. 815; Issue 1263.
  48. ^ "The Human Age"", Wyndham Lewis. The Listener (London, England), Thursday, June 2, 1955; p. 976
  49. ^ "A Kind of Loving – The Literature of Stan Barstow":[5]; A Kind of Loving (1962) – IMDb [6]
  50. ^ Jim Cox, Say Goodnight, Gracie: The Last Years of Network Radio, pp. 145–148.
  51. ^ John Dunning, On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio, Oxford University Press, 1998, p. 742. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3.
  52. ^ Robb, Brian J. (2012). A Brief Guide to Star Wars. London: Hachette. ISBN 978-1-78033-583-4. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  53. ^ John, Derek. "That Time NPR Turned 'Star Wars' Into A Radio Drama – And It Actually Worked". NPR.org. All Things Considered, National Public Radio. from the original on 20 June 2016. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  54. ^ a b Lichtig, Toby (24 April 2007). "The podcast's the thing to revive radio drama". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2010-04-12.
  55. ^ "The Archers – Frequently Asked Questions – BBC Radio 4". BBC.
  56. ^ "Eight years of Westway end". BBC News. 2005-10-28. Retrieved 2010-04-12.
  57. ^ "Listen – Selected Shorts". selectedshorts.org.
  58. ^ Mellor, Louise (6 March 2013). "Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere BBC Radio 4 launch report". London: Den of Geek. Retrieved 2013-06-18.
  59. ^ LicHatfullhtig, Jonathan (4 March 2013). "Neil Gaiman, Natalie Dormer and More Talk Neverwhere". London: SciFiNow. Retrieved 2013-06-13.
  60. ^ White, Nancy J. (9 November 2012). "Legendary CBC radio drama studio to close". The Toronto Star.
  61. ^ Maughan, Shannon. "L.A. Theatre Works at 40". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 6 February 2018.
  62. ^ Bergan, Ronald (September 9, 2009). "Ray Barrett". The Guardian. London.
  63. ^ "Cypriot Sketch". Cybc-media.com. 2015. Retrieved 2015-05-29.
  64. ^ Torsten Wissmann, Geographies of Urban Sound, 2016, Routledge (publisher; in the year 2014 published by Ashgate Publishing), p. 204. Cite: "Germany is the most important market for audio plays"
  65. ^ . RTÉ.ie. Archived from the original on 2021-06-01. Retrieved 2020-01-16.
  66. ^ NHK編『放送の五十年 昭和とともに』 日本放送出版協会、1977年 pp.14-26「ラジオの夜明け」
  67. ^ 岩淵東洋男『わたしの音響史』 社会思想社、1981年 pp.146-167「『効果』の歩み」
  68. ^ 炭坑の中.
  69. ^ 『放送の五十年』pp.28-30「ラジオドラマのはじまり」
  70. ^ 「空想美少女用語辞典」『空想美少女大百科 電脳萌え萌え美少女大集合!』宝島社〈別冊宝島〉、1999年1月3日、245頁。 ISBN 4-7966-9421-8
  71. ^ "Radioteatret". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Retrieved 23 September 2016.
  72. ^ ""Pogrzeb Kiejstuta" – pionierski wyczyn Polskiego Radia i Witolda Hulewicza". polskieradio.pl (in Polish). Polskie Radio. 2021-05-17. Retrieved 2022-04-08.
  73. ^ "To jedno z najdłużej nadawanych słuchowisk na świecie. "Matysiakowie" mają 64 lata!". polskieradio.pl (in Polish). Polskie Radio. 2021-02-13. Retrieved 2022-04-08.
  74. ^ "Superprodukcje Audioteki". audioteka.pl (in Polish). Audioteka. Retrieved 2022-04-08.
  75. ^ Marcin Zwierzchowski (2015-03-02). ""The Walking Dead", tomy VII i VIII – słuchowisko powraca". Naekranie.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2022-04-08.
  76. ^ "Nagrody Teatru Polskiego Radia – laureaci nagrody Wielki Splendor 2021". polskieradio.pl (in Polish). Polskie Radio. 2021-12-06. Retrieved 2022-04-08.

Further reading

  • Tim Crook, Radio Drama: Theory and Practice. London; New York: Routledge, 1999.
  • Armin Paul Frank, Das englische und amerikanische Hörspiel. München: Fink, 1981.
  • Walter K. Kingson and Rome Cowgill, Radio Drama Acting and Production: A Handbook. New York: Rinehart, 1950.
  • Karl Ladle: Hörspielforschung. Schnittpunkt zwischen Literatur, Medien und Ästhetik. Wiesbaden: Deutscher Universitäts-Verlag, 2001.
  • Sherman Paxton Lawton, Radio Drama. Boston: Expression Company, 1938.
  • Peter Lewis (ed.), Radio Drama. London; New York: Longman, 1981.
  • Dermot Rattigan, Theatre of Sound: Radio and the Dramatic Imagination. 2nd edition. Carysfort Press, 2003.
  • Neil Verma, Theater of the Mind: Imagination, Aesthetics, and American Radio Drama. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012.

External links

  • Audio-Drama.com A directory of audio drama websites.
  • The Audio Drama Production Podcast Instructional podcast on the production of audio drama.
  • The Well-tempered Audio Dramatist Treatise on writing, producing, performing and directing audio plays in the 21st century.
  • (archived at the Wayback Machine)
  • National Audio Theatre Festivals Radio drama workshop.

BBC sources

  • The BBC Story – The Written Archives: [7]
  • Radio Plays & Radio Drama webpage (England): [8]
  • British Radio Drama – A Cultural Case History by Tim Crook: [9]

radio, drama, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, december, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, audio, drama, audio, play, . The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Radio drama or audio drama audio play radio play 1 radio theatre or audio theatre is a dramatized purely acoustic performance With no visual component radio drama depends on dialogue music and sound effects to help the listener imagine the characters and story It is auditory in the physical dimension but equally powerful as a visual force in the psychological dimension 2 Radio drama includes plays specifically written for radio docudrama dramatized works of fiction as well as plays originally written for the theatre including musical theatre and opera Recording a radio play in the Netherlands 1949 Radio drama achieved widespread popularity within a decade of its initial development in the 1920s By the 1940s it was a leading international popular entertainment With the advent of television in the 1950s radio drama began losing its audience However it remains popular in much of the world Recordings of OTR old time radio survive today in the audio archives of collectors libraries and museums as well as several online sites such as Internet Archive By the 21st century radio drama had a minimal presence on terrestrial radio in the United States with much American radio drama being restricted to rebroadcasts of programmes from previous decades However other nations still have thriving traditions of radio drama In the United Kingdom for example the BBC produces and broadcasts hundreds of new radio plays each year on Radio 3 Radio 4 and Radio 4 Extra Like the US Australia ABC has abandoned broadcasting drama but in New Zealand RNZ continues to promote and broadcast a variety of drama over its airwaves Thanks to advances in digital recording and Internet distribution radio drama experienced a revival around 2010 3 Podcasting offered the means of inexpensively creating new radio dramas in addition to the distribution of vintage programs The terms audio drama 4 or audio theatre are sometimes used synonymously with radio drama however audio drama or audio theatre may not necessarily be intended specifically for broadcast on radio Audio drama can also be found on CDs cassette tapes podcasts webcasts or other digital downloads as well as broadcast radio Contents 1 History 1 1 1880 1930 Early years 1 2 1930 1960s Widespread popularity 1 3 1960 2000 Decline in the United States 1 4 2000 present Radio drama s New Media revival 2 Radio drama around the world 2 1 Australia 2 2 Cyprus 2 3 Germany 2 4 India 2 5 Republic of Ireland 2 6 Japan 2 7 Norway 2 8 Poland 2 9 Thailand 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External links 6 1 BBC sourcesHistory EditThe Roman playwright Seneca has claim as a forerunner of radio drama because his plays were performed by readers as sound plays not by actors as stage plays I n this respect Seneca had no significant successors until 20th century technology made possible the widespread dissemination of sound plays 5 1880 1930 Early years Edit Radio drama traces its roots back to the 1880s In 1881 French engineer Clement Ader had filed a patent for improvements of Telephone Equipment in Theatres Theatrophone 6 English language radio drama seems to have started in the United States 7 A Rural Line on Education a brief sketch specifically written for radio aired on Pittsburgh s KDKA in 1921 according to historian Bill Jaker 8 Newspaper accounts of the era report on a number of other drama experiments by America s commercial radio stations KYW broadcast a season of complete operas from Chicago starting in November 1921 9 In February 1922 entire Broadway musical comedies with the original casts aired from WJZ s Newark studios 10 Actors Grace George and Herbert Hayes performed an entire play from a San Francisco station in the summer of 1922 11 An important turning point in radio drama came when Schenectady New York s WGY after a successful tryout on August 3 1922 began weekly studio broadcasts of full length stage plays in September 1922 12 using music sound effects and a regular troupe of actors The WGY Players Aware of this series the director of Cincinnati s WLW began regularly broadcasting one acts as well as excerpts from longer works in November 13 The success of these projects led to imitators at other stations By early 1923 original dramatic pieces written specially for radio were airing on stations in Cincinnati When Love Wakens by WLW s Fred Smith 13 14 Philadelphia The Secret Wave by Clyde A Criswell 15 and Los Angeles At Home over KHJ 16 That same year WLW in May and WGY in September sponsored scripting contests inviting listeners to create original plays to be performed by those stations dramatic troupes 13 17 Listings in The New York Times 18 and other sources for May 1923 reveal at least 20 dramatic offerings were scheduled including one acts excerpts from longer dramas complete three and four act plays operettas and a Moliere adaptation either as in studio productions or by remote broadcast from local theaters and opera houses An early British drama broadcast was of Shakespeare s A Midsummer Night s Dream on 2LO on 25 July 1923 19 Serious study of American radio drama of the 1920s and early 1930s is at best very limited Unsung pioneers of the art include WLW s Fred Smith Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll who popularized the dramatic serial The Eveready Hour creative team which began with one act plays but was soon experimenting with hour long combinations of drama and music on its weekly variety program the various acting troupes at stations like WLW WGY KGO and a number of others frequently run by women like Helen Schuster Martin and Wilda Wilson Church early network continuity writers like Henry Fisk Carlton William Ford Manley and Don Clark producers and directors like Clarence Menser and Gerald Stopp and a long list of others who were credited at the time with any number of innovations but who are largely forgotten or undiscussed today Elizabeth McLeod s 2005 book on Gosden and Correll s early work 20 is a major exception as is Richard J Hand s 2006 study of horror radio which examines some programs from the late 1920s and early 1930s 21 Another notable early radio drama one of the first specially written for the medium in the UK was A Comedy of Danger by Richard Hughes broadcast by the BBC on January 15 1924 about a group of people trapped in a Welsh coal mine 22 One of the earliest and most influential French radio plays was the prize winning Maremoto Seaquake by Gabriel Germinet and Pierre Cusy which presents a realistic account of a sinking ship before revealing that the characters are actually actors rehearsing for a broadcast Translated and broadcast in Germany and England by 1925 the play was originally scheduled by Radio Paris to air on October 23 1924 but was instead banned from French radio until 1937 because the government feared that the dramatic SOS messages would be mistaken for genuine distress signals 23 In 1951 American writer and producer Arch Oboler suggested that Wyllis Cooper s Lights Out 1934 47 was the first true radio drama to make use of the unique qualities of radio Radio drama as distinguished from theatre plays boiled down to kilocycle size began at midnight in the middle thirties on one of the upper floors of Chicago s Merchandise Mart The pappy was a rotund writer by the name of Wyllis Cooper 24 Though the series is often remembered solely for its gruesome stories and sound effects Cooper s scripts for Lights Out were later recognized as well written and offered innovations seldom heard in early radio dramas including multiple first person narrators stream of consciousness monologues and scripts that contrasted a duplicitous character s internal monologue and his spoken words The question of who was the first to write stream of consciousness drama for radio is a difficult one to answer By 1930 Tyrone Guthrie had written plays for the BBC like Matrimonial News which consists entirely of the thoughts of a shopgirl awaiting a blind date and The Flowers Are Not for You to Pick which takes place inside the mind of a drowning man After they were published in 1931 Guthrie s plays aired on the American networks Around the same time Guthrie himself also worked for the Canadian National Railway radio network producing plays written by Merrill Denison that used similar techniques A 1940 article in Variety credited a 1932 NBC play Drink Deep by Don Johnson as the first stream of consciousness play written for American radio The climax of Lawrence Holcomb s 1931 NBC play Skyscraper also uses a variation of the technique so that the listener can hear the final thoughts and relived memories of a man falling to his death from the title building There were probably earlier examples of stream of consciousness drama on the radio For example in December 1924 actor Paul Robeson then appearing in a revival of Eugene O Neill s The Emperor Jones performed a scene from the play over New York s WGBS to critical acclaim Some of the many storytellers and monologists on early 1920s American radio might be able to claim even earlier dates 1930 1960s Widespread popularity Edit Perhaps America s most famous radio drama broadcast is Orson Welles The War of the Worlds a 1938 version of H G Wells novel which inspired stories of a mass panic that though greatly exaggerated signaled the power of the form 25 By the late 1930s radio drama was widely popular in the United States and also in other parts of the world There were dozens of programs in many different genres from mysteries and thrillers to soap operas and comedies Among American playwrights screenwriters and novelists who got their start in radio drama are Rod Serling and Irwin Shaw Radio program written and performed in Phoenix Arizona by children of Junior Artists Club Federal Arts Program 1935 In Britain however during the 1930s BBC programming tended to be more high brow including the works of Shakespeare Classical Greek drama as well as the works of major modern playwrights such as Chekhov Ibsen Strindberg and so forth Novels and short stories were also frequently dramatised 26 In addition the plays of contemporary writers and original plays were produced with for example a broadcast of T S Eliot s famous verse play Murder in the Cathedral in 1936 27 By 1930 the BBC was producing twice as many plays as London s West End and were producing over 400 plays a year by the mid 1940s 28 Producers of radio drama soon became aware that adapting stage plays for radio did not always work and that there was a need for plays specifically written for radio which recognized its potential as a distinct and different medium from the theatre George Bernard Shaw s plays for example were seen as readily adaptable 29 However in a lead article in the BBC literary journal The Listener of 14 August 1929 which discussed the broadcasting of 12 great plays it was suggested that while the theatrical literature of the past should not be neglected the future lay mainly with plays written specifically for the microphone In 1939 40 the BBC founded its own Drama Repertory Company which made a stock of actors readily available After the war the number was around 50 They performed in the great number of plays broadcast in the heyday of BBC radio drama of the 40s 60s 30 Initially the BBC resisted American style soap opera but eventually highly popular serials like Dick Barton Special Agent 1946 51 Mrs Dale s Diary 1948 69 and The Archers 1950 were produced The Archers is still running as of October 2017 update and is the world s longest running soap opera with a total of over 18 400 episodes 31 There had been some earlier serialized drama including the six episode The Shadow of the Swastika 1939 Dorothy L Sayers s The Man Born To Be King in twelve episodes 1941 and Front Line Family 1941 48 which was broadcast to America as part of the effort to encourage the US to enter the war The show s storylines depicted the trials and tribulations of a British family the Robinsons living through the war This featured plots about rationing family members missing in action and the Blitz After the war in 1946 it was moved to the BBC Light Programme 32 The BBC continued producing various kinds of drama including docu drama throughout World War II amongst the writers they employed were the novelist James Hanley 33 and poet Louis MacNeice who in 1941 became an employee of the BBC s MacNeice s work for the BBC initially involved writing and producing radio programmes intended to build support for the US and later Russia through cultural programmes emphasising links between the countries rather than outright propaganda By the end of the war MacNeice had written well over 60 scripts for the BBC including Christopher Columbus 1942 which starred Laurence Olivier The Dark Tower 1946 and a six part radio adaptation of Goethe s Faust 1949 34 Following World War II the BBC reorganized its radio provision introducing two new channels to supplement the BBC Home Service itself the result of the fusion in September 1939 of the pre war National and Regional Programmes These were the BBC Light Programme dating from 29 July 1945 and a direct successor to the wartime General Forces Programme and the BBC Third Programme launched on 29 September 1946 The BBC Light Programme while principally devoted to light entertainment and music carried a fair share of drama both single plays generally as the name of the station indicated of a lighter nature and serials In contrast the BBC Third Programme destined to become one of the leading cultural and intellectual forces in post war Britain specialized in heavier drama as well as the serious music talks and other features which made up its content long form productions of both classical and modern experimental dramatic works sometimes occupied the major part of its output on any given evening The Home Service meanwhile continued to broadcast more middle brow drama one off plays and serializations daily The high water mark for BBC radio drama was the 1950s and 1960s and during this period many major British playwrights either effectively began their careers with the BBC or had works adapted for radio Most of playwright Caryl Churchill s early experiences with professional drama production were as a radio playwright and starting in 1962 with The Ants she wrote nine productions with BBC radio drama up until 1973 when her stage work began to be recognised at the Royal Court Theatre 35 Joe Orton s dramatic debut in 1963 was the radio play The Ruffian on the Stair which was broadcast on 31 August 1964 36 Tom Stoppard s first professional production was in the 15 minute Just Before Midnight programme on BBC Radio which showcased new dramatists 36 John Mortimer made his radio debut as a dramatist in 1955 with his adaptation of his own novel Like Men Betrayed for the BBC Light Programme However he made his debut as an original playwright with The Dock Brief starring Michael Hordern as a hapless barrister first broadcast in 1957 on BBC Third Programme later televised with the same cast and subsequently presented in a double bill with What Shall We Tell Caroline at the Lyric Hammersmith in April 1958 before transferring to the Garrick Theatre Mortimer is most famous for Rumpole of the Bailey a British television series which starred Leo McKern as Horace Rumpole an aging London barrister who defends any and all clients It has been spun off into a series of short stories novels and radio programmes 37 Giles Cooper was a pioneer in writing for radio becoming prolific in both radio and television drama His early successes included radio dramatisations of Charles Dickens s Oliver Twist William Golding s Lord of the Flies 38 and John Wyndham s classic science fiction novel Day of the Triffids 39 He was also successful in the theatre The first of his radio plays to make his reputation was Mathry Beacon 1956 about a small detachment of men and women still guarding a Top Secret missile deflector somewhere in Wales years after the war has ended 40 Bill Naughton s radio play Alfie Elkins and his Little Life 1962 was first broadcast on the BBC Third Programme on 7 January 1962 In it Alfie w ith sublime amorality swaggers and philosophises his way through life 41 The action spans about two decades from the beginning of World War II to the late 1950s In 1964 Bill Naughton turned it into a stage play which was put on at London s Mermaid Theatre Later he wrote the screenplay for a film version Alfie 1966 starring Michael Caine Other notable radio dramatists included Henry Reed Brendan Behan Rhys Adrian Alan Plater Anthony Minghella Alan Bleasdale and novelist Angela Carter Novelist Susan Hill also wrote for BBC Radio from the early 1970s 39 Henry Reed was especially successful with the Hilda Tablet plays Irish playwright Brendan Behan author of The Quare Fellow 1954 was commissioned by the BBC to write a radio play The Big House 1956 prior to this he had written two plays for Irish radio Moving Out and A Garden Party 42 Among the most famous works created for radio are Dylan Thomas s Under Milk Wood 1954 Samuel Beckett s All That Fall 1957 Harold Pinter s A Slight Ache 1959 and Robert Bolt s A Man for All Seasons 1954 43 Beckett wrote a number of short radio plays in the 1950s and 1960s and later for television his radio play Embers was first broadcast on the BBC Third Programme on 24 June 1959 and won the RAI prize at the Prix Italia awards later that year 44 Robert Bolt s writing career began with scripts for Children s Hour 45 A Man for All Seasons was subsequently produced on television in 1957 Then in 1960 there was a highly successful stage production in London s West End and on New York s Broadway from late 1961 In addition there have been two film versions in 1966 starring Paul Scofield and 1988 for television starring Charlton Heston 46 While Alan Ayckbourn did not write for radio many of his stage plays were subsequently adapted for radio Other significant adaptations included dramatised readings of poet David Jones s In Parenthesis in 1946 and The Anathemata in 1953 for the BBC Third Programme 47 and novelist Wyndham Lewis s The Human Age 1955 48 Among contemporary novels that were dramatised were the 1964 radio adaptation of Stan Barstow s A Kind of Loving 1960 there had also been a 1962 film adaption 49 1960 2000 Decline in the United States Edit After the advent of television radio drama never recovered its popularity in the United States Most remaining CBS and NBC radio dramas were cancelled in 1960 50 The last network radio dramas to originate during American radio s Golden Age Suspense and Yours Truly Johnny Dollar ended on September 30 1962 51 There have been some efforts at radio drama since then In the 1960s Dick Orkin created the popular syndicated comic adventure series Chicken Man ABC Radio aired a daily dramatic anthology program Theater Five in 1964 65 Inspired by The Goon Show the four or five crazy guys of the Firesign Theatre built a large following with their satirical plays on recordings exploring the dramatic possibilities inherent in stereo A brief resurgence of production beginning in the early 1970s yielded Rod Serling s The Zero Hour for Mutual National Public Radio s Earplay and veteran Himan Brown s CBS Radio Mystery Theater and General Mills Radio Adventure Theater These productions were later followed by the Sears Mutual Radio Theater The National Radio Theater of Chicago NPR Playhouse and a newly produced episode of the former 1950s series X Minus One Works by a new generation of dramatists also emerged at this time notably Yuri Rasovsky Thomas Lopez of ZBS and the dramatic sketches heard on humorist Garrison Keillor s A Prairie Home Companion Brian Daley s 1981 adaptation of the blockbuster space opera film Star Wars for NPR Playhouse was a notable success Production costs on this serial were mitigated by the support of Lucasfilm who sold the rights to NPR for a nominal 1 fee and by the participation of the BBC in an international co production deal Star Wars was credited with generating a 40 rise in NPR s ratings and quadrupling the network s youth audience overnight Radio adaptations of the sequels followed with The Empire Strikes Back in 1983 and Return of the Jedi in 1996 52 53 Thanks in large part to the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities public radio continued to air a smattering of audio drama until the mid 1980s From 1986 to 2002 NPR s most consistent producer of radio drama was the idiosyncratic Joe Frank working out of KCRW in Santa Monica The Sci Fi Channel presented an audio drama series Seeing Ear Theatre on its website from 1997 to 2001 Also the dramatic serial It s Your World aired twice daily on the nationally syndicated Tom Joyner Morning Show from 1994 to 2008 continuing online through 2010 2000 present Radio drama s New Media revival Edit Radio drama remains popular in much of the world though most material is now available through Internet download rather than heard over terrestrial or satellite radio 54 Stations producing radio drama often commission a large number of scripts The relatively low cost of producing a radio play enables them to take chances with works by unknown writers Radio can be a good training ground for beginning drama writers as the words written form a much greater part of the finished product bad lines cannot be obscured with stagecraft The BBC s sole surviving radio soap is The Archers on BBC Radio 4 it is with over 18 700 episodes to date 55 the world s longest running such programme Other radio soaps ongoing serials produced by the BBC but no longer on air include Mrs Dale s Diary 1948 69 Westway on the World Service 1997 2005 56 Silver Street 2004 10 on the Asian NetworkIn September 2010 Radio New Zealand began airing its first ongoing soap opera You Me Now which won the Best New Drama Award in the 2011 New Zealand Radio Awards On KDVS radio in Davis California there are two radio theater shows Evening Shadows a horror fantasy show paying tribute to classic old time radio horror and KDVS Radio Theater which commonly features dramas about social and political themes The audio drama format exists side by side with books presented on radio read by actors or by the author In Britain and other countries there is also quite a bit of radio comedy both stand up and sitcom Together these programs provide entertainment where television is either not wanted or would be distracting such as while driving or operating machinery Selected Shorts a long running NPR program broadcast in front of a live audience at Symphony Space in New York originated the driveway moment for over 300 000 people listeners each week during readings of contemporary and classic short stories by well known professional actors 57 The lack of visuals also enable fantastical settings and effects to be used in radio plays where the cost would be prohibitive for movies or television The Hitchhiker s Guide to the Galaxy was first produced as radio drama and was not adapted for television until much later when its popularity would ensure an appropriate return for the high cost of the futuristic setting On occasion television series can be revived as radio series For example a long running but no longer popular television series can be continued as a radio series because the reduced production costs make it cost effective with a much smaller audience When an organization owns both television and radio channels such as the BBC the fact that no royalties have to be paid makes this even more attractive Radio revivals can also use actors reprising their television roles even after decades as they still sound roughly the same Series that have had this treatment include Doctor Who Dad s Army Thunderbirds dubious discuss and The Tomorrow People In 2013 BBC Radio 4 released a radio adaptation of Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman featuring a cast of well known television and film actors 58 Neil Gaiman has said he was excited about the radio drama adaptation as it allowed the work to be presented with a greater deal of special effects than was possible on television 59 In the United States an adaptation of The Twilight Zone aired to modest success in the 2000s decade as a syndicated program Regular broadcasts of radio drama in English can be heard on the BBC s Radio 3 Radio 4 and Radio 4 Extra formerly Radio 7 on RTE Radio 1 in Ireland and RNZ National in New Zealand The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation produced notable radio plays in Calgary and Toronto in the postwar decades from which many actors and directors proceeded to international careers but abolished its radio drama department in the 1970s and finally ceased production of radio dramas in 2012 60 BBC Radio 4 in today noted for its radio drama broadcasting hundreds of new one off plays each year in such strands as The Afternoon Play as well as serials and soap operas Radio 4 Extra broadcasts a variety of radio plays from the BBC s vast archives and a few extended versions of Radio 4 programmes The British commercial station Oneword though broadcasting mostly book readings also transmitted a number of radio plays in instalments before it closed in 2008 In the United States contemporary radio drama can be found on broadcasters including ACB radio produced by the American Council of the Blind on the Sirius XM Book Radio channel from Sirius XM Satellite Radio previously Sonic Theater on XM and occasionally in syndication as with Jim French s production Imagination Theater Several community radio stations carry weekly radio drama programs including KBOO KFAI WMPG WLPP and WFHB A growing number of religious radio stations air daily or weekly programs usually geared to younger audiences such as Focus on the Family s Adventures in Odyssey 1 700 syndicated stations or Pacific Garden Mission s Unshackled 1 800 syndicated stations a long running radio drama which is geared to adults The networks sometime sell transcripts of their shows on cassette tapes or CDs or make the shows available for listening or downloading over the Internet Transcription recordings of many pre television shows have been preserved They are collected re recorded onto audio CDs and or MP3 files and traded by hobbyists today as old time radio programs Meanwhile veterans such as the late Yuri Rasovsky The National Radio Theater of Chicago and Thomas Lopez ZBS Foundation have gained new listeners on cassettes CDs and downloads In the mid 1980s the nonprofit L A Theatre Works launched its radio series recorded before live audiences Productions have been broadcast via public radio while also being marketed on compact discs and via download 61 Carl Amari s nationally syndicated radio series Hollywood 360 features four old time radio shows during his four hour weekly broadcasts Amari also broadcasts old time radio shows on The WGN Radio Theatre heard every Saturday night beginning at 10 pm on 720 WGN in Chicago In addition to traditional radio broadcasters modern radio drama also known as audio theater or audio drama has experienced a revival with a growing number of independent producers who are able to build an audience through Internet distribution 3 While there are few academic programs in the United States that offer training in radio drama production organizations such as the National Audio Theatre Festival teach the craft to new producers The digital age has also resulted in recording styles that differ from the studio recordings of radio drama s Golden Age Not from Space 2003 on XM Satellite Radio was the first national radio play recorded exclusively through the Internet in which the voice actors were all in separate locations Other producers use portable recording equipment to record actors on location rather than in studios 3 Podcasts are a growing distribution format for independent radio drama producers Podcasts provides an alternative to mainstream television and radio which does not necessarily require a pitching process to be made and distributed as these aspects of production can be learned by the creator and which have no restrictions regarding programme length or content 54 Radio drama around the world EditAustralia Edit In Australia as in most other developed countries from the early years of the medium almost every radio network and station featured drama serials and soap operas as staples of their programming during the so called Golden Years of radio these were hugely popular Many Australian serials and soapies were copies of American originals e g the popular soap Portia Faces Life or the adventure series Superman which featured future Australian TV star Leonard Teale in the title role although these were typically locally produced and performed live to air since the technology of the time did not permit high quality pre recording or duplication of programs for import or export In this period radio drama serials and soap operas provided a fertile training ground and a steady source of employment for many actors and this was particularly important because at this time the Australian theatre scene was in its infancy and opportunities were very limited Many who trained in this medium such as Peter Finch subsequently became prominent both in Australia and overseas It has been noted that the producers of the popular 1960s Gerry Anderson TV series Thunderbirds were greatly impressed by the versatility of UK based Australian actor Ray Barrett who voiced many roles in Anderson s TV productions Thanks to his early experience on Australian live radio where he often played English and American roles Barrett was considered better than his English counterparts at providing a convincing Mid Atlantic English transatlantic accent and he could perform a wide range of character voices he also impressed the Anderson team with his ability to quickly and easily switch from one voice accent to another without the sound engineers having to stop the recording 62 The effect of the introduction of television there in the late 1950s had the same devastating effects as it did in the US and many other markets and by the early 1960s Australian commercial radio had totally abandoned radio drama and related programming including comedy soapies and variety in favour of music based formats such as Top 40 or talk radio talkback and the once flourishing Australia radio production industry vanished within a few years One of the few companies to survive was the Melbourne based Crawford Productions which was able to make the successful transition into TV production Despite the complete abandonment of drama and related programming by the commercial radio sector the government funded Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC maintained a long history of producing radio drama One of its most famous and popular series was the daily 15 minute afternoon soap opera Blue Hills which was written for its entire production history by dramatist Gwen Meredith It featured many well known Australian actresses and actors ran continuously for 27 years from 28 February 1949 to 30 September 1976 with a total of 5 795 episodes broadcast and was at one time the world s longest running radio serial It was preceded by an earlier Meredith serial The Lawsons which featured many of the same themes and characters and itself ran for 1299 episodes In the 1960s and later the ABC continued to produce many original Australian radio dramas as well as works adapted from other media In recent years original radio dramas and adapted works were commissioned from local dramatists and produced for the ABC s Radio National network program Airplay which ran from the late 1990s until early 2013 In late 2012 ABC management imposed budget cuts and axed a number of long running arts programs thereby ending the national broadcaster s decades long history of producing radio drama as well as its equally long history of providing daily serialised book readings Cyprus Edit Since around the early sixties the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation RIK features radio plays in the Cypriot Greek dialect They are called Cypriot radio drama sketches and they are mainly about Cyprus s rural life traditions and customs its history and its culture The works are written by established writers but also from new writers through the Writing Contest of Cypriot Sketches issued annually by CyBC RIK 63 Germany Edit The first German radio drama was produced in 1923 Because of the external circumstances in postwar Germany in which most of the theaters were destroyed citation needed radio drama boomed Between 1945 and 1960 there were more than 500 radio plays every year The German word for radio drama or audio play is Horspiel Today Germany is a major market for radio plays worldwide 64 In particular audio plays on CD are very popular A popular audio play serial of Germany and of the world is Die drei de Three Investigators Berlin s Prix Europa includes a Radio Fiction category citation needed India Edit Vividh Bharati a service of All India Radio has a long running Hindi radio drama program Hawa Mahal Republic of Ireland Edit RTE Radio Drama is one of the oldest audio theatre departments in the radio world 65 Japan Edit Radio dramas began in Japan in 1925 and enjoyed a great level of popularity after the hit of Tankou no Naka 66 67 68 This resulted in the NHK hiring famous writers to write radio drama scripts for 500 yen which in 1930 was equivalent to 1 million yen in the present day 69 Due to voice acting in Japan having its own distinct culture audio dramas continue to be popular in Japan where they are now primarily released on disc as drama CDs ドラマCD They are also referred to in Japanese as voice dramas ボイスドラマ Many such audio dramas are based on anime manga novels and video games but there are also many that are completely original 70 Though most drama CDs are commercial products made by corporate entities there has been a growing number of doujin audio dramas in recent years due to it being easier for hobbyists to obtain the equipment required to make recordings and the Internet making distribution easier Norway Edit Radioteatret Radio drama in Norway has existed since 1926 71 Poland Edit In Poland radio dramas are sometimes called the theater of the imagination Polish teatr wyobrazni The first Polish radio drama Warszawianka based on Stanislaw Wyspianski s play was produced in 1925 while the first radio drama written for radio was produced in 1929 Polish Radio has been successfully producing radio dramas since then between 1925 and September 1939 over 2 500 were made 72 In 1956 Polish Radio started broadcasting Matysiakowie which is currently one of the longest running radio plays in the world 73 Audio plays based on literature are also popular in Poland this is how the sound adaptations of George R R Martin s A Game of Thrones Mario Puzo s The Godfather Ken Follett s The Pillars of the Earth or Robert Kirkman s The Walking Dead were created 74 75 Since 1988 the Polish Radio Theater has awarded the Wielki Splendor pl awards to actors and authors of radio dramas 76 Thailand Edit A low power radio station M C O K Radio 2 formally Pira FM introduces a new programming block called M C O K Television aims to replace the regular evening music programmes The programming block is composed of British radio dramas and an Audio Described version of British TV programmes such as Doctor Who EastEnders and Horrible Histories Since 1 November 2021 Radio dramas were scrapped and replaced with more Audio Described programmes All At Sea Dad s Army Mrs Brown s Boys and The Outlaw The radio station broadcasts on 87 2 MHz every evening late night Due to the nature of low power VHF propagation the coverage is very limited the radio station can be heard only in Lat Luang Bangkok Samut Prakan area It is the first radio station in Thailand to broadcast both English radio TV programmes on FM See also EditAmateur voice acting BBC Radio 4 BBC Radio 4 Extra Books on the radio Closet drama Full cast audiobook List of BBC Radio programmes adapted for television Television to radio transfers List of films based on radio series List of radio soap operas Performance art Pingshu Chinese performing art often heard on radio Podcasts Radio comedy Radio programming Saturday Night Theatre Television playReferences Edit LC subject heading Tim Crook Radio drama Theory and practice Archived 2014 07 01 at the Wayback Machine London New York Routledge 1999 p 8 a b c Wall Street Journal Newman Barry 2010 02 25 Return With Us to the Thrilling Days Of Yesteryear Via the Internet Wall Street Journal Compare the entry to Horspiel e g in dict cc Deutsch Englisch Worterbuch Martin Banham ed The Cambridge Guide to Theatre Cambridge NY Cambridge University Press 1995 Radio drama p 896 Tim Crook Radio drama Theory and practice London New York Routledge 1999 p 15 Historian Alan Beck reports in The Invisible Play B B C Radio Drama 1922 1928 that The first English experiment in radio drama took place October 17 1922 in Great Britain But U S stations were broadcasting drama prior to this See following Bill Jaker March 27 1998 email post to the OTR Digest OPERA CARRIES 1 500 MILES BY RADIO PHONES November 12 1921 Chicago Tribune Radi Opera November 17 1921 Chicago Tribune TWO PLAYS BY WIRELESS February 4 1922 New York Times MILLION TO HEAR MUSICAL COMEDY February 12 1922 Los Angeles Times YOU CAN HEAR ENTIRE SHOW BY RADIO PHONE February 19 1922 Mansfield OH News July 1922 wire service story which appeared in the July 19 1922 Lima OH News under headline ACTING BY RADIO IS A WEIRD SENSATION and the July 23 1922 Charleston SC Daily Mail under headline PRESENTING A PLAY OVER THE WIRELESS IN NEWEST WRINKLE New York Times and Hartford CT Courant radio listings August 3 1922 New York Times radio listings September 11 19 and 25 1922 Will Give Dramatic Productions By Radio September 2 1922 The Fort Wayne IN News Sentinel LOCAL RADIO FANS TO HEAR OFFICER 666 November 3 1922 Fayetteville AR Democrat MADAME X FROM WGY THURSDAY NIGHT November 21 1922 Fayetteville AR Democrat a b c Lawrence Lichty Radio Drama The Early Years in Lawrence Lichty and Malachi Topping eds American Broadcasting New York Hastings House 1975 April 2 1923 Hamilton OH Evening Journal radio listing WRITING RADIO PLAYS IS LATEST May 27 1923 Oakland CA Tribune April 22 1923 Los Angeles Times radio listings KHJ TRAVELS IN PRETENSE LAND April 23 1923 Los Angeles Times Contest for Prize Radio Drama Opens September 1 August 19 1923 Washington Post G E COMPANY HAS PRIZE FOR RADIO DRAMA September 7 1923 Waukesha WI Daily Freeman Compare The New York Times Archive 1851 1980 SHAKESPEARE www britishdrama org uk Elizabeth McLeod The Original Amos n Andy Freeman Gosden Charles Correll and the 1928 1943 Radio Serial McFarland amp Co 2005 Richard J Hand Terror on the Air Horror Radio in America 1931 1952 McFarland 2006 Richard Hughes A Comedy of Danger in The Invisible Play B B C Radio Drama 1922 1928 by Alan Beck Maremoto a radio play 1924 Reseaux 1994 Volume 2 Numero 2 p 251 265 Theatre Arts July 1951 Windy Kilocycles by Arch Oboler richsamuels com Kristen Hare Threatened by radio newspapers exaggerated War of the Worlds panic Poynter Institute 29 Oct 2013 See reviews in The Listener The Poetic Quality Grace Wyndham Goldie The Listener London England Wednesday January 8 1936 p 78 Issue 365 Radio broadcast recordings The British Library See for example A Listener s Commentary R D Charques The Listener London England Wednesday October 23 1929 p 553 Issue 41 Soundstart The Radio Drama Company BBC The Archers airs 15 000th episode BBC News 2006 11 07 Crook Tim 1999 British Radio Drama A Cultural Case History p 3 Archived from the original on June 11 2011 Linnea Gibbs James Hanley A Bibliography Vancouver William Hoffer 1980 p 165 Poets org Caryl Churchill www doollee com a b International radio drama www irdp co uk John Mortimer Radio Plays 1 filmreference com film 69 John Mortimer html John Mortimer Biography 1923 2009 The Listener London England Thursday September 1 1955 p 349 Issue 1383 a b Deacon Alison Deacon Nigel RADIO DRAMA APPLES EKEGUSII POTATOES EARLY MUSIC Mandy Giltjes www suttonelms org uk Critic on the Hearth J C Trewin The Listener London England Thursday June 28 1956 p 903 Issue 1422 Deacon Alison Deacon Nigel Bill Naughton radio drama DIVERSITY WEBSITE www suttonelms org uk The Columbia encyclopedia of modern drama by Gabrielle H Cody Brendan Behan RTE Archives 2 J C Trewin Critic on the Hearth Listener London England 5 Aug 1954 224 Prix Italia PAST EDITIONS WINNERS 1949 2007 Archived 2012 03 03 at the Wayback Machine British Radio Drama A Cultural Case History by Tim Crook A Man for All Seasons 1966 IMDb 3 A Man for All Seasons TV 1988 IMDb 4 Critic on the Hearth Philip Hope Wallace The Listener London England Thursday November 28 1946 p 767 Issue 933 Critic on the Hearth Martin Armstrong The Listener London England Thursday May 14 1953 p 815 Issue 1263 The Human Age Wyndham Lewis The Listener London England Thursday June 2 1955 p 976 A Kind of Loving The Literature of Stan Barstow 5 A Kind of Loving 1962 IMDb 6 Jim Cox Say Goodnight Gracie The Last Years of Network Radio pp 145 148 John Dunning On the Air The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio Oxford University Press 1998 p 742 ISBN 978 0 19 507678 3 Robb Brian J 2012 A Brief Guide to Star Wars London Hachette ISBN 978 1 78033 583 4 Retrieved 21 July 2016 John Derek That Time NPR Turned Star Wars Into A Radio Drama And It Actually Worked NPR org All Things Considered National Public Radio Archived from the original on 20 June 2016 Retrieved 22 July 2016 a b Lichtig Toby 24 April 2007 The podcast s the thing to revive radio drama The Guardian London Retrieved 2010 04 12 The Archers Frequently Asked Questions BBC Radio 4 BBC Eight years of Westway end BBC News 2005 10 28 Retrieved 2010 04 12 Listen Selected Shorts selectedshorts org Mellor Louise 6 March 2013 Neil Gaiman s Neverwhere BBC Radio 4 launch report London Den of Geek Retrieved 2013 06 18 LicHatfullhtig Jonathan 4 March 2013 Neil Gaiman Natalie Dormer and More Talk Neverwhere London SciFiNow Retrieved 2013 06 13 White Nancy J 9 November 2012 Legendary CBC radio drama studio to close The Toronto Star Maughan Shannon L A Theatre Works at 40 Publishers Weekly Retrieved 6 February 2018 Bergan Ronald September 9 2009 Ray Barrett The Guardian London Cypriot Sketch Cybc media com 2015 Retrieved 2015 05 29 Torsten Wissmann Geographies of Urban Sound 2016 Routledge publisher in the year 2014 published by Ashgate Publishing p 204 Cite Germany is the most important market for audio plays About Us Drama on One Sundays 8pm RTE ie Archived from the original on 2021 06 01 Retrieved 2020 01 16 NHK編 放送の五十年 昭和とともに 日本放送出版協会 1977年 pp 14 26 ラジオの夜明け 岩淵東洋男 わたしの音響史 社会思想社 1981年 pp 146 167 効果 の歩み 炭坑の中 放送の五十年 pp 28 30 ラジオドラマのはじまり 空想美少女用語辞典 空想美少女大百科 電脳萌え萌え美少女大集合 宝島社 別冊宝島 1999年1月3日 245頁 ISBN 4 7966 9421 8 Radioteatret Store norske leksikon in Norwegian Retrieved 23 September 2016 Pogrzeb Kiejstuta pionierski wyczyn Polskiego Radia i Witolda Hulewicza polskieradio pl in Polish Polskie Radio 2021 05 17 Retrieved 2022 04 08 To jedno z najdluzej nadawanych sluchowisk na swiecie Matysiakowie maja 64 lata polskieradio pl in Polish Polskie Radio 2021 02 13 Retrieved 2022 04 08 Superprodukcje Audioteki audioteka pl in Polish Audioteka Retrieved 2022 04 08 Marcin Zwierzchowski 2015 03 02 The Walking Dead tomy VII i VIII sluchowisko powraca Naekranie pl in Polish Retrieved 2022 04 08 Nagrody Teatru Polskiego Radia laureaci nagrody Wielki Splendor 2021 polskieradio pl in Polish Polskie Radio 2021 12 06 Retrieved 2022 04 08 Further reading EditTim Crook Radio Drama Theory and Practice London New York Routledge 1999 Armin Paul Frank Das englische und amerikanische Horspiel Munchen Fink 1981 Walter K Kingson and Rome Cowgill Radio Drama Acting and Production A Handbook New York Rinehart 1950 Karl Ladle Horspielforschung Schnittpunkt zwischen Literatur Medien und Asthetik Wiesbaden Deutscher Universitats Verlag 2001 Sherman Paxton Lawton Radio Drama Boston Expression Company 1938 Peter Lewis ed Radio Drama London New York Longman 1981 Dermot Rattigan Theatre of Sound Radio and the Dramatic Imagination 2nd edition Carysfort Press 2003 Neil Verma Theater of the Mind Imagination Aesthetics and American Radio Drama Chicago University of Chicago Press 2012 External links Edit Look up radio drama in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Radio dramas Audio Drama com A directory of audio drama websites The Audio Drama Production Podcast Instructional podcast on the production of audio drama The Well tempered Audio Dramatist Treatise on writing producing performing and directing audio plays in the 21st century Necrology of Old Radio Personalities archived at the Wayback Machine National Audio Theatre Festivals Radio drama workshop BBC sources Edit The BBC Story The Written Archives 7 Radio Plays amp Radio Drama webpage England 8 British Radio Drama A Cultural Case History by Tim Crook 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Radio drama amp oldid 1126906959, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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