1940’s Radio Hour

The 1940s Radio Hour (Find out more on Facebook)

Presented by WV Wesleyan College

Event InfoType: Music/Arts – Performance

When: Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 8:00pm through Sunday, November 16, 2008 at 2:00pm
Location: Atkinson Auditorium, Buckhannon, WV

Description: The 1940’s Radio Hour takes the audience on a nostalgic trip down memory lane into a backdrop of the second World War, setting the stage for swinging big band music and old fashioned situation comedy of a bygone period. It takes place in a small 5000-watt New York City radio station (WOV) located in the Hotel Astor’s Algonquin Room around Christmastime 1942 and is centered around a group of performers and their attempts to make it to the “big time” in show biz. There is a wide selection of stock characters of various ages such as the harried producer, the delivery boy who aspires to stardom, the torch singer who raises temperatures in the studio, the alcoholic featured male vocalist and the kindly elderly man who has seen everything and understands everyone. The radio program, the Mutual Manhattan Variety Cavalcade, is seen through the eyes of the theatre audience who become the actual radio station audience. This fun production includes such old time greats as Blue Moon, Boogie Woogle Bugle Boy, Old Black Magic, Ain’t She Sweet, Kalamazoo, Blue in the Night, I Got It Bad and That Ain’t Good, I’ll Be Seeing You, and Strike Up the Band.

Cast
Lindsay Dawson – Shirley
Sara Ogawa – Mops
Lance Russell – Johnny Cantone
Josh Peters – Clifton
Gabby Tokach – Lou Cohn
Greg Ramsey – Wally Ferguson
Emily Elborn – Connie Miller
Becky Myers – Ginger Brooks
Josh Holets – B.J. Gibson
Becca Culp – Ann Collier
Kelsey Bowman – Geneva Lee Brown
Ryan Perry – Biff Baker

The show runs Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8 and Sunday at 2!!!


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Comments

2 responses to “1940’s Radio Hour”

  1. Bill Donegan Avatar
    Bill Donegan

    Are they going to do this again in 2009?

    Bill and Linda

  2. Jim Barnes Avatar
    Jim Barnes

    I really don’t know, but I will check into it. Chances are that it was a one-of-a-kind event, since it was a college production.

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