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- Lux_Radio_Theatre abstract "Lux Radio Theatre, sometimes spelled Lux Radio Theater, a long-run classic radio anthology series, was broadcast on the NBC Blue Network (1934-35); CBS Radio (1935-54), and NBC Radio (1954-55). Initially, the series adapted Broadway plays during its first two seasons before it began adapting films. These hour-long radio programs were performed live before studio audiences. The series became the most popular dramatic anthology series on radio, broadcast for more than 20 years and continued on television as the Lux Video Theatre through most of the 1950s. The primary sponsor of the show was Unilever through its Lux Soap brand.Broadcasting from New York, the series premiered at 2:30 p.m., October 14, 1934, on the NBC Blue Network with a production of Seventh Heaven starring Miriam Hopkins and John Boles in a full-hour adaptation of the 1922–24 Broadway production by Austin Strong. The host was the show's fictional producer, Douglass Garrick (portrayed by John Anthony). Doris Dagmar played another fictional character, Peggy Winthrop, who delivered the Lux commercials. Each show featured a scripted session with Garrick talking to the lead actors. Anthony appeared as Garrick from the premiere 1934 episode until June 30, 1935. Garrick was portrayed by Albert Hayes from July 29, 1935 to May 25, 1936, when the show moved to the West Coast.Cecil B. DeMille took over as the host on June 1, 1936, continuing until January 22, 1945. That initial episode with DeMille featured Marlene Dietrich and Clark Gable in The Legionnaire and the Lady. On several occasions, usually when he was out of town, he was temporarily replaced by various celebrities, including Leslie Howard and Edward Arnold.Lux Radio Theatre strove to feature as many of the original stars of the original stage and film productions as possible, usually paying them $5,000 an appearance. In 1936, when sponsor Lever Brothers (who made Lux soap and detergent) moved the show from New York City to Hollywood, the program began to emphasize adaptations of films rather than plays. The first Lux film adaptation was The Legionnaire and the Lady, with Marlene Dietrich and Clark Gable, based on the film Morocco. That was followed by a Lux adaptation of The Thin Man, featuring the movie's stars, Myrna Loy and William Powell.".
- Lux_Radio_Theatre country United_States.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre format Anthology_series.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre language English_language.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre presenter Cecil_B._DeMille.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre presenter William_Keighley.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre thumbnail Lux_Radio_Theatre_1948.jpg?width=300.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageExternalLink lluxradio.html.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageExternalLink holdingsInfo?bibId=65973.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageExternalLink display.w3p;adv=yes;group=;groupequals=;holdingType=;page=0;parentid=;query=Number%3A143501;querytype=;rec=0;resCount=10.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageExternalLink lux.xml.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageExternalLink ?p=luxr.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageExternalLink war_worlds_lux.htm.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageExternalLink Lux01.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageID "1425539".
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageLength "13580".
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageOutDegree "153".
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageRevisionID "703312678".
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink 7th_Heaven_(1927_film).
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Academy_Award_(radio).
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Academy_of_Motion_Picture_Arts_and_Sciences.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Alice_Faye.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink American_Federation_of_Television_and_Radio_Artists.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Anthology_series.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Q._Bryan.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Authors_Playhouse.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Barbara_Stanwyck.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Bette_Davis.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Betty_Grable.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Betty_Hutton.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Bing_Crosby.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Blue_Network.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Bob_Hope.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Broadway_theatre.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink CBS.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink CBS_Radio.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink CBS_Radio_Workshop.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Carole_Lombard.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Cary_Grant.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Category:1930s_American_radio_programs.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Category:1940s_American_radio_programs.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Category:1950s_American_radio_programs.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_radio_dramas.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Category:CBS_Radio_programs.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Category:NBC_radio_programs.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Category:National_Radio_Hall_of_Fame_inductees.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Category:Peabody_Award_winning_radio_programs.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Category:Radio_programs_based_on_works.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Cavalcade_of_America.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Cecil_B._DeMille.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Clark_Gable.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Closed_shop.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Curtain_Time_(radio_program).
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Deanna_Durbin.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Don_Wilson_(announcer).
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Edward_Arnold_(actor).
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Edward_G._Robinson.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Elizabeth_Taylor.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink English_language.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Fibber_McGee_and_Molly.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink File:Luxradioexterior.jpg.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Ford_Theatre.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Frank_Sinatra.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Fred_Allen.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Fredric_March.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Gene_Kelly.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink General_Electric_Theater.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink George_Burns.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Ginger_Rogers.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Gloria_Swanson.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Gracie_Allen.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Hedy_Lamarr.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Fonda.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Hollywood.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Hollywood_Hotel_(radio_program).
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Howard_Hughes.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Humphrey_Bogart.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Huntington_Hartford.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Ingrid_Bergman.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Irene_Dunne.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Jack_Benny.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink James_Cagney.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink James_Mason.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink James_Stewart.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Jeanette_MacDonald.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Jim_Jordan_(actor).
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Joan_Crawford.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Joan_Fontaine.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink John_Boles_(actor).
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink John_Wayne.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Cotten.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Judy_Garland.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Katharine_Hepburn.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Kermit_Schaefer.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Lana_Turner.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Lauren_Bacall.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Laurence_Olivier.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Leslie_Howard_(actor).
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink Lever_Brothers.
- Lux_Radio_Theatre wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Lux_Radio_Theatre_episodes.