Spotlight on Lee Falk - Other writings - The Picture Man: Difference between revisions

From MandrakeWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(7 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 40: Line 40:
</gallery>
</gallery>


===Other===
===Radio===
====Sketch====
*"The Picture Man" was<ref>"Social News", The Modern View, ''(St. Louis, Missouri)'', 22 Apr 1937, p 13</ref> broadcast over a coast-to-coast network<ref group="footnotes">possible the "Coronet on the Air" on April 16, 1937. Deems Taylor as the host of a weekly program that dramatized various features from the pages of Coronet magazine, with music by Robert Armbruster and his orchestra. 30 min. over NBC Blue in 1937</ref> of one of the large stations from New York on April 16, 1937.
A sketch was given<ref>"Social News", The Modern View ''(St. Louis, Missouri)'' 27 Jan 1938, p 17</ref> on the Rudy Vallee hour.  
*A sketch was given<ref>"Social News", The Modern View ''(St. Louis, Missouri)'' 27 Jan 1938, p 17</ref> on the Rudy Vallee's variety hour (KSD) on January 20, 1938. Starring<ref>"Radio Programs for Today", St. Louis Post-Dispatch ''(St. Louis, Missouri)'', 20 Jan 1938, p 39</ref> Peter Lorre and Lila Lee.
====Radio====
*"The Picture Man" was adapted as a sketch by W. Spier. It was aired<ref>"Broadcast Today", The Gazette ''(Montreal, Quebec, Canada)'', 11 Oct 1938, p 2</ref> on October 11, 1938 by CMB and CBF ''(both in Canada)'' as part of the "Spotlight Parade". The Royalists, Charles Jordan and Allen McIver's orchestra complete the cast.
"The Picture Man" was adapted as a sketch by W. Spier. It was aired on October 11, 1938 by CMB and CBF ''(both in Canada)'' as part of the "Spotlight Parade". The Royalists, Charles Jordan and Allen McIver's orchestra complete the cast.
 
==Note==
<references group="footnotes" />


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 12:05, 24 July 2019

Tpm-1937.jpg
from Coronet
Country: Mini usa.gif USA / English


Plot

Late afternoon, a cheerful group of friends are out walking. They entred a street that Bert couldn't remember having seen before. It looked like an ordinary street, but lacked any sign of humans or human activity, except for a strange looking picture man. For fun, Richie wanted that the picture man to take pictures of them.

Slowly they realize that this man does not take regular pictures. But portray them as they will look in 10, 20 or 5 years, according to their wishes.

Appearances

Time

  • Late afternoon

Scene

  • a quiet and empty street

Cast

  • Bert (first-person)
  • Midge, Bert's girlfriend
  • Richie
  • Grace, Richie's girlfriend
  • Mark
  • The Picture Man


Publications

Books

"The Picture Man" was published in Lee Falk – Storyteller / Lee Falk - Berättaren, published in 2011 by "The Scandinavian Chapter of the Lee Falk Memorial Bengali Explorers Club".

Magazines

"The Picture Man" was published in Coronet (April 1937), and in the Scholastic magazine about the same time. It was translated into Iclandic and printed in Vikan #11/1941 as: "Götuljósmyndarinn".

Radio

  • "The Picture Man" was[1] broadcast over a coast-to-coast network[footnotes 1] of one of the large stations from New York on April 16, 1937.
  • A sketch was given[2] on the Rudy Vallee's variety hour (KSD) on January 20, 1938. Starring[3] Peter Lorre and Lila Lee.
  • "The Picture Man" was adapted as a sketch by W. Spier. It was aired[4] on October 11, 1938 by CMB and CBF (both in Canada) as part of the "Spotlight Parade". The Royalists, Charles Jordan and Allen McIver's orchestra complete the cast.

Note

  1. possible the "Coronet on the Air" on April 16, 1937. Deems Taylor as the host of a weekly program that dramatized various features from the pages of Coronet magazine, with music by Robert Armbruster and his orchestra. 30 min. over NBC Blue in 1937

References

  1. "Social News", The Modern View, (St. Louis, Missouri), 22 Apr 1937, p 13
  2. "Social News", The Modern View (St. Louis, Missouri) 27 Jan 1938, p 17
  3. "Radio Programs for Today", St. Louis Post-Dispatch (St. Louis, Missouri), 20 Jan 1938, p 39
  4. "Broadcast Today", The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec, Canada), 11 Oct 1938, p 2