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August 14, 1945: Columbia Presents Corwin debuts Orson Welles on CBS

August 14, 1945: Orson Welles voiced "Fourteen August" , centered on the fall of Japan, The show was scripted by Corwin and broadcast on Columbia Presents Corwin . Ray Bradbury described Corwin as the world's greatest writer/director/producer. His talents and radio shows  attracted the attention of high profile people, including Orson Welles . Corwin died at age 101 in 2011.

"Drama is life with the dull bits cut out." - Alfred Hitchcock

August 13: Happy Birthday to  Alfred Hitchcock ! "Drama is life with the dull bits cut out." - Alfred Hitchcock

August 12: Happy Birthday, Cecil B. DeMille

People can debate whether it was "All right, Mr. DeMille, I'm ready for my closeup," or "I'm ready for my closeup, Mr. DeMille," but there can be no dispute over the fact that the film director was also a huge figure in oldtime radio . Cecil DeMille was a regular actor and frequent host of The Lux Radio Theatre , working alongside such greats as Loretta Young , Lionel Barrymore , Clark Gable , and Geraldine Peck. His run on the show stretched from 1936-1945. DeMille was amazing in his ability to adapt to media after media. Born--today--in 881, he began as a stage actor and writer. He met the new medium of film and began directing silent films in 1914. When radio began crackling over the airwaves, he became a virtuoso in that form, also becoming a legend in talkies--motion pictures with sound. We salute a paragon of versatility, a man known as a filmmaker whose legacy also includes great work in front of the microphone.

August 10: Happy Birthday, Eddie Fisher

1928: The Winter Olympics were held in St. Moritz, Switzerland; Lev Trotsky was arrested in Moscow; WMAK begins broadcasting in Buffalo, while W2XAD from Schenectady airs radio's first "melodrama," The Queen's Messenger; Haile Selassie becomes king of Abyssinia; and in Philadelphia, Eddie Fisher was born on August 10. Fisher was a silky pop crooner, singer of such hits as "Wish You Were Here," "Any Time," "Tell Me Why," "Oh! My Pa-Pa". In 1952, Fisher became a regular on the U.S. Army-produced program Forward March, on which he sang numbers such as "I'm Yours," "All By Myself," and "Lady of Spain."  In a similar capacity, he hit the airwaves in 1954 on a program called Coke Time , belting out tunes, usually backed by Axel Stordahl and His Orchestra. We commemorate the birth of the great entertainer, Eddie Fisher.

August 9, 1942: 'Our Secret Weapon' First Heard on CBS

August 9, 1942: Our Secret Weapon ,featuring the character Rex Stout, was transmitted for the first time on CBS. The wartime show was aimed at countering the Axis propaganda. American listeners were treated to a one-of-a-kind radio program , ' Our Secret Weapon ' aired over CBS Radio. The radio program was created specifically to counter against enemy propaganda and featured Rex Stout, the famous American writer of detective fiction. He was to refute everything that the Axis claimed against the Allied countries.

Happy Birthday to Garrison Keillor (born Aug 7, 1942)

Happy Birthday to Garrison Keillor (born Aug 7, 1942), star of "Prairie Home Companion" -- an ongoing weekly broadcast "from Lake Woebegone" which references the golden age of radio.

August 6, 1939: Dinah Shore stars on Her First Own Show

  August 6, 1939: Dinah Shore , who performed every Sunday evening, started her own show on the NBC Blue Network after her success on network radio with Ben Bernie Orchestra. Dinah Shore, whose real name is Frances Rose Shore,  was an American singer-actress. She was a popular radio and television performer with a career lasting for more than 40 years. She was well-known for her sincerity and great stage presence.