An Old Time Radio Show that is guaranteed to let you "escape" from the daily grind
By Ned Norris
In the Golden Days of Radio, back in the 1930s to the 1950s, most popular radio series had a set time for going out each week.
Occasionally, there might be a change in the schedule, but on the whole a consistent time-slot was something that helped build a large audience
and so was something the big networks aimed to achieve.
One noticeable exception to the above rule was a wonderful dramatic adventure anthology series called Escape, whose time-slot
shifted eighteen times in its seven-year run from 1947-54. To make matters even worse it had a habit of coming and going and sometimes
disappearing off the schedules altogether at short notice for weeks on end only to resurface weeks later in a completely different timeslot.
The fragrant disregard CBS paid to building a regular timeslot and audience for Escape could make you think that it was a
mediocre show that was only good as a lightweight filler for when the regular show was off-the-air, such as during the quiet summer months. In my
opinion, and that of many old radio aficionados, this couldn't be further from the truth. Escape is probably the best adventure anthology ever
broadcast.
For me, Escape is everything that was good about old-time radio drama rolled into one. The title itself almost sums up the very
essence of what radio drama is all about. Each and every episode was a micro drama carefully planned to capture the listeners attention for
thirty minutes. There were over two-hundred episodes made and almost every one is as good today as it was half a century ago.
For the first few years the opening announcement varied on an almost weekly basis, but by the 1950s it had become the now
famous:
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Tired of the everyday grind?
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Ever dream of a life of romantic adventure?
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Want to get away from it all?
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We offer you ... ESCAPE!
This may give the wrong impression as Escape was far more than a swashbuckling adventure yarn. It was a superbly scripted,
brilliantly produced series that brought to the radio adaptations of classic stories by famous writers as well as new work by unknown talent.
Many of the stories were later reused by more high profile shows such as Suspense, but on the whole the Escape versions were of equal quality and
sometimes more dramatically focused and atmospheric.
When Radio Life wrote "These stories all possess many times the reality that most radio writing conveys" it hit the nail on the
head. This is a quality show in every way.
If you've never given this tremendous series a chance it's well worth tracking down. Whether you listen in the car on your daily
commute, whilst doing the housework, relaxing in your favorite easy-chair, or snuggled up in bed - you really will be thrilled!
Ned Norris is the webmaster of www.rusc.com, one of the oldest and
most highly regarded old time radio web sites on the Internet. It's a place where you can relive the golden days of radio at your leisure,
download or listen online to 1000s of classic shows, and enjoy regularly updated editorial and reviews on old time radio and related
topics.
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