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Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep01) Reappointment
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep02) Student Editorial
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep03) The Gangster's Son
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep04) Wellman's Nose - Charter Day Ceremonies
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep05) Dr Bromley, Shakespeare Expert
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep06) The Snowman
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep07) The Chinese Student
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep08) Student Thief
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep09) Merton Savada's Crush
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep10) Victoria's New Review
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep11) Dirty Politics
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep12) Professor Gerhardt's Secret
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep13) The Ivy Chamber Music and Knockwurst Society
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep14) Toddy Plays Hooky
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep15) Mrs. Foster's Lost Dog
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep16) Traffic and Cocoanuts
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep17) The Scofield Prize
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep18) Student Actress
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep19) Mrs. Whitney's Statue
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep20) Dr Abel
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep21) The Fighting Med Student
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep22) The Sexton Award
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep23) D-Day
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep24) Stolen First Edition
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep25) The Bentheimers and the Census
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep26) Faculty Raffle
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep27) Poetry Reading
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep28) The Education of Annie Belle
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep31) The Leslie Hoff Painting
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep32) The New English Teacher
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep33) Phone Problems
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep34) Scandal
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep38) The Glee Club Serenades the Halls
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep39) Jack Benny Visits Ivy
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep40) The Honor Student
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep45) Professor Barrette's Play
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep48) The Goya Bequest
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep49) Professor Warren's Retirement
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep52) Calhoun Gaddy
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep53) The French Scholarship
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep54) Eddie Gray's Wedding
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep55) His Father's Image
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep60) Romiette and Julio
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep61) Note the Quote
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep62) Student Vandalism and the Draft
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep63) Gloria Golightly
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep65) Cook's Night Out
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep66) Finals Day Award
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep68) Finals Season
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep69) Pork Barrel Politics
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep71) Adoption
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep72) Editorial in the Ivy Bull
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep73) Student Council Election
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep74) Mrs. Why
Halls of Ivy 1951 (ep75) Football Coach
Halls of Ivy 1950 (ep20) Dr Abel
The Halls of Ivy is an American situation comedy that ran from 1950 to 1952 on NBC radio, created by Fibber McGee & Molly co-creator/writer Don Quinn. The series was adapted into a CBS television comedy (1954–55) produced by ITC Entertainment and Television Programs of America. British husband-and-wife actors Ronald Colman and Benita Hume starred in both versions of the show.
Quinn developed the show after he had decided to leave Fibber McGee & Molly in the hands of his protégé Phil Leslie. The Halls of Ivy's audition program featured radio veteran Gale Gordon (then co-starring in Our Miss Brooks) and Edna Best in the roles that ultimately went to the Colman’s, who demonstrated a flair for radio comedy during the late 1940s recurring roles on The Jack Benny Program.
The Halls of Ivy featured Ronald Colman as William Todhunter Hall, the president of small, Midwestern Ivy College, and Benita Hume as his wife, Victoria, a former British musical comedy star who sometimes feels the tug of her former profession, and followed their interactions with students, friends, and college trustees. Others in the cast included Herb Butterfield as testy board chairman Clarence Wellman, Willard Waterman (then starring as Harold Peary's successor as The Great Gildersleeve) as board member John Merriweather, and Bea Benaderet, Elizabeth Patterson, and Gloria Gordon as the Halls' maids. Alan Reed (television's Fred Flintstone) appeared periodically as the stuffy English teacher, Professor Heaslip. Other actors who appeared included Virginia Gregg, Lee Patrick, Jean Vander Pyl, Rolfe Sedan, Sidney Miller, William Tracy, Sam Edwards, Arthur Q. Bryan, Barton Yarborough, James Gleason, Jerry Hausner and other actors.
The series ran 109 half-hour radio episodes from January 6, 1950, to June 25, 1952, with Quinn, Jerome Lawrence and Robert Lee writing many of the scripts and giving free if even more sophisticated play to Quinn's knack for language play, inverted cliches and swift puns (including the show's title and lead characters), a knack he'd shown for years writing Fibber McGee & Molly. Jerome Lawrence and Robert Lee continued as a writing team; their best-known play is Inherit the Wind. Cameron Blake, Walter Brown Newman, Robert Sinclair, and Milton and Barbara Merlin became writers for the program as well.
In subject matter, the program was often notably ahead of its time, forward looking, and willing to tackle controversial topics. "Hell Week," first broadcast on January 2, 1952, boldly addressed the unforeseen dangers of college fraternity hazing. "The Leslie Hoff Painting" (September 27, 1950) and "The Chinese Student" (February 7, 1950) both openly countenanced and dealt with instances of racial bigotry. Another episode centered on an unmarried student's pregnancy.
But listeners were surprised to discover that the episode of January 24, 1951, "The Goya Bequest"—a story examining the bequest of a Goya painting that was suspected of being a fraud hyped by its late owner to avoid paying customs duties when bringing to the United States—was written by Colman, who poked fun at his accomplishment while taking a rare turn giving the evening's credits at the show's conclusion.
A further treat was the episode of November 22, 1951, in which Jack Benny appeared as himself, in a storyline involving his accepting Victoria Hall's invitation to perform for charity at Ivy College.
The sponsor was the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company ("The Beer That Made Milwaukee Famous"). Nat Wolff produced and directed. Henry Russell handled the music and co-wrote the theme with Vick Knight. Radio veteran Ken Carpenter was the announcer.
The radio program received a Peabody Award in 1950.
Radio series
The Halls of Ivy
Genre Situation comedy
Running time 30 minutes
Country of origin United States
Language(s) English
Home station NBC
Starring Ronald Colman
Benita Hume
Willard Waterman
Bea Benaderet
Elizabeth Patterson
Alan Reed
Created by Don Quinn
Original release January 6, 1950 – June 25, 1952
No. of series 3
No. of episodes 109
Audio format Monaural
Sponsored by Schlitz beer
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