- Source: The Adventures of Topper
The Adventures of Topper is a radio situation comedy in the United States. It was broadcast on NBC June 7 – September 13, 1945, as a summer replacement for Dinah Shore's program.
Format
The 30-minute program was based on characters created by novelist Thorne Smith. Cosmo Topper, a businessman, bought the house that had been inhabited by George and Marian Kerby before they died. He had no idea that the Kerbys' ghosts haunted the house. Confusion arose because only Topper could see the ghosts, leading his wife to wonder why he spoke to people who apparently were not there.
David C. Tucker, in his book, The Women Who Made Television Funny: Ten Stars of 1950s Sitcoms, cited the program's ghost-based premise as one reason for its lack of success: "As noted by Variety's reviewer, however, a comedy centered on the antics of appearing and disappearing ghosts 'reads good on paper and was even enhanced in the film treatment,' but played less well on radio, resulting in a show he found 'singularly unfunny.'"
The program was sponsored by Post Toasties cereal and Maxwell House coffee.
Personnel
Characters in the program and the actors who played them are shown in the table below.
Source: Radio Programs, 1924–1984: A Catalog of More Than 1800 Shows, except as noted.
The announcer was Richard Kollmar.
See also
Topper (film)
Topper (TV series)
References
External links
The Adventures of Topper episodes from the Internet Archive
The Adventures of Topper episodes from Old Time Radio Researchers Group Library
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Penghargaan Oscar untuk Efek Visual Terbaik
- Lana Turner
- Leon Belasco
- Eugene Pallette
- Theodore von Eltz
- Cyril Ring
- Alan Mowbray
- Acara televisi Amerika Serikat terpopuler menurut musim
- John Rambo
- Acara televisi Amerika Serikat terpopuler 1954–55
- The Adventures of Topper
- Thorne Smith
- Topper (TV series)
- The Beezer
- List of old-time radio programs
- 1945 in radio
- List of radio comedies
- Topper Returns
- List of Topper comic strips
- List of Beano comic strips