{
  "title": "CASE HISTORY",
  "category": "[RADIO-SCRIPT]",
  "article": "Original drama by Milton Geiger was the fifth broadcast of The Columbia Workshop.\n“Simulated conditions approached reality somewhat more closely than was anticipated during\nthe rehearsal of last week’s CBS Columbia Workshop experimental drama. The scene was laid in a\nhospital where oxygen was being administered in an effort to revive an unconscious aviator.\nNormally, a tank of compressed air is employed for such sound effects, but at rehearsal time only\na tank of oxygen was available. The oxygen was allowed to escape on one side of the microphone\nwhile Kenneth Delmar breathed heavily as would a man in a coma. All at once, to the\nbewilderment of director Irving Reis, Delmar began missing cues and blinking. Investigation\nshowed that Delmar was literally over-stimulated from breathing the escaping gas.”",
  "origination": "",
  "duration": "",
  "personnel": "",
  "extant_recordings": "",
  "chronology": "THE COLUMBIA WORKSHOP (WABC, NEW YORK—CBS)\n[Saturday—\nAugust 15, 1936\n“Case History”\nSCRIPT: Milton Geiger.\nPERSONNEL: Irving Reis (director).\nCAST: Kenneth Delmar (Rivers), Edwin Jerome, et al.\nEXTANT RECORDING",
  "sources": "",
  "gallery": "",
  "images": []
}