THE DEATH OF OLIVIER BACAILLE [SHORT-STORY] DEATH RIDES THE HIGHWAY [RADIO SERIES] [Saturday—7:30-8:00 PM] February 1, 1936 [BERKLEY DAILY GAZETTE: “…Supplementing the current campaign against reckless driving, ‘Death Rides the Highway,’ dramatization based on actual traffic accidents, makes its initial appearance tonight from 7:30 to 8 o’clock, the spot it will occupy each week on KPO. William Dugan is the script writer…”] February 8, 1936 February 15, 1936 February 22, 1936 [Friday—7:30-8:00 PM] February 28, 1936 [BAKERSFIELD CALIFORNIAN: “…Due to a change of broadcast dates, the many followers of the new radio drama ‘Death Rides the Highways [sic]’ who do not want to miss any of the programs will be dialing their favorite NBC Red Network station on Friday nights instead of Saturdays, although the hour will remain the same… The first Friday program will be broadcast tonight, February 28. In its two fold role, ‘Death Rides the Highway’ not only provides dramatic radio entertainment for hundreds of thousands of radio listeners but also is a mighty factor in the great nation-wide safety campaign. The sponsors of the program, the Western Auto Supply Company, hope that it will help to lessen the number of automobile accidents on western highways…”] DEATH TAKES A HOLIDAY [STAGE-PLAY; MOTION-PICTURE] Italian play of melancholy romanticism by Alberto Casella, adapted for the English-speaking stage by Walter Ferris. “Casella, besides being an author, is a dare-devil speed demon, a noted duelist, a devil-may-care soldier who entered the World War at the age of 15 and became the youngest man ever to hold the rank of captain. “At the height of one of the bloodiest battles on the Italian front, Casella got the idea for his play, wondering what would happen if Death were to go on a vacation for a few days. With fellow soldiers dying all around him, Casella became so enraptured with the notion that he set to work on it immediately after the Armistice was signed. “Before Walter Ferris adapted ‘Death Takes a Holiday’ to English, the play was presented on the Continent in leading cities. It came to Broadway in 1929 and made two more appearances there over a three-year period. In between its New York appearances, it toured all over the country, being presented in practically every large city in America.” “It was produced by Lee Schubert at the Ethel Barrymore theatre, New York, December 26, 1929, and ran 180 performances.” [CHRONOLOGY] THE FLEISCHMANN HOUR (WEAF, NEW YORK—NBC-RED) [Thursday— July 3, 1933 “Death Takes a Holiday” [RADIOGOLDINDEX: “…Rudy introduces a scene from a play, which he says, ‘is not really good radio material at all...”] PARAMOUNT MOVIE PARADE (TRANSCIPTION DISC) February 25, 1934 “Death Takes a Holiday” CAST: Fredric March, Gail Patrick, Kent Taylor, Evelyn Venable. THE FLEISCHMANN HOUR (WEAF, NEW YORK—NBC-RED) [Thursday— October 11, 1934 “Death Takes a Holiday” CAST: Boris Karloff, et al. THE RADIO GUILD (WJZ, NEW YORK—WJZ, NEW YORK—NBC-BLUE) [Monday— October 15, 1934 “Death Takes a Holiday” CAMEL CARAVAN (KHJ, LOS ANGELES) [Tuesday—6:30-7:30 PM] December 8, 1936 “Death Takes a Holiday” [“…When the Caravan comes to the microphone you will hear Boris Karloff, famed ‘horror’ man of the movies. He will play the lead in the ‘Caravan’s’ presentation of ‘Death Takes a Holiday.’ The story is based on the poetic conception of Death suspending all activities for three days, during which period he falls in love with a beautiful girl, and through her, realizes why mortals fear him..”] CAST: Mary Jane Higby, Boris Karloff, et al. THE LUX RADIO THEATRE (KNX, HOLLYWOOD—CBS) [Monday— March 22, 1937 “Death Takes a Holiday” SCRIPT: George Wells. PERSONNEL: Walter Ferris (intermission guest), Charlie Forsyth (sound effects), Louis Silvers (musical director), Frank Woodruff (director). CAST: Daisy Belmore, Margaret Brayton, Arthur Q. Bryan, Florence Eldridge, Charles Emerson, Kay Johnson, Gene Lockhart, Fredric March, Lou Merrill, Frank Nelson, Bernard Phillips, Howard Phillips, Theresa Maxwell. GREAT MOMENTS FROM GREAT PLAYS (WABC, NEW YORK) [Friday—9:00-9:30 PM] July 25, 1941 “Death Takes a Holiday” EVERYTHING FOR THE BOYS (KFI, LOS ANGELES) [Tuesday—9:00-9:30 PM] April 25, 1944 “Death Takes a Holiday” SCRIPT: Arch Oboler. PERSONNEL: Gordon Jenkins (musical director), Arch Oboler (director). CAST: Ingrid Bergman, Ronald Colman, Hans Conried, Luis Van Rooten. BROWNSTONE THEATER (WOR, NEW YORK—MUTUAL) ???day— September 2, 1945 “Death Takes a Holiday” PERSONNEL: Clayton Hamilton (host), Sylvan Levin (music), Jock MacGregor (director). CAST: Jackson Beck, et al. EXTANT RECORDING: One-half of broadcast survives. (HOME SERVICE, LONDON) [Monday—9:15-10:45 PM] February 17, 1947 “Death Takes a Holiday”