Showing posts with label Edward G. Robinson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edward G. Robinson. Show all posts
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Big Town notes
I love Edward G. Robinson as newspaper editor Steve Wilson on the show Big Town - and I often thought he was the driving force behind the show. But I've heard 4 episodes now with Una Munson as Lorelei (she replaced Claire Trevor.) While Munson is fine in the part, the shows have no life without Trevor.
There is a definite acting chemistry between Robinson and Trevor. As you may know, Trevor won an Academy Award for the film, Key Largo, in which Robinson also starred.
She the stars of the cast for Big Town here.
©Jimbo 2010/2011
There is a definite acting chemistry between Robinson and Trevor. As you may know, Trevor won an Academy Award for the film, Key Largo, in which Robinson also starred.
She the stars of the cast for Big Town here.
©Jimbo 2010/2011
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Billboard Vs Jimbo: Big Town
Billboard has it right. This review from 1943 is a year too late for the series of the the same name that included Edward G. Robinson and Claire Trevor.
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| "Wallop-packers" |
That series named Big Town (1938-1942) has very few surviving entries but they are wallop-packers and they pretty much go to the head of the class (or close to it.)
I'm not sure how many Warner Brothers' films you have seen in the late 1930's but there is an air to them that defies explanation; they are fast, short, powerful films usually about a hoodlum or a newspaper.
Big Town prior to 1943 is about a newspaper with Robinson the cigar-sucking editor and Trevor the Lois Lane-type. The stories are hard-hitting, realistic and fast as lightning.
Adding to the realism is that many of the surviving Big Town episodes (again don't be suckered in by the 1943+ version) are only avilable because the rehearsal exists - and this is what we hear. Man, that's some really, really good radio.
The other series with the same name has very little in common and (while they may not actually be two different shows) are two different shows, entirely.
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