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Andrew C. Love (né Anderson Christian Love; 23 October 1894 Bridgeport, Connecticut – 14 December 1987 San Diego, California) was an NBC national broadcast radio theater producer and director on the West Coast (in California).[1]
Career
[edit]In 1914, Love became manager of the talking machine department of Kohler & Chase in Seattle, succeeded Harry Welles Dawley (1883–1963), who resigned a short time earlier.[2] Before 1914, Love had been with the Columbia Graphophone Co. in that city. Since before 1918, and through 1920, Love worked for the San Francisco branch of the Columbia Graphophone Company. He sold phonographs.
U.S. Army, World War I
[edit]In 1918, Love enlisted in the U.S. Army.
Post World War I
[edit]Before marring Hazel in 1920, Hazel, had worked for the talking machine department of the Fresno store of the Wiley B. Allen Co. Sometime after his marriage in 1920, Love is covered territory in the San Joaquin Valley for the Columbia.
NBC Radio
[edit]Since about 1930, Love worked for NBC Radio, initially in San Francisco.[3]
From at least 1935,[4] until 1937, Love had been a continuity editor for NBC in San Francisco.
- University Radio Course, UC Berkeley Extension Division in San Francisco. Love, then a continuity acceptance editor for NBC in San Francisco, taught, via broadcast radio, a ten-week course in all branches of continuity writing.[5]
NBC Hollywood
[edit]Effective July 1, 1937, NBC transferred him to Hollywood to work with Janet MacRorie (maiden; 1887–1950) as head of similar position – critical editor of NBC's Continuity Acceptance Division (a censor)[6] – in keeping with the rise in NBC radio production in Hollywood and the growing importance of the editing phase of continuity acceptance work.[7][8][9] MacRorie was, at the time, head of continuity acceptance for all of NBC.
Love convinced UCLA Extension division to offer a course on radio writing and on November 3, 1937, he began teaching it.[10]
Love directed several NBC radio shows, including:
- Amos 'n' Andy
- The Bob Burns Show
- The Dunninger Show
- 1951–1955: Barrie Craig, Confidential Investigator[11]
- 1951–1952: NBC Presents: Short Story
Selected episodes:- 1951: "The Lottery"
- 1853–1954: Rocky Fortune[11]
- The Eternal Light
- 1949: Emotion[12]
- 1953–1954: Last Man Out[12]
- The New Theater
- 1948–1951: NBC University Theater[13]
- The Truitts.[14]
From 1951 to 1973, Love produced the national NBC radio broadcast of live performances by the Oregon Shakespeare Festival.[15]
Awards
[edit]- Two Peabody Awards for excellence in radio (before 1959)
- 1948: NBC University Theatre, NBC Radio?
- 1962: The Eternal Light, NBC Radio?
- 1967: The Eternal Light, NBC Radio?
- 1972: Conversations with Will Shakespeare and Certain of His Friends (series)
- KOAC, Corvallis, Oregon
- KOAP-FM, Portland, Oregon
- Carl Ritchie, writer and narrater
- Frank Woodman of KOAC, producer
- Andrew C. Love, consultant
Credits
[edit]- Andrew C. Love, Producer, 27th Academy Awards, March 30, 1955, NBC Radio and NBC TV
- Andrew C. Love, Producer & Director for NBC Radio, 28th Academy Awards, March 21, 1956, NBC Radio and NBC TV[16]
Family
[edit]- Love, on October 9, 1920, married Hazel Rae Leighton (1893–1984) in Alameda County.[17]
- Andrew was born to Danish-born parents, Niels Andersen Løve (1868–1908) and Else Marie Mortensen. Andrew was 13 years old when his father died.
- Both Andrew's parents were born in Denmark. The surname "Løve," in Danish, translates to "Lion."
Notes and references
[edit]Notes
[edit]- There may be some confusion between Andrew Christian Love, the NBC producer of this article, and Andrew Jackson Love (1911–1982), jazz singer with the Tune Twisters because of a column on December 9, 1976, in the Greater Oregon, by E.M. Mitchell saying that the two are one and the same.[18]
References
[edit]- ^ Chapter 7: "'The Tendency to Deprave and Corrupt Morals' – Regulation and Irregular Sexuality in Golden Age Radio Comedy," by Matthew Murray, Radio Reader: Essays in the Cultural History of Radio, Michele Hilmes & Jason Loviglio (eds.), Routledge (2002), pps. 143 & 144; OCLC 248358184
- ^ "New Manager in Seattle," Talking Machine World, Vol. 10, No. 6, June 15, 1914, p. 4
- ^ "Hollywood Service Awards," NBC Chimes, November-December 1955, p. 9; OCLC 907641884, 940080556
- ^ "Good Taste, Common Sense," Broadcasting, April 15, 1935, p. 50
- ^ "University Radio Course," Broadcast Advertising, October 1, 1936, p. 60
- ^ Women in Radio: Illustrated by Biographical Sketches, by Frances Willard Kerr, Women's Bureau – Bulletin 22, United States Department of Labor (May 1947), p. 16
- ^ "Change Announced by NBC Executive," San Francisco Examiner, June 20, 1937, Sec. 1, p. 18 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
- ^ "Pigs Ate My Roses": Media Moralities, Comedic Inversions, and the First Amendment" (PhD dissertation) by Anna Lisa Candido, McGill University, March 2018, p. 87
- ^ "The Sinners and the Scapegoat: Public Reaction in the Press to Mae West's Adam and Eve Skit," by Lori Amber Roessner & Matthew Broaddus, American Journalism, Vol. 30, No. 4, Autumn 2013, p. 531 (520–546); OCLC 7183737559, 1073621329, 6782226503; ISSN 0882-1127
- ^ "Writing Class at UCLA," Radio Daily, Vol. 2, No. 77, October 19, 1937, p. 5
- ^ a b Radio Crime Fighters: More Than 300 Programs from the Golden Age, by Jim Cox (born 1939), McFarland & Company (2002); OCLC 1001915825; ISBN 978-0-7864-4324-6In reference to:
- ^ a b Radio Program Openings and Closings, 1931–1972, by Vincent Terrace (born 1948), McFarland & Company (2003; 2011); OCLC 910878830; ISBN 978-0-7864-4925-5In reference to:
Emotion, pps. 74–75
Last Man Out, p. 132
- ^ "NBC University Theater," Radio & Television Best, Vol. 2, No. 1, December 1948, p. 24; OCLC 4842093
- ^ On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio, by John Dunning, Oxford University Press (1998), pps. 102, 234, 481, 482, 484, 682; OCLC Oxford University Press
- ^ "Audio Collection: 1950–2013," Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Archives Division, Collection No. A0002, p. 5
- ^ "Credits for the 28th Annual Awards Presentations of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences," NBC Trade News, March 15, 1956; OCLC 858620855
- ^ "Andrew C. Love Married," Talking Machine World, Vol. 16, No. 11, November 15, 1920, p. 133
- ^ "TV–Radio Notes" (column), "Southward Ho," by E.M. Beard (né Eugene Mitchell Beard; 1919–2002), Vol. 63, No. 40, December 9, 1976; OCLC 36369400 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)(the Greater Oregon was a weekly published in Albany from January 17, 1929, to May 25, 1978)