+ The Goldbergs is a comedy-drama broadcast from 1929 to 1946 on American radio, and from 1949 to 1956 on American television. It was adapted into a 1948 play, Me and Molly, and a 1973 Broadway musical, Molly. The program was devised by writer-actress Gertrude Berg in 1928 and sold to the NBC radio network the following year. It was a domestic comedy featuring the home life of a Jewish family, supposedly located at 1038 East Tremont Avenue in the Bronx. In addition to writing the scripts and directing each episode, Berg starred as bighearted, lovingly meddlesome, and somewhat stereotypical matriarch Molly Goldberg. The show began as a portrait of Jewish tenement life before later evoking such growing pains as moving into a more suburban setting and struggling with assimilation while sustaining their roots. The Goldbergs began as a weekly 15-minute program called The Rise of the Goldbergs on November 20, 1929, going daily in 1931. The series moved to CBS in 1936 with the title shortened to The Goldbergs. Like other 15-minute comedies of the day, such as Amos 'n' Andy, Lum and Abner, Easy Aces, Vic and Sade and Myrt and Marge, The Goldbergs was a serial with running storylines. Berg's usual introduction—in character as Molly, hollering, "Yoo-hoo! Is anybody...?"—became a catchphrase. In the 1940s, this was followed by Bud Collyer warbling, "There she is, folks—that's Molly Goldberg, a woman with a place in every heart and a finger in every pie". When Gertrude Berg missed a couple of weeks due to illness, stations carrying the popular show were flooded with get-well mail. At the height of the show's popularity, Life wrote: "For millions of Americans, listening to The Goldbergs... has been a happy ritual akin to slipping on a pair of comfortable old shoes that never seem to wear out". Radio historians Frank Buxton and Bill Owen, in The Big Broadcast 1920–1950, noted that The Goldbergs, which they considered a soap opera as much as a comedy, "differed from most of the other 'soaps' in that its leading characters lived through relatively normal situations. Even though it was the story of a poor Jewish family in the Bronx, New York, it had identification for a wide segment of listeners". Of the 15-minute serial comedies, only Amos 'n' Andy enjoyed a longer radio life than The Goldbergs.-WikiPedia Click here to read more about Goldbergs, The
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Please enjoy these 261 old time radio episodes:
Air Date | Title | Synopsis | Rating |
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02.06.1942 | dr cater comes 1148 | ||
02.05.1942 | jake sends an s o s 1147 | ||
02.03.1942 | jakes secret springs leak 1146 | ||
02.02.1942 | molly thinks whats going on 1145 | ||
01.30.1942 | seymour walks to molly 1144 | ||
01.29.1942 | jake wants molly to go to movies 1143 | ||
01.28.1942 | dr cater sr calls 1142 | ||
01.27.1942 | jake and molly play cards 1141 | ||
01.26.1942 | molly and david talk with cater 1140 | ||
01.23.1942 | normalcy returns 1139 | ||
01.22.1942 | orianne makes her decision 1138 | ||
01.21.1942 | way and orianne talk 1137 | ||
01.20.1942 | another talk | ||
01.19.1942 | sammy latitude 1135 | ||
01.16.1942 | molly is sewing buttons 1134 | ||
01.15.1942 | fatherly talk with mr way 1133 | ||
01.14.1942 | mr way to receive a pardon 1132 | ||
01.13.1942 | mr and mrs way talk 1131 | ||
01.09.1942 | letter to mrs bloom 1129 | ||
01.08.1942 | upset over seymours enlisting 1128 | ||
01.07.1942 | stay for coffee 1127 | ||
01.06.1942 | molly admits being wrong 1126 | ||
01.05.1942 | through with orianne 1125 | ||
01.02.1942 | still at goldberg home 1124 | ||
01.01.1942 | how long can mess continue 1123 |
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Shelley
GOLDBERGS - THE RISE OF THE GOLDBERGS
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