Showing posts with label radio performers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radio performers. Show all posts

9. Stress in the Radio Biz

 An Ulcer-Making Frenzy

 

"Don't say party to us, say Nan Dorland and Jane Froman, NBC stars who have adopted an early to bed, early to rise, resolution." Quote source: Honolulu Advertiser, Jan. 24, 1932.  Photo source

In the early days ...I knew one man who wrote the commercials for 375 15-minute radio programs per week, wrote and produced an average of 48 transcribed spots a week, wrote a five-a-week daytime serial, and a half-hour dramatic original each week, and did that much for a little over five years," Nan's first husband Richard Morenus wrote in 1949. "I know, and I can show the scars to prove it." [Source: Canadian Broadcaster, January 12, 1949.]

The big clock on the wall of the radio studio ruled the lives of the 75 or so people who worked behind the scenes to produce a show. Ten, nine, eight... three, two - you're on the air!  "That's radio, the fastest business in America and the world today,"writes Carl Prentiss in the August 14, 1937 issue of Radio Guide. "Here, time travels like a rocket. A program may be conceived, written, rehearsed and broadcast in an afternoon. New stars catapult into prominence overnight, plummet into obscurity just as quickly. Whatever you do, do it fast! You'll have to, because - that's radio!"

Radio Guide, March 18, 1938

Many radio performers experienced health problems due to the pace, stress and overwork in the 1930s and 1940s. NBC news commentator Walter Winchell, for example, suffered a nervous collapse due to overwork in April of 1932 and was ordered by his doctor to "take a protracted rest" from writing and broadcasting. (Philadelphia Inquirer, April 24, 1932.)

Fred Allen, a radio comedian from 1932 to 1949, had to take a year off work in 1944-1945 due to dizzy spells brought on by chronic hypertension. He called the process of producing his radio shows a recipe for a nervous breakdown. "For a one-hour show I had to turn out the equivalent of one act of a three-act play every week," Fred Allen said during an interview in January 1945. Allen recalled that, for eight years, he worked 16- to 18-hour days, "pounding out a 50-page script" every week. "People who write for radio wind up with ulcers or go into another business," he observed. [Source: Frederick Woltman, "Behind the Mike," in Pittsburgh Press, January 24, 1945.]

1930s radio performers like Nan had to be versatile. "There was never time to prepare a detailed and searching performance, and for the most part, the hastily written scripts did not warrant it," writes former radio actress Mary Jane Higby. "What was needed was a quick impression, given with broad, sure strokes. It bore the relation to a stage performance that a pencil sketch has to an oil painting." [Source: Mary Jane Higby, Tune in Tomorrow. New York: Cowles Education Corp., 1966.]

Radio's appetite for content was voracious. "My wife and I had been stop-watch slaves in New York for more than ten years," Morenus writes in Maclean's magazine. "I, as writer-director of network programs, [Nan] as one of the more popular actresses who suffer daily in serials before the microphone." The cost of obeying the studio clock "was great in ruined digestions, tired bodies, and nerves as taut as piano wires," Morenus continues. "Something had to snap. It had been Nan." Source

Nan Requires Emergency Surgery

In 1939, Nan, suffering severe abdominal pain, had emergency surgery in New York for a perforated ulcer. A perforated ulcer is a sore in the lining of the stomach or upper intestine that makes a hole through the lining into the belly, causing internal bleeding and damaging other organs such as the liver or pancreas. Surgery was standard treatment in the 1930s. It may not have been the first time, and it was not last time, Nan was hospitalized for abdominal problems.

"It was the intense competition of acting that caused her health to deteriorate," Nan's second husband John Albrecht later told his friend Bob Lee. "After several ulcer operations, the doctors demanded that she change occupations or her life would be in jeopardy." [Source: Bob Lee, The North Called Softly. Prince Albert, Saskatchewan:
Self-published,1977.]

Source

The main causes of ulcers are stress, diet, and excessive smoking and drinking. A study of the personal histories of ulcer patients in Britain found that in 84 percent of the cases, an anxiety-provoking event such as a change in job, the death of a close relative, or unemployment had preceded the illness. Davies and Wilson concluded that "unusual emotional tension" was associated with these emergencies and that patients had been "harassed and worried by their responsibilities and by environmental changes." A 1942 Rockefeller Foundation study of American patients with peptic ulcers found that the ailment correlated with "strong emotions - chiefly fear and anxiety."  Source

Nan had experienced anxiety during her childhood, and had been through some ups and downs during the 1930s. After the short-lived success of her radio show "Keeping Up with Daughter" (1931-32), her career languished. The Depression had caused widespread unemployment in the US, and Nan had gone to work as a cashier at Vera Megowen's Tea Room in Evanston, Illinois in 1933. Once her radio career picked up again in the late 1930s, the competition for work was brutal.

Ad in the Chicago Tribune, October 4, 1931.

Richard’s Account of Nan’s Surgery

“The bench was getting hard. I looked at my watch. Quarter past three. I’d been sitting there in the whispering silences of the hospital corridor since midnight," Richard Morenus writes in his article "From Broadway to Bush" in Maclean's magazine (Sept. 1, 1946). He continues:

How long did it take to perform an emergency operation on a perforated ulcer? I’d obtained the best surgeon-specialist in New York, noted for the brilliance of his quick efficient work. But three hours and 15 minutes! Maybe he’d run into trouble. Maybe he couldn’t save her!

The door of the hospital elevator slid open. Flanked by interns and nurses, still in their operating room caps and gauze masks, a tall rubber-wheeled stretcher cart slowly passed me.

The only color in the moving white was the splash of golden-red hair on the pillow. I had one short glimpse of her face, eyes closed in merciful anaesthetized sleep. But she was alive! My wife was alive. I looked at my watch. Three-thirty.

"She’s all through, Dick." The doctor looked at me steadily. "Yes," he went on, "she’s through with radio. No more stage work, no more making motion pictures, no more metropolitan living. Oh, she’ll be all right, she’ll be perfectly healthy," he added quickly, "but her nerves won’t be able to take any more of that stuff. My advice is that you get her out into the country. You’ve always liked the outdoors, Dick, and it’s Nan’s salvation to live away from the city so you might just as well make up your mind to it.”

Turning Point

During Nan's convalescence, she and Richard made the life-changing decision "to cut loose and carve a year-round existence out of the wilderness" in northern Ontario. Source

Had Nan stayed in the radio business another five years or so, she would likely have found it far less stressful than it had been during the 1930s. After the Second World War, the taping of shows reduced the difficulties of producing a radio show. Mary Jane Higby writes, "Gone is the strain, stress, the ulcer-making frenzy that caused insurance companies to rate the radio actor as a risk only slightly less hazardous than that of a construction worker on a skyscraper." (Tune in Tomorrow, 1966.) 

 

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©Joan Champ, 2021. All rights reserved

 

 

8. Nan and Richard in New York

 High Style in Hard Times

 

Postcard of the Rockefeller Center where Nan and Richard worked at NBC studios, late 1930s. Source

When Nan and Richard got married on October 15, 1936, they were both working in radio - he in advertising then as a writer, and Nan as a performer. At the time of their wedding, they lived at 33 West 51st Street, a block away from NBC studios at Rockefeller Centre. They soon moved into an apartment four blocks away at Randolph House, 135 East 50th Street, about half a block off Lexington Avenue in the heart of Midtown Manhattan. 

Their salaries from NBC would not have been high. According to Robert Eichberg, in 1937 big radio stars like Kate Smith and Eddie Cantor were paid $7500 per episode, but staff performers made much less. Announcers might have been paid $50 to $90 per week, while singers made as little as $25 per week. "Staff script writers worked on a low weekly salary; only those turning out exclusive material or star get more." [Source: Robert Eichberg, Radio Stars of Today. Boston: L. C. Page & Co., 1937.]  Richard would have been paying alimony to at least some of his previous four wives and child support for his only son. Nan, on the other hand, may have been receiving income from her mother's estate or other family sources. I have no evidence of this, however.

Still, the Morenuses had a comfortable lifestyle enhanced by a dog - a cocker spaniel named Nik - which they took for daily walks along Lexington Avenue. They also had a car - a coupe - into which they loaded Nik, a typewriter, and other belongings when they moved to northern Ontario in 1941. 

Randolph House, Nan and Richard's Manhattan residence until May of 1941, is a 10-story, 104-unit Beaux-Art apartment building designed by E. Polk, completed in 1924. Source The entrance at the centre of the building has double doors covered by a canopy that extends out over the sidewalk. As you can see in the two photos below, Randolph House has not changed much since 1940.

Current photo of Nan and Richard's apartment at Randolph House, 135 East 50th Street, New York. Source


Randolph House in 1940, the year before Nan and Richard moved to Canada. Source

Social Life

"Silver-screen elegance became more affordable for the average man" during the 1930s. Source

Nan and Richard's social life in New York City largely revolved around their work at NBC. In his article "From Broadway to Bush" for Maclean's magazine (September 1, 1946), Richard describes himself and his wife as "two people instinctively gregarious, so dependent upon contacts with other human beings for livelihood." Richard writes that, on their last night in New York before moving to northern Ontario in May 1941, they "were partied, and had to listen to the head-shaking commiseration of our friends.”
 
It was not long before they were missing those friends. In a letter to his former boss Lewis H. Titterton, Manager of NBC's Script Division, written from Sioux Lookout on May 15, 1941, Richard said, "I'm glad I left some friends, for I liked the people I was working with and wanted them for friends...it's a warm feeling." [Source: Wisconsin Historical Society, National Broadcasting Company Records, 1921-1976: Central Files, 1921-1976, Subseries: Correspondence, 1921-1942, Box 85, Folder 35, Richard Morenus, script writer.]
 
 

"On the Streets of Manhattan," 1937, a series of video clips from "March of Time" newsreels. Source: YouTube

 

NEXT: Stress in the Radio Business - Click HERE

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INDEX TO BLOG SERIES - Click HERE 

©Joan Champ, 2021. All rights reserved.