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Early Television
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In 1946, the first television sets became available to American consumers.
Only a few decades later, television's stylistic conventions have become
a very familiar, virtually omnipresent part of the American cultural landscape.
But in the late 1940s and early 1950s, the language of television was
still being invented. Inspiration came from a variety of sources. Comedy
programs such as THE JACK BENNY SHOW and THE
GOLDBERGS, dramatic anthologies such as KRAFT TELEVISION THEATER, quiz
shows such as NAME THAT TUNE, and variety programs such as ARTHUR GODFREY
AND HIS FRIENDS borrowed heavily from popular radio formats. Other early
programming addressed the medium's place in the home. PHOTOGRAPHIC HORIZONS,
for example, posed models for viewers to photograph off the television
screen. Still other early television programs self-consciously experimented
with the expressive capabilities of the medium itself. Certain special
effects on THE ERNIE KOVACS SHOW, for example, drew the audience's attention
to both the limitations and the possibilities of early studio equipment.
With the occasional exception of shows such as GARROWAY AT LARGE (which
was produced in Chicago) and DRAGNET (which was filmed in Hollywood),
early network television emanated from the studios of CBS, NBC and ABC
in New York. Until 1955, the DuMont Television Network also broadcast
to a number of cities across the US, including Los Angeles.
The UCLA Film and Television Archive has an extensive collection of early
television programming. In addition to network programming, the Archive's
DuMont holdings include CAVALCADE OF STARS--which introduced Jackie Gleason's
THE HONEYMOONERS--and CAPTAIN VIDEO--television's first science-fiction
program. The Archive also maintains a large collection of local television
programs such as HELP THY NEIGHBOR, a call-in show for Angelinos down
on their luck, and THE CONTINENTAL, which featured a host who addressed
his audience as if they were in-house drinking guests.
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