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OMNIBUS
HOST
Alistair
Cooke
PRODUCERS
Robert Saudek, Fred
Rickey, William Spier, Mary V. Ahern
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
CBS
October 1953-April 1956 Sunday
5:00-6:00 ABC October 1956-March 1957 Sunday
9:00-10:30 NBC April 1957-April 1961 Sunday
Irregular Schedule
U.S. Cultural Series
Omnibus
was the most successful cultural magazine series in the history
of U.S. commercial television and a prototype for the development
of programming on educational television. Developed by the Television-Radio
Workshop of the Ford Foundation, Omnibus generated both corporate
sponsorship and a loyal, but limited, network audience for intellectual
programming over nine years (1952 to 1961) on all three networks.
Omnibus
was the vision of Robert Saudek, a former ABC vice-president of
public affairs who became director of the Workshop in 1951. Commissioned
to devise an innovative series for network television, Saudek created
a variety show for the intellect, a compendium of the arts, literature,
science, history, and even some pure entertainment. Saudek hired
journalist Alistair Cooke to serve as master of ceremonies. Cooke
was known for his literate commentary on Letter from America,
a BBC radio series heard throughout Great Britain. With initial
underwriting from the Ford Foundation, which TV Guide called
"risk capital" for the untried, Saudek also secured financing from
advertisers to produce a weekly, ninety-minute series, first airing
4:30-6:00 P.M. on Sunday afternoons. Omnibus premiered on 9 November
1952 over CBS. The first installment featured Rex Harrison and Lilli
Palmer as Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn; William Saroyan narrating
an adaptation of his short story "The Bad Men"; and the first images
of X-ray movies, an inside look at the working human digestive system
.
Saudek
and his producers, among them Fred Rickey, William Spier, and Mary
V. Ahern, deftly interwove the high and popular arts into a cultural
smorgasbord. Their definition of "culture" was flexible enough to
encompass Orson Welles's triumphant return form Europe to star in
Peter Brook's adaptation of King Lear; a production of William Inge's
"Glory in the Flower" with Jessica Tandy, Hume Croyn, and a still
very green James Dean; S. J. Perelman's paean to burlesque with
Bert Lahr; several appearances by Agnes DeMille, including the performance
of her ballet "Three Virgins and the Devil ("Virgins" becoming "Maidens"
because of network censors); Jack Benny recreating his notorious
role as an avenging angel in "The Horn Blows at Midnight"; and Peter
Ustinov in his American television debut as Dr. Samuel Johnson.
Omnibus also gave air time to artists new to the mass media:
William Faulkner gave a tour of Oxford, Mississippi; James Agee
contributed a five-part docudrama on the life of Abraham Lincoln,
now considered one of the first miniseries; Frank Lloyd Wright discussed
architectural forms with Cooke; and painter Thomas Hart Benton gave
a tour of his studio. In addition, individuals who would later become
fixtures in prime time received a career boost on Omnibus, including
Mike Nichols and Elaine May, who brought their sardonic humor to
an edition entitled "Suburban Revue"; Les Ford and Mary Ford, who
demonstrated multi-track recording with a madrigal-singing Cooke;
and Jacques Cousteau, who screened his first undersea adventure
on American television.
Beginning
with Leopold Stokowski and Benjamin Britten's "Young Person's Guide
to the Orchestra," Saudek linked pedagogy with showmanship to produce
a series of visual lectures that became a model for educational
television. The most stimulating and original of the electronic
teachers was Leonard Bernstein, who single-handedly enlarged the
possibilities of musical analysis and performance on television.
Commencing with his dissection of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony in
1954, Bernstein brought an intellectual passion of excitement and
discovery to his subject and later explored musical comedy, jazz,
grand opera, and modern music with the same vigor. Gene Kelly in
his video lecture compared the art and choreography of ballet dancers
to the movements of professional athletes, exemplified by his tap
dance with boxer Sugar Ray Robinson.
For
most of its run, Omnibus, nearly always broadcast live, graced
the "ghetto" of weekend programming, Sunday afternoon. As that daypart
became more valuable, beginning on CBS with the success of professional
football, Omnibus shifted to other networks. The series was
seen on CBS from 1952 to 1956; on ABC 1956 to 1957; and NBC 1957
to 1961. During the final season Omnibus appeared as a series
of irregular specials, concluding with a look at the future of the
western hemisphere. In all, Saudek and his team assembled 166 volumes
totaling more than 230 hours of entertaining enlightenment. The
series was revived by producer Martin Starger as a series of special
on ABC in 1981.
The
artistic concerns and approaches to production of Omnibus provided
a road map for public television. The Ford Foundation, citing Omnibus's
struggle for ratings, questioned whether commercial broadcasters
were dedicated to "the development of mature, wise and responsible
citizens," and began to fund educational television projects. Without
the Foundation's support, Saudek in 1955 formed his own production
company to create and gain network sponsorship for the series. The
Omnibus sensibility has been felt throughout the history
of public television. During the National Educational Television
years, NET Playhouse (1966-72) and NET Festival (1967-70)
were direct descendants. Since the formation of the Public Broadcasting
Service, Great Performances (1974-present) partakes of the
Omnibus ethos to share a cultural melange with a discriminating
audience. And, of course, the ringmaster of Omnibus, Alistair
Cooke became a PBS icon for over twenty years as host of Masterpiece
Theater.
-Ron
Simon
FURTHER
READING
Beck,
Kirstin. Cultivating the Wasteland. New York: American Council
for the Arts, 1983.
Bernstein,
Leonard. The Joy of Music. New York: Fireside, 1963.
Henderson,
Amy. On the Air Pioneers of American Broadcasting. Washington,
D. C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1988.
Leonard
Bernstein: The Television Work. New York: Museum of Broadcasting,
1985.
Rose,
Brian. Televising the Performing Arts. Westport, Connecticut:
Greenwood Press, 1992.
_______________.
Television and the Performing Arts. Westport, Connecticut:
Greenwood Press, 1986.
See
also Cooke,
Alistair; Educational
Television
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