HOST Ralph Edwards
ANNOUNCER
Bob Warren
PRODUCERS
Axel Greenberg, Al Pascholl, Richard Gottlieb, Bill Carruthers,
Jim Washburn
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
NBC
October 1952-June 1953
Wednesday 10:00-10:30
June 1953-August 1953 Tuesday
9:30-10:00
July 1953-June 1958 Wednesday
9:30-10:00
September 1958-September 1960
Wednesday
10:00-10:30
September 1960-September 1961 Sunday
10:30-11:00
This
Is Your Life, which was broadcast from 1952 to 1961, is one
of the best remembered television series from the 1950s. The format
of This is Your Life was based on the rather simple principle--guests
were surprised with a presentation of their past life in the form
of a narrative read by host Ralph Edwards and reminisces by relatives
and friends. But the format was also quite shrewd in its exploitation
of television's capacity for forging intimacy with viewers through
live transmission and on-air displays of sentimentality.
This
is Your Life was the creation of host Ralph Edwards, who was
also the host of radio's popular Truth or Consequences. In
a 1946 radio broadcast of the latter program Edwards presented a
capsule narrative of the past life of a disabled World War II veteran
who was having difficulties adjusting to post-war life. Edwards
received such positive feedback from this show that he developed
the formula for a separate radio program called This is Your
Life. It began airing on radio in 1948, and became a live television
program in 1952, running on the NBC network until 1961, and reappearing
in syndicated versions briefly in the early 1970s and 1980s (during
this last period, it was hosted by actor Joseph Campanella).
In its network television years, This is Your Life alternated
in presenting the life stories of entertainment personalities and
"ordinary" people who had contributed in some way to their communities.
Edwards always insisted that the theme of "Love thy neighbor" was
clear no matter who was the subject of a particular program. The
host was often quoted as saying that the lives under examination
must represent something "constructive," must have been "given a
lift 'above and beyond the call of duty' and. . .in turn, he or
she has passed on the help to another." For that reason, the emotion
expressed by the guest, who having first been surprised by Edwards
with the on-air announcement "this is your life!" and then with
the appearance of people from his or her past, was justified as
a source for audience inspiration rather than voyeurism.
Entertainment
personalities who were subjects of the program ranged from broadcast
journalist Lowell Thomas (who displayed obvious anger and embarrassment
over the "surprise") to singer Nat "King" Cole, from the famous
silent film star Gloria Swanson, to contemporary movie favorite
Debbie Reynolds. While Edwards claimed that there were few "leaks"
to the subjects about the show (if there were leaks, that subject
was immediately dropped), there were several notable occasions when
guests were informed in advance of their tributes--for example,
Eddie Cantor was told because his heart trouble worried producers
regarding the show's "surprise factor," and singer-actress Lillian
Roth and actress Frances Farmer were told because their well-known
troubled pasts were considered subjects too delicate (and perhaps
unpredictable) for the program's usual spectacle of surprise.
When
This is Your Life reviewed the lives of "ordinary people,"
Edwards and the show staff relied on help from the individual's
community. In some ways the program's coverage of individuals who
achieved despite handicaps was ahead of its time when indicating
how the subject had surmounted societal bigotry. Not surprisingly,
the show shared with its times a Cold War fervor towards conformity
and patriotism. For example, in a 1958 program featuring a Japanese-American
druggist who had been sent to an internment camp during World War
II, the life narrative recounts his struggle to establish a pharmacy
practice in a bigoted community. But Edwards praises the subject's
behavior in the internment camp when he squelched a camp uprising
protesting forced labor. At the end of the show, members from his
most recent community embrace him and Edwards announces that Richard
Nixon has donated an American flag and Ivory soap has donated money
for a flag pole for the town which has overcome racial prejudice.
In
the late 1980s, Edwards and his production company made many of
the episodes featuring Hollywood celebrities available for re-broadcasting.
American Movie Classics cable network channel aired these for several
years to accompany screenings of movies from studio-era Hollywood.
-Mary
Desjardins
Balling,
Fredda. "The World is His Neighbor." TV-Radio Mirror (New
York), June 1959.
Hall,
Gladys. "Four Magic Words." TV-Radio Mirror (New York), 1954.