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User:K3vin/todo/Rosemary (soap opera)

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Rosemary was a daily dramatic serial about a young single woman, trying to succeed in the big city. It ran on NBC for one season, followed by CBS for nine.

Rosemary
GenreDaily Dramatic Serial
Running time15 Minutes
Country of originUSA
Language(s)English
Syndicates CBS Radio NBC
StarringBetty Winkler, Virginia Kaye, Sidney Smith, Joan Alexander
AnnouncerBob Dixon, Gil Herbert, Joe O'Brien, Ed Herlihy
Written by Elaine Sterne Carrington
Directed byCarl Eastman, Hoyt Allen, Ralph Butler, Leslie Harris, Theodara Yates, Charles Fischer
Produced byTom McDermott
Recording studioNew York
Original releaseOctober 2, 1944 –
July 1, 1955
Sponsored byProctor & Gamble:
Dash
Ivory Snow
Camay
Tide

Epigraph: Rosemary, written by Elaine Carrington, author of Pepper Young's Family and When a Girl Marries, is dedicated to all the women of today. Yes, Rosemary is your story -- this is you.

Premise: A better subtitle for this serial might have been: "Shall we move to New York or not?" If any question begged answering here, perhaps it was that one. Rosemary and Bill Roberts spent so much time shifting their residence back and forth between the small town of Springdale and New York City that the IRS, the people who hook up and disengage utilities and their creditors must have wondered what type of con game this couple had going on. Actually, Bill was the one who did most of the traveling; Rosemary stayed put much of the time. Although Bill, a practicing journalist, had good intentions, he was shiftless, unable to put down roots for very long anywhere. Like many a serial hero (although that term seems inappropriate in representing him), he had a roving eye that kept him in touch with a pretty skirt. Meanwhile, Rosemary was the stabilizing force in his life; her feet were planted securely on terra firma. Her goals and ideals and virtues were intact, and she deserved better than she got. Occasionally, though understandably, she showed a weakness for jealousy. Her fans empathized with her nonetheless, some probably hoping she'd wash that man right outta her hair. She never did -- he brought her pain and sorrow, yet she sustained an abiding faith in him. In the end Bill Roberts proved his mettle, choosing Rosemary over all other women. A unique postscript could be added. The principals on this show did something that most other heroes and heroines never did: they married each other in real life. Surely their own situation was a far cry from that of the wretched pair they portrayed on a daily basis.

Cast

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Airtimes

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M - F
Network Air Dates Time Slot
NBC Oct. 2, 1944- 1945 11:15 a.m. ET
CBS 1946-July 1, 1955 11:45 a.m. ET

{{Joan Alexander}}