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Author James Boyd (Drums, Marching On) decided the time had come for U. S. writers to fill the air full of the cause of democracy. Elmer Rice and Sherwood Anderson agreed. Together they shaped up an outfit called The Free Company, invited many another literary craftsman to join them in confecting a series of radio dramas designed to sing the various aspects of freedom in the U. S. This week, over a coast-to-coast hook-up (Sunday: 2-2:30 E. S. T.), The Free Company will get going. The Company's initial venture, characteristically entitled The People...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Of Thee They Sing | 2/24/1941 | See Source »

Writers of The Free Company contribute their services gratis, with CBS underwriting all other costs, including the expense of short-waving the show to Latin America. The Bill of Rights provides a pattern for the series. Following Saroyan's lyric outbursts on illuminated Americans, Robert Sherwood will dwell on freedom of the press, Marc Connelly on freedom to teach, Orson Welles on freedom of assembly, Archibald MacLeish on freedom of speech, Paul Green on racial freedom. Filling out the broadcasts, now designed to run 13 weeks, will be scripts on freedom in general by Stephen Vincent Benet, Sherwood Anderson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Of Thee They Sing | 2/24/1941 | See Source »

...title number "One on the House," "Sweet Dreaming," and I'm Not in the Mood," composed by Sherwood Rollins, Jr. '41, have been accepted by BMI, subject to slight changes so as not to resemble any song copyrighted by ASCAP. publications of the songs will be made to coincide with the trip through the East and Middle West during Spring vacation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BMI WILL PUBLISH NEW SONGS OF HASTY PUDDING MUSICAL | 2/18/1941 | See Source »

...speech was not in the President's usual literary style. It was pseudo-poetic, full of little except generalities, as if it had been written for him by someone such as Playwright Robert E. Sherwood. Five times the President was applauded-briefly, by gloved and mittened hands. When he finished, he turned away, then turned back and waved his top hat. At this familiar gesture the crowd cheered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Third Term Begins | 1/27/1941 | See Source »

...editor is a German-born exile from Nazi-occupied Czecho-Slovakia and The Netherlands: slight, balding Klaus Mann, son of Nobel Prizewinning Novelist Thomas Mann. Editorial advisers include such refugee notables as Dr. Eduard Benes, Stefan Zweig, Somerset Maugham, such native littérateurs as Playwright Robert Sherwood, Newsman Vincent Sheean, Editor (of The Nation) Freda Kirchwey, Taletellers Stephen Vincent Benét and Sherwood Anderson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Refugee Review | 1/20/1941 | See Source »

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