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Something on My Own - Gertrude Berg and American Broadcasting, 1929aEURO"1956 (Hardcover)
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Something on My Own - Gertrude Berg and American Broadcasting, 1929aEURO"1956 (Hardcover)
Series: Television and Popular Culture
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In 1929, ""The Goldbergs"" debuted on the air, introducing Gertrude
Berg - and her radio alter ego, Bronx housewife Molly Goldberg - to
the nation. The show would become one of the most beloved and
enduring programs of Golden Age radio and of early TV. At the helm
was Berg who, as creator, star, writer, and producer, became a
force to be reckoned with. This multifaceted biography provides a
penetrating look at how Gertrude Berg carved a special place for
herself in the annals of broadcast history. Decades before Lucille
Ball, Berg triumphed as a woman of commercial and creative
consequence in what was essentially a male-dominated arena. For
over three decades, Berg's ""Molly"" fluttered about and hung out
her kitchen window dispensing motherly advice laced with engaging
malapropisms, insights, and lots of ""schmaltz."" The show offered
a warmly comedic look at the lives and dreams of working-class
American Jews and subtle insights into the nature of assimilation.
While Molly, husband Jake, and Uncle David represent Old World
Jewish stereotypes, children Rosalie and Sammy are as American as
apple pie. A sentimental portrait of the immigrant experience,
""The Goldbergs"" offered a mythic ideal of the American dream.
Drawing on Gertrude Berg's papers at Syracuse University's Bird
Library and rare interviews with her family and colleagues, the
author reveals her as shrewd, creative, and forthright. Unlike
""Molly,"" Berg was a cultivated woman and a Columbia graduate. A
pioneer in the concept of product tie-in, she parlayed the show's
popularity into a movie, short stories, and even a cookbook. In
1951, she stood up to the blacklist by refusing to fire longtime
co-star Philip Loeb who was under investigation by the House
Un-American Activities Committee. The book also chronicles Berg's
accomplishments in theater, film, and literature.
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