William N. Robson
William N. Robson was a director and producer of radio programs.
Early life
Robson was born William N. Robson II in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the son of William N. Robson and Gertrude Brehm Robson. His father handled public relations for the Loyal Order of Moose and was described in a newspaper article as being "known from coast to coast." He was involved in entertainment as early as age 9, when a newspaper article about a 1916 amateur production in Pittsburgh reported, "Little Bill Robson has six parts in the show... "Robson graduated from Allegheny High School and attended the University of Pittsburgh for two years, leaving the school to become a reporter for the Pittsburgh Post. He attended Yale University, graduating in 1928.
In the 1920s, Robson had his own musical group, Bill Robson and His Yale Music. In the summers of 1926, 1927, and 1928, the group toured Europe, performing in Paris, Vienna, and Berlin, among other cities.
Robson was the screenwriter for the 1933 Paramount Pictures film Private Jones. He worked as an associate producer at Paramount for three years.
Radio career
Robson spent most of his career involved with radio. His radio debut came in 1936 as director of Big Town. He succeeded Irving Reis as head of the Columbia Workshop.Perhaps the most notable of Robson's productions was Suspense, followed closely by the similarly formatted Escape. Suspense lasted more than two decades on the air with more than 900 episodes broadcast. Ronald L. Smith wrote about Suspense and Escape in his book, Horror Stars on Radio: The Broadcast Histories of 29 Chilling Hollywood Voices: "Both used the same format: a challenging host introducing a story of murder or perhaps classic horror. Robson favored adaptations of anything from Poe tales to a good yarn in the latest issue of Esquire magazine."
Robson's roles in other radio programs included those shown in the table below.
Program | Role |
Calling All Cars | Producer and writer |
Christopher London | Producer |
Columbia Workshop | Director |
Doorway to Life | Producer, director, and writer |
Hawk Larabee | Producer and director |
Luke Slaughter of Tombstone | Producer, director, and writer |
The Man Behind the Gun | Producer |
The Man Called X | Director |
Pursuit | Producer and director |
Request Performance | Producer and director |
The Saint | Producer and director |
Shorty Bell | Producer |
Stars in the Afternoon | Director |
T-Man | Producer and director |
Robson left CBS in 1939 to become director of an advertising firm's radio department, and after the United States entered World War II he helped to prepare broadcasts for the Office of Emergency Management and the War Production Board. He returned to CBS in May 1942 to help the network prepare programs related to the war.
Accusations of communist sympathies
On June 22, 1950, a pamphlet called Red Channels appeared, focusing on the field of broadcasting. Robson was among 151 entertainment industry professionals named in the context of "Red Fascists and their sympathizers".Eric Barnouw's A History of Broadcasting in the United States: Volume 2: The Golden Web: 1933 to 1953 summarized the accusations against Robson as follows:
The Red Channels listing for Robson contained four items. It said that in 1942, he had been sponsor of an Artists Front to Win the War organized at a meeting in Carnegie Hall in December 1946, he had made a speech in Los Angeles, protesting encroachments on freedom of expression; in 1948, he had signed with other artists a "We Are For Wallace" advertisement in the New York Times. he was listed as an "associate" on the masthead of the Hollywood Quarterly, a scholarly journal of film, radio, and television published by the University of California Press.
This guilt-by-association would affect Robson's career over the next decade.
Television
Robson was the producer of Sure as Fate, a mystery series that debuted on CBS in the summer of 1950. The listing in Red Channels took its toll, however, resulting in his replacement as producer. During the hiatus, he used a pseudonym as a writer for the television version of Suspense . Even that activity ceased, however, after "he was told that orders from CBS headquarters in New York had forbidden further assignments to him."During the 1950s, he wrote television dramas. In 1961, he joined the Voice of America where he produced documentaries, among them New York, New York on which Garry Moore interviewed celebrities visiting the city, and 200 Years Ago Tonight, a series about the American Revolutionary War produced during the bicentennial year of 1976. His time at the VOA won him four additional Peabody Awards.
Recognition
Three of Robson's radio works received George Foster Peabody Awards:- 1942 — "The Man Behind the Gun" for Outstanding Entertainment in Drama
- 1943 — "An Open Letter to the American People" for Outstanding Entertainment in Drama
- 1975 — Two Hundred Years Ago Tonight
Later life