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Around this time, Backstage acquired the New York–based Ross Reports publication, a monthly digest founded in 1949 by Wallace A. Ross. The Ross Reports compiled information on casting directors, agents, managers, production companies, and upcoming film and television productions. [citation needed]
Cover of The Ross Reports, May 1952. In 1949 Ross founded The Ross Reports, a monthly digest that compiled information on casting directors, agents, managers, production companies, and upcoming film and television productions for the NYC theater and television community. [8] [9] Ross was the publisher and editor of The Ross Reports until 1954.
The trade publication Ross Reports called Vanity Fair "a successful example of an established daytime program" at a time when daytime television was in its infancy. [3] A review of the December 29, 1950, episode said, "Miss Doan presided in a relaxed manner" and noted that viewers were able to remain focused on the guests and conversation ...
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Janet Dean, Registered Nurse is an American medical drama television series. It was released in February 1954, [ 1 ] and it continued to be broadcast in reruns in the early 1960s. [ 2 ] It was the first TV series in which the lead was a nurse.
Filmed by Grant Productions at Hal Roach Studios, Your Show Time was American television's first dramatic series to be shot on film instead of being aired on live television or as a kinescope. The series Public Prosecutor was produced on film in 1947–48, for a planned September 1948 debut, but remained unaired until DuMont aired that series ...
[20] Although the premiere's rating was a "whopping 29.1 Trendex, outranking combined network competition", [21] about a month later the trade publication Television Digest reported, "Major salvage job being attempted by ABC-TV on its expensive, but low-rated Frank Sinatra Show". [22]
He complimented the presentation of "With Malice Toward None" as "creative TV, with a point of view and imagination and made for an absorbing thirty minutes". [ 8 ] In January 1949, Screen Test, Incorporated, sued ABC and the show's producers for $500,000, charging that their idea had been stolen.