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  1. The Lux Video Theatre was a spin-off from the successful Lux Radio Theater series broadcast on the NBC Blue Network (1934–1935) and CBS (1935–1955). Lux Video Theatre began as a live 30-minute Monday evening CBS series on October 2, 1950, switching to Thursday nights during August, 1951. [1] In September 1953, the show relocated from New ...

    • Anthology
  2. Lux Video Theatre: With Ken Carpenter, Jay Jackson, Otto Kruger, Gordon MacRae. Live dramatic shows featuring Hollywood stars, adaptations of motion pictures, and a host accompanying.

    • (154)
    • 1950-10-02
    • Comedy, Drama
    • 30
  3. S6.E33 ∙ The Night of January Sixteenth. Thu, May 10, 1956. The story revolves around three people; Tycoon Bjorn Faulkner, who is being called upon by his board of directors to explain a missing $20,000,000; Kit Lane, his secretary who also has a personal interest; and Steve Van Ruyle, a sailor who has inherited a position on Faulkner's board ...

  4. Dec 1, 2022 · This anthology series was a spinoff of the "Lux Radio Theatre", which had been heard first on the NBC Blue Network, then later on CBS. The TV version first r...

    • 53 min
    • 1111
    • Analog TV Obscurity
  5. Lux Video Theatre is an American anthology series that was produced from 1950 until 1959. The series presented both comedy and drama in original teleplays, as well as abridged adaptations of films and plays.

    • 7
    • 1
  6. Lux Video Theatre (TV Series 1950–1959) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  7. Lux Video Theatre. 1 9 5 0 – 1 9 5 7 (USA) 337 x 30/60 minute episodes. For four years on CBS, and then for three years on NBC, with hosts like James Mason and Gordon MacRae, the Lux Video Theatre offered many established Hollywood and Broadway stars their first television exposure. It was initially a thirty-minute weekly dramatic show, but ...

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