*** Welcome to piglix ***

Valiant Lady

Valiant Lady
Valiant Lady Flora Campbell Bonnie Sawyer 1956.jpg
Bonnie Sawyer as Kim Emerson and Flora Campbell as Helen Emerson, 1956.
Genre Soap opera
Created by Adrian Spies
Written by Charles Elwyn
Starring Nancy Coleman
Flora Campbell
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 1,024
Production
Location(s) CBS Studios
New York, New York
Running time 15 minutes
Release
Original network CBS
Picture format Black-and-white
Audio format Monaural
Original release October 12, 1953 (1953-10-12) – August 16, 1957

Valiant Lady is an American soap opera which ran daily on CBS radio and television from October 12, 1953 to August 16, 1957 at 12:00 PM (EST). The show's title was taken from a 1930s radio soap opera about a young woman struggling through life but is otherwise very different. Like many early soap operas, the show was broadcast live from CBS Studio 57 in Manhattan.

The series was created by Adrian Spies; the head writer was Charles Elwyn.

Helen Emerson, the focus of the show, was a forty-ish matron whose husband died in the show's first year. Because of her widowhood, she endured financial hardship while continually worrying about her three children's lives. Headstrong son Mickey fell for a divorcee, impulsive daughter Diane ran off with a married man, and bratty Kim constantly implored Helen to teach her the latest dance step. Helen's biggest romance throughout the series was with Hal Soames, a married airline pilot in the midst of a divorce. She finally found peace and happiness in the show's final year, when she married Governor Lawrence Walker.

During the run of the show, two different actresses played Helen Emerson, and two played daughter Kim. Son Mickey was played throughout by James Kirkwood Jr., the 1970s/1980's novelist and playwright best known for A Chorus Line. Kirkwood would learn his lines while driving into work with director John Desmond. Though the wife of the airline pilot was played by four different actresses (one of whom, Sue Randall, became best known as Theodore Cleaver's teacher Miss Landers in the TV series Leave It To Beaver), the airline pilot himself, Hal Soames, was played by only one actor throughout, Earl Hammond, who later became well known as the deep bass voice of many television cartoon heroes and villains in the 1980s. Helen's husband, on the series for only the first year, was played by Jerome Cowan, best known for playing Miles Archer, the private eye partner of Humphrey Bogart's Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon.

Martin Balsam appeared late in the series as an undesirable boyfriend of daughter Kim who ends up saving the lives of the entire family during a hostage situation. A minor character was played by Helen Wagner, who, later on As the World Turns, played Nancy Hughes, the longest-running character on any television soap opera.


...
Wikipedia

...