Louis Dropkin papers, 1941-1956, bulk 1947-1952

Louis Dropkin papers, 1941-1956, bulk 1947-1952

Summary Information

Abstract

This collection consists of scripts and other materials related to the work of American radio, stage, and screen writer and producer Louis Dropkin. It provides insight into the nature of a journeyman writer/producer's professional life during the years when television first began to challenge radio for mass media dominance in the United States in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

At a Glance

Call No.:
MS#1436
Bib ID:
6621199 View CLIO record
Creator(s):
Dropkin, Louis, 1914-1997
Repository:
Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Physical Description:
1.5 linear feet (3 document boxes)
Language(s):
English .
Access:
You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.

This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.

This collection has no restrictions.

Description

Summary

By the far the largest types of material in the Louis Dropkin Papers are scripts for radio, stage, and television shows dating from the 1940s and 1950s. Many of these scripts appear in multiple drafts and contain handwritten corrections. Some of them have note cards indicating which producers they were distributed to. The Louis Dropkin Papers also include some short prose pieces, songs, manuscripts by authors other than Dropkin, and a small collection of correspondence related to his professional life.

Arrangement

This collection is arranged in three series.

Using the Collection

Restrictions on Access

You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.

This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.

This collection has no restrictions.

Terms Governing Use and Reproduction

Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. The RBML maintains ownership of the physical material only. Copyright remains with the creator and his/her heirs. The responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.

Preferred Citation

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Louis Dropkin papers; Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.

Accrual

No additions are expected

Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact rbml@columbia.edu for more information.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Source of acquisition--Augusta Dropkin. Method of acquisition--Gift; Date of acquisition--1998 January 7.

About the Finding Aid / Processing Information

Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library

Processing Information

Papers processed Nicholas Patrick Osborne (GSAS 2012).

Finding aid written Nicholas Patrick Osborne April 2008.

Collection is processed to folder level.

Revision Description

2008-11-07 File created.

2009/01/13 xml document instange created by Patrick Lawlor

2009/05/28 xml document instange created by Catherine N. Carson

2019-05-20 EAD was imported spring 2019 as part of the ArchivesSpace Phase II migration.

Biographical Note

Louis "Lou" Dropkin pursued a career in the entertainment industry at a particularly interesting time in its history. In 1948, there were fewer than one million television sets in the United States; by the mid-1950s, there were more than thirty-five times that number. The 1940s and 1950s saw television become a fixture in United States homes while radio's claim to being America's dominant national entertainment medium had its denouement. As a writer and producer for both radio and television during these years, Lou Dropkin was right in the middle of this transition.

Though much of Dropkin's early writing experience appears to have consisted of short essays, by the mid-1940s he had found both a talent for writing dramatic scripts and a professional partnership with his fellow New Yorker, Felix Leon. Their early collaborations focused on radio scripts that ranged from dark looks at topical events such as the drama "Is Hitler Dead" to the sentimental and somewhat tongue-in-cheek "By a Nose," a story of the strong bond between a carousel horse and his young rider, both of which were produced in 1946.

The Dropkin and Leon partnership was suspended briefly from 1946-1947, when Dropkin left New York to take a job writing, editing, directing, and producing radio programs for WBAL in Baltimore. According to one of his former employers at WBAL, while there Dropkin focused on "dramatic, public service and those special last minute shows which seem to be a part of radio," and his extant scripts from that period demonstrate a particular focus on documentary and public service programs that ranged from histories of Baltimore to an examination of the dangers of tuberculosis.

Dropkin continued his radio work after he returned to New York in late 1947, most notably helping to produce WNEW's weekly "The American Spirit!" series. Airing in the early 1950s, this program--in the words of the introduction to each episode--sought "to illustrate musically and dramatically various aspects of the American spirit" and "to provide a hearing for young actors" by adapting plays by some of America's most famous playwrights (including Eugene O'Neill, Robert E. Sherwood, and Maxwell Anderson) and having them performed on the radio by aspiring actors from the Professional Training Program of the American Theatre Wing.

It was during this period, however, that Dropkin also began to focus his creative efforts on the emerging medium of television. His training in documentary work from his radio days undoubtedly helped this endeavor, netting him opportunities at NBC's New York affiliate, WNBT, in the early 1950s for which Dropkin produced several short nonfiction pieces. At least one of these programs--about the state of New York City's disaster preparedness plans--was hosted by the noted early television personality Ben Grauer, and was the type of show that proved instrumental in solidifying Grauer's transition from radio to television. Nevertheless, it appears that Dropkin's real creative passion after his return to New York was writing the short vaudeville-style sketches which characterized many early television offerings of the time. In this pursuit, he found the revival of his partnership with Felix Leon to be particularly fruitful.

Though they occasionally tried their hands at other genres--such as the three-act stage play "An Eagle in the House," or comic songs like "I Dillied When I Should Have Dallied"--Dropkin and Leon's bread-and-butter pieces were short farces that revolved around misunderstandings, counterintuitive situations, and physical gags. In "The Second Report," for example, Dropkin and Leon poked fun at a Kinsey-esque sex researcher who seemingly had interest in the sexual habits of every woman but his wife. "The Child is the Father of the Man" featured a son and daughter telling off their curfew-breaking parents, while "The Home Life of an Eskimo" found its punch line in a polar bear who, having eaten the husband and assumed his place in the family igloo, finds himself beholden to the same nagging wife that drove the husband outside and into the bear's clutches in the first place.

Dropkin and Leon found some success in television with their sketches, getting at least one ("The Missing Check") performed by Sid Caesar on the Admiral Broadway Revue--a variety show better-known by its later name, Your Show of Shows--in 1949. (They would later write several pieces specifically with the emerging comic star Caesar in mind.) But Dropkin's and Leon's sketches also show signs of the transitioning nature of the television industry in the late 1940s and early 1950s. For example, many of their scripts appear to have been written with either stage or television in mind, sometimes with multiple versions apparently intended for one medium or the other. Equally telling, the pair seems to have curtailed their writing of vaudeville-style sketches after producing a flurry of them in the late 1940s, indicating that Dropkin and Leon were adapting to the general trend of television in the 1950s to eschew the variety shows that characterized its initial years in favor of programming such as game shows, news and public service programs, and serial dramas and comedies. Indeed, as the 1950s wore on and television programming became more regularized, Dropkin and Leon collaborated on screen treatments and longer scripts and appear to have abandoned the sketch format entirely.

Lou Dropkin was a writer who came of age in a time of tremendous technological and cultural change, and he seems to have been keenly aware of the opportunities of his moment. Even while making a career in radio, he kept an eye on other media, as indicated by a copy of a 1945 essay by the filmmaker Leo Hurwitz that Dropkin saved along with the drafts of his scripts. Titled "The Director's Job," it set out to analyze the different tasks of and creative potentials for directors in radio, stage, film, and television productions. "The television medium is at the beginning of a long road," wrote Hurwitz, and it turned out to be a road that Lou Dropkin and others like him were instrumental in paving. While Dropkin's work is largely forgotten today, it seems safe to say that without writers, producers, and directors like him, radio and television in the 1940s and 1950s would not have existed as they did. Little is known about Dropkin's life after this period, though he died in late 1997 at the age of 82.

This biographical note was based largely on material contained within the Louis Dropkin Papers. Supplementary information was found in: "Paid Notice: Deaths, Lou Dropkin," New York Times, 4 October 1997, and Lisa Parks, "Cracking Open the Set: Television Repair and Tinkering with Gender, 1949-1955," in Small Screens, Big Ideas: Television in the 1950's, Janet Thumin, editor. (London: I.B. Tauris & Company, 2002).

Subject Headings

The subject headings listed below are found in this collection. Links below allow searches for other collections at Columbia University, through CLIO, the catalog for Columbia University Libraries, and through ArchiveGRID, a catalog that allows users to search the holdings of multiple research libraries and archives.

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Genre/Form
Radio scripts
Name
Dropkin, Louis, 1914-1997
Subject
Radio -- History
Television -- History
Television scripts
Variety shows (Television programs)

Series I: Stage and Television Scripts, circa 1948-1956

Series I is composed almost entirely of scripts written by Louis Dropkin. In the vast majority of cases, these scripts were co-written with Felix Leon. Correspondence concerning the production or attempted production of one of the scripts is included in a small number of folders in this series.

Items are arranged in alphabetical order according to script title in each subseries of Series I. Multiple drafts of substantially similar material occasionally appear in the collection under different titles. In these cases, all identifiable draft titles are listed in the folder title. The folder title indicates those folders in this series which include multiple drafts of the same script or materials that are not a script (eg., correspondence).


Subseries 1: Sketches, circa 1948-circa 1953

Comprising the majority of this series, this subseries contains drafts of short comedic sketches that were written for the stage, television screen, or potentially both. In almost every case, the same sketch appears in a variety of forms—often with substantial changes from draft to draft. In many cases, these scripts had attached note cards which appear to indicate which drafts were sent to which producers. In a few cases, the sketches appear to be performing scripts rather than drafts, and in one case a newspaper review was attached to a script.


Box 1 Folder 1

"The Aldrich Family," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, undated


Box 1 Folder 2

Aldrich Family Script (Untitled), undated


Box 1 Folder 3

"A Bartender's Bartender," "Special Material for George De Witt," "Say When," or "The Bartender Spot," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts (with Correspondence), circa, 1949-1951


Box 1 Folder 4

"The Battle of Battle Creek," circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 5

"Call a Taxi," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 6

"The Child is the Father of the Man," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts,, undated


Box 1 Folder 7

"Cinder in the Eye," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 8

"Don't Wake Up Till I Grow Up," Sketch by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, Lyrics by Larry Markes, Music by Charles Murray--Multiple Drafts,, undated


Box 1 Folder 9

"Faye and Elliot at Breakfast," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 10

"A Federal Offense," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 11

"For He's a Jolly Good Fellow,", undated


Box 1 Folder 12

"The Front Page Story," or "The Family Newspaper," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1948


Box 1 Folder 13

"High School Reunion: A Routine for Sid Caesar," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts,, undated


Box 1 Folder 14

"The Home Life of an Eskimo," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 15

"Home of the Brave,", undated


Box 1 Folder 16

"The House That Jack Built," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, undated


Box 1 Folder 17

"An Important Message," or "Don't Write--Telegraph!," by Louis Dropkin, Felix Leon, and David Rodgers--Multiple Drafts,, undated


Box 1 Folder 18

"In a Little Gypsy Tea Room," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 19

"Kill the Umpire," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts,, undated


Box 1 Folder 20

"Marriage License," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 21

"The Missing Check," "The Lost Check," or "Cafeteria Sketch," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts (with Review), circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 22

"Nothing But the Best," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, undated


Box 1 Folder 23

"A Pair of Shoelaces," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 24

"The Patient in Spite of Himself," or "Pulse: Normal," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon,--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 1 Folder 25

"Princess Margaret Rose," Featuring the Song "Decorum," Sketch and Lyrics by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, circa, 1953


Box 1 Folder 26

"The Rooster and the Hen," Sketch by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, Music by Bob Colby, Lyrics by Mauri Edwards--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1950


Box 1 Folder 27

"Sauce for the Goose: A Dropkin & Leon's Eye View,", undated


Box 1 Folder 28

"The Second Report," by Louis Dropkin, Felix Leon, and Ray Golden--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 2 Folder 1

"A Slight Case of Fungus," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 2 Folder 2

"Soda with Two Straws," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 2 Folder 3

"A Street Car Named Rumpelmeyer," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 2 Folder 4

"Subway Fare," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 2 Folder 5

"Suits Pressed While You Wait," or "Jack Haley at the Cleaners," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts,, undated


Box 2 Folder 6

"Tickets Please!," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1949


Box 2 Folder 7

"The Typewriter: A Specialty for Sid Caesar," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon,, undated


Subseries 2: Television Scripts and Treatments, 1950-1956

This subseries contains scripts and treatments that were clearly intended for television production. Several of the items in this subseries appear to be shooting scripts rather than drafts. With only two exceptions, it is unclear whether Dropkin was the author, producer, or both for these productions.


Box 2 Folder 8

Angel Auditions: "Crosstown,", 1954


Box 2 Folder 9

"Genius at Work," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, undated


Box 2 Folder 10

"The Goldwyn Story," WNBT Screenplay, 1950


Box 2 Folder 11

New York Disaster Preparedness Screenplay (Untitled), undated


Box 2 Folder 12

"The Piano," by Ben Ames Williams, Adapted for Television by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon (with Correspondence),, 1956


Box 2 Folder 13

"Pin-Up Girl--1950," WNBT Screenplay, 1950


Box 2 Folder 14

"The Return,", undated


Box 2 Folder 15

Weeping Willow Screen Treatment (Untitled), undated


Subseries 3: "An Eagle in the House", circa 1940s-1952

This subseries is comprised of three drafts of a full-length stage play entitled either "An Eagle in the House" or "Peter and the Platypus," and one draft of a musical called "Don't Mention It!" that was based on the play.


Box 2 Folder 16

"Don't Mention It!," Book and Lyrics by Lowell Salaway, Music by George Engles, Based on "An Eagle in the House," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon,, 1952


Box 2 Folder 17-19

"An Eagle in the House," or "Peter and the Platypus," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts,, undated, (3 Folders)

Series II: Radio Scripts, 1946-1952

Nearly every item in this series is a production copy of a radio script, many of which were written by Dropkin and at least some of which were produced by him. There are also a few manuscript drafts for which production status is indeterminable. The scripts in this series cover a range of topics, but the two biggest groups include radio dramas and documentaries.

Of particular note in this series are scripts from two radio serials with which Dropkin was intimately involved: "The American Spirit" and "Mount Vernon Place." Each episode of the former program featured an adaptation of a story from some of the United States' most famous playwrights performed by aspiring actors from the American Theatre Wing, a professional group with which Dropkin was associated. The latter program was a documentary series that focused on Baltimore and Maryland history, aired by Dropkin's long-time employer, the Baltimore radio station WBAL.

Folders in Series II are arranged in alphabetical order according to program series title unless no such title is evident. In these cases, folders have been arranged by episode title. The folder title indicates those folders in this series which include multiple drafts of the same script or materials that are not a script (eg., correspondence).


The American Spirit


Box 2 Folder 20

"Ah Wilderness," by Eugene O'Neill, Adapted for Radio, 1951


Box 2 Folder 21

"The American Way," by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, Adapted for Radio,, undated


Box 2 Folder 22

"The Common Glory," by Paul Green, Adapted for Radio, 1952


Box 2 Folder 23

"The Devil and Daniel Webster," by Stephen Vincent Benet, Adapted for Radio,, undated


Box 2 Folder 24

"Of Mice and Men," by John Steinbeck, Adapted for Radio, 1952


Box 2 Folder 25

"The Petrified Forest," by Robert E. Sherwood, Adapted for Radio by Louis Dropkin,, 1952


Box 2 Folder 26

"Valley Forge," by Maxwell Anderson, Adapted for Radio, 1951


Box 2 Folder 27

The Baltimore Story : "Star Spangled Banner," WBAL Radio--Multiple Drafts,, undated


Box 3 Folder 1

"Death is the Hunter," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, undated


Box 3 Folder 2

The Experimental Radio Theater: "Is Hitler Dead," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon,, 1946


Box 3 Folder 3

Harbor House Episode, by Louis Dropkin,, 1947


Mount Vernon Place


Box 3 Folder 4

History of the Port of Baltimore, 1947


Box 3 Folder 5

Story of Luther Martin--Multiple Drafts, 1947


Box 3 Folder 6

Story of Old Ironsides, by Louis Dropkin, 1947


Box 3 Folder 7

"'Red Goose,' by Norbert Davis. . .originally appeared in BLACK MASK MAGAZINE, Feb 1934," Adapted for Radio by Louis Dropkin,, undated


Box 3 Folder 8

"The Second Manhattan Project!," by Louis Dropkin--Multiple Drafts,, 1949


Box 3 Folder 9

"The Silent Invader," by Louis Dropkin, 1947


Box 3 Folder 10

"The Square Peg Club," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, undated


Box 3 Folder 11

"State of the Union,", undated


Box 3 Folder 12

Us the Folks: "By a Nose," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts, circa, 1946


Box 3 Folder 13

"Women Can Keep Secrets," by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, undated

Series III: Other Writings, 1941-circa 1950s

The small amount of material in this collection which is neither a script nor directly related to one is arranged in Series III. It comprises prose pieces written by Dropkin and others, several songs, and a small volume of correspondence and other material related to Dropkin's professional life.

Items in this series are arranged in alphabetical order within each subseries according to the titles indicated on the individual pieces. In a few cases, no title was indicated on an item—folders containing such materials have been given descriptive titles. The single folder of correspondence is arranged in chronological order. The folder title indicates those folders in this series which include multiple drafts of the same script or materials that are not a script (eg., correspondence).


Subseries 1: Prose, circa 1940s

This subseries contains short prose pieces written by Dropkin. Most of the manuscripts in this series are short essays or biographical profiles of literary and entertainment figures which Dropkin apparently attempted to publish. In addition, this subseries contains a large number of play reviews (perhaps written by Dropkin in his role as a member of a theater workshop) and a few notes for works-in-progress.


Box 3 Folder 14

"Carl Sandburg: A Profile," by Louis Dropkin, undated


Box 3 Folder 15

"Franklin Pierce Adams: A Profile," by Louis Dropkin--Multiple Drafts (with Correspondence),, 1942


Box 3 Folder 16

"Henry Morgan," by Louis Dropkin, with WOR Press Release, circa, 1940s


Box 3 Folder 17

"John Steinbeck: A Profile,", undated


Box 3 Folder 18

Notes, undated


Box 3 Folder 19

"Pearl Buck: A Profile," by Louis Dropkin (with Correspondence),, undated


Box 3 Folder 20

Play Reviews, undated


Box 3 Folder 21

"A Quaint History of the Hat," by Louis Dropkin--Multiple Drafts,, undated


Box 3 Folder 22

"The Smallest Light," by Louis Dropkin--Multiple Drafts, undated


Box 3 Folder 23

"The Way of the Guerrilla,", undated


Subseries 2: Songs, circa 1950s

Though a few songs appear in Series I due to their inclusion in sketches written by Dropkin and Leon, the songs in this subseries appear to have been written in order to stand alone.


Box 3 Folder 24

"Ain't Love Grand!," or "Sold American!," Lyrics by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts (with Correspondence),, undated


Box 3 Folder 25

"I Dillied When I Should Have Dallied," or "Let's Do It My Way!," Lyrics by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon--Multiple Drafts,, undated


Box 3 Folder 26

"It Takes Two to Make a Kiss," Lyrics by Louis Dropkin and Felix Leon, Music by Albert Van Dam--Multiple Drafts and Published Sheet Music,, 1950


Box 3 Folder 27

"The Wallflower Waltz,", undated


Subseries 3: Writings by Others, 1941-1953

This subseries consists of three distinct types of material written by people other than Dropkin: correspondence, forms, and creative writings. The correspondence concerns Dropkin's professional life exclusively, and includes letters from potential producers of his work, letters of reference from former employers, and letters concerning programs he was producing. The two forms in this subseries include an American Theatre Wing workshop schedule that included several of the works and authors found in this collection and a standard intellectual property waiver from the National Broadcasting Company. The creative writings in this subseries include a range of sketches, songs, and essays, perhaps the most noteworthy of which is Leo Hurwitz's essay on the similarities of and differences between directing stage, radio, television, and movie productions.


Box 3 Folder 28

American Theatre Wing Professional Training Program Writers Workshop Schedule,, 1950 February 21


Box 3 Folder 29

Correspondence, 1941-1953


Box 3 Folder 30

"The Director's Job," by Leo Hurwitz, 1945 June


Box 3 Folder 31

"The Face of Spain," by Felix Leon, 1951


Box 3 Folder 32

"Movie Fans," by Seymour L. Bloom, undated


Box 3 Folder 33

NBC Waiver, undated


Box 3 Folder 34

"The Rembrandt Spirit," by Felix Leon, 1952


Box 3 Folder 35

"The Subway Rush Song," Music by Bob Colby, Lyrics by Mauri Edwards,, undated