EPISODE · Jul 18, 2025 · 28 MIN
October 25, 1943: Drama Critics Go Naval with John Mason Brown and Richard Lockridge
from Information Please · host OTRPODS
In this October 25, 1943, episode of Information Please, Clifton Fadiman hosts a spirited panel featuring Franklin P. Adams, John Kieran, and special Navy Day guests—Lieutenants John Mason Brown and Richard Lockridge, both former New York drama critics now serving in the U.S. Navy. The episode celebrates Navy Day and highlights Brown and Lockridge’s forthcoming book, To All Hands. The evening is filled with lively theatrical and literary challenges, including questions on famous stage props and the roles they signify, “alphabet days” from military history, and the most memorable kisses in fact and fiction. The panel also dives into musical moments from Broadway and identifies their significance in plays like Lady in the Dark, Private Lives, and The Male Animal. Other highlights include witty explorations of poetic quotations about silence, the rationing changes in wartime fashion and toiletries, and a comical round matching fictional detectives with their favorite stimulants. The experts also tackle mental characteristic names, rewrites of Shakespeare, and soldiers quoting poetry in the face of battle. Throughout, the humor and camaraderie of the panel shine, with Brown and Lockridge’s theatrical expertise adding a special Navy twist to the proceedings. Tune in for a brisk, engaging, and knowledge-packed hour that blends wartime realities with the magic of stage and page—only on Information Please!
What this episode covers
In this October 25, 1943, episode of Information Please, Clifton Fadiman hosts a spirited panel featuring Franklin P. Adams, John Kieran, and special Navy Day guests—Lieutenants John Mason Brown and Richard Lockridge, both former New York drama critics now serving in the U.S. Navy. The episode celebrates Navy Day and highlights Brown and Lockridge’s forthcoming book, To All Hands.<br />The evening is filled with lively theatrical and literary challenges, including questions on famous stage props and the roles they signify, “alphabet days” from military history, and the most memorable kisses in fact and fiction. The panel also dives into musical moments from Broadway and identifies their significance in plays like Lady in the Dark, Private Lives, and The Male Animal.<br />Other highlights include witty explorations of poetic quotations about silence, the rationing changes in wartime fashion and toiletries, and a comical round matching fictional detectives with their favorite stimulants. The experts also tackle mental characteristic names, rewrites of Shakespeare, and soldiers quoting poetry in the face of battle. Throughout, the humor and camaraderie of the panel shine, with Brown and Lockridge’s theatrical expertise adding a special Navy twist to the proceedings.<br />Tune in for a brisk, engaging, and knowledge-packed hour that blends wartime realities with the magic of stage and page—only on Information Please!<br />
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October 25, 1943: Drama Critics Go Naval with John Mason Brown and Richard Lockridge
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