Thu, 8 July 2010 ![]() Size: 8M, Duration: 17:04 This month we bring you Horror at Camp Healthy Springs by Thomas Berry, performed live at the Academy Theatre for Halloween 2008. Don't forget you can support ARTC and keep the podcast going by picking up some of our fine audio dramas on CD, available by mail order at artc.org or by download at Audible.com, iTunes, and Amazon. Next live performance: LibertyCon July 10, 2010, 9pm Featuring: The Competitor by Brad Linaweaver, adapted for audio by William Alan Ritch and Time and Time Again by H. Beam Piper, adapted for audio by Ron N. Butler, along with some nifty other surprises! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 10 June 2010 ![]() Size: 4.7M, Duration: 10:03 This month we bring you another episode from our longest-running most requested serial, Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: Set Loose the Dogs of Time! by Ron N. Butler, recorded live at TimeGate 2008. If you enjoy the adventures of the intrepid Marshal and Cadet Skip Sagan, be sure to check out the imaginatively-named Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: Volume 1 available by mail order at artc.org or by download at Audible.com, iTunes, and Amazon. Next live performance: LibertyCon July 10, 2010, 9pm Featuring: The Competitor by Brad Linaweaver, adapted for audio by William Alan Ritch and Time and Time Again by H. Beam Piper, adapted for audio by Ron N. Butler, along with some nifty other surprises!
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Thu, 13 May 2010 ![]()
Coming to you from deep inside studio territory, it's the ARTC podcast! The next live shows will be in July, September, and October, but for now we're laying down tracks for the next round of CDs and Audible.com downloads! This month we bring you The Gargoyle's Shadow by Katherine Kurtz, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor. Remember, the most powerful help you can give us is to tell your friends and family about the richness and power of the imagination. Use the Share This button at the top of this post to plaster us all over the Internet! You can also give us encouragement by commenting on this podcast. Give us something besides spam to read. ;) Special thanks to violinist Paul Mercer and pianist Brad Weage for providing music for this podcast. There is Adventure in Sound!
Size: 9.7M Duration: 20:43
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Thu, 8 April 2010
Size: 38.7M, Duration: 26:51 Fresh off our performance at the Academy Theatre comes the 2010 update of The Last Dragon to Avondale by Thomas E. Fuller. We'd like to take just a moment to thank Bob Zimmerman for turning around the post-production of this piece so quickly for the podcast. We're entering into the offseason for ARTC now, taking a break from the stage to get back into the studio. Full details about what we're recording and how we're progressing will be available via our newsletter, Breaking Radio Silence. Sign up here! You can also follow us on Twitter for faster action! The Last Dragon to Avondale was performed as a benefit for the Georgia Aquarium. Thanks to everybody who came out to support audio drama and the study of endangered species. And what's more endangered than the last fire-breathing dragon in the world? The Last Dragon to Avondale, written for audio by Thomas E. Fuller There is Adventure in Sound!
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Thu, 11 March 2010
Size: 16.5M, Duration: 35:03 The Worst Good Woman in the World by Kelley S. Ceccato. Also, Caught by our special musical guest for March, Rooke! Rooke can be found on MySpace and Facebook. Come be a part of our podcast! We draw all of our material from our live performances, and we have another show coming up at the end of March. Witness one of the few audio drama ensembles in the country that performs live! The Last Dragon to Avondale by Thomas E. Fuller (Also on Audible.com) March 27, 8:00pm March 28, 2:30pm Academy Theatre 119 Center Street Avondale Estates, GA 30001 Tickets: $10 Also featured: The House Across the Way by Kelley S. Ceccato, with guest violinist Paul Mercer. All this with Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: The Colour of the Shadow of the Outsider over the Mountains of Madness out of Space. ARTC is pleased to benefit the Georgia Aquarium with this performance. 25% of ticket sales will go towards their efforts to study and protect endangered species. ARTC is also proud to offer free admission for the visually impaired and half-price admission for their sighted friends and family through a partnership with the Center for the Visually Impaired here in Atlanta. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 11 February 2010 ![]() [Time: 32.23] [Size: 31.1MB] [Classic Science Fiction] from Dragon*Con 2009: "Omnilingual" written by H. Beam Piper & adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor.
Speculative science fiction: Follow the first archaeologists to land on Mars. How do they decode what they find there, with no similar cultures to compare it to?
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Thu, 14 January 2010 [Time: 22:23] [Size: 26.9 MB] [Genre: Sci Fi/Comedy] Another part of our 2 performances at DragonCon 2009, we present Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: Enemies Within! Written by Ron. N Butler, directed by Neil Butler.
This episode draws heavily from a previous episode of Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: Luna Shall Be Dry! Comments? Questions? Requests? By all means, email us: podcast [at] artc [dot] org There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Tue, 8 December 2009 Length: 10:26, Size: 7MHey, everybody, thanks for another year of podcasting. A real low-key entry for this month, but we'll be back in full force in January. In the meantime, don't forget to give the gift of imagination this year with ARTC and audio drama. Mail order here and downloads here and our newsletter here. Also, we're on the radio! If you're in Atlanta, try us on 1010AM WGUN or stream the shows at www.wgunradio.com. We'll be on Saturdays and Sundays at 7pm, so tune in for more of your favorite audio drama. Merry Christmas and There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 12 November 2009 [Time: 19:11] [Size: 23 MB] [Genre: Horror] Recorded Live at a
performance at DragonCon 2009, The Atlanta Radio Theatre Company
presents "The Call of C'thulhu" written by H.P. Lovecraft, adapted for
audio by Ron N. Butler. This is Part 2 of 2.Folks, by now you all know about all the stuff I usually post here and the links go on for several posts, so I'm not going to repeat them again this month. I just want to thank everybody for another (almost) year of great podcasting and appreciation of audio drama. The fact that you're still listening makes it all worth it. We've got one more podcast left for this year, in December, and then it's off to 2010. One goal I'd like to try to achieve for the coming year is more interaction with our audience. What do you want to hear from us? How can we improve? There's lots of changes coming and we've got some interesting ideas, but we want to make sure we're doing the right ideas and changing in the right ways. So how are we doing? Everything ok? We'd like to hear from you, so go ahead and send us that email or comment on this post. Just two links this month. First, in the spirit of that increased interaction I just talked about, we've done a survey to find out what you want to hear from us out of the studio next. And second, a reminder to join our mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence"! Sign up at artc.org/ and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! Next live show: An Atlanta Christmas at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates, GA. December 5 and 6. Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. Thanks again! -- David Benedict and Bob Zimmerman, your podcasting team. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[2] | |
Thu, 8 October 2009 [Time 33:50] [Size: 24.4MB] [Genre: Horror] Recorded Live at a performance at DragonCon 2009, The Atlanta Radio Theatre Company presents "The Call of C'thulhu" written by H.P. Lovecraft, adapted for audio by Ron N. Butler. This is Part 1 of 2.And now the obligatory self-promotion: H.P. Lovecraft's "Call of C'thulhu" will be repeated at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates GA on October 24, 2009 (8PM) and October 25, 2009. (2:30PM) Come see us Live! We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! You can now also show your support for quality, original audio drama to the world with our expanded line of merchandise at Woodrow's Mercantile, hosted by Cafe Press! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. There is Adventure in Sound! Direct download: 01_Call_of_Cthulhu_by_H.P._Lovecraft_Part_1.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 7:47 PM Comments[0] | |
Thu, 10 September 2009 Size: 9M, Duration: 18:53Hey, folks, we're deep into getting ready for Dragon*Con, but you can look forward to hearing some of those performances here in October! This assumes, of course, that you can't be there yourself. By the way, a correction to the Dragon*Con schedule. The Call of Cthulhu will be on Saturday night at the Marriott Atrium Ballroom at 7:30pm. Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: Enemies Within! will be on Sunday night at the Hyatt Regency VI-VII at 7:00pm. The above schedule is backwards from what Dragon*Con published in their pocket program guide, so pass the word and don't miss either show! We'll be back in a public venue at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates on October 24 and 25, so be sure to tell all your non-congoing friends that they don't have to miss out on the radio magic! This month we bring you the second part of Our Fair City by Robert A. Heinlein, adapted for audio by Brad Strickland and Thomas E. Fuller, performed live at LibertyCon in Chattanooga, TN on July 11, 2009. This is part of our Dean's List series, available through our website. And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! You can now also show your support for quality, original audio drama to the world with our expanded line of merchandise at Woodrow's Mercantile, hosted by Cafe Press! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 13 August 2009 Hello and welcome again to the Atlanta radio theatre company's podcast,
your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama.This month we bring you Our Fair City by Robert A. Heinlein, adapted for audio by Brad Strickland and Thomas E. Fuller, performed live at LibertyCon in Chattanooga, TN on July 11, 2009. This is part of our Dean's List series, available through our website. And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! You can now also show your support for quality, original audio drama to the world with our expanded line of merchandise at Woodrow's Mercantile, hosted by Cafe Press! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be at Dragon*Con on Labor Day weekend, where we will present The Call of Cthulhu by H. P. Lovecraft, adapted for audio by Ron N. Butler, and then we'll be back at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates on October 24 and 25. Halloween programming guaranteed to chill the imagination. Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 9 July 2009 Size: 12.5M Duration: 26:40Hello and welcome again to the Atlanta radio theatre company's podcast, your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama. This month we bring you another episode of Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: Luna Shall Be Dry! by Ron N. Butler, performed live at Sci-Fi Summer in June 2004. The studio version of this piece is available as the "B-side" of The Menace From Earth. (Audible.com link) And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. You can now also show your support for quality, original audio drama to the world with our expanded line of merchandise at Cafe Press! We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be on July 11 at LibertyCon, followed by Dragon*Con on Labor Day weekend, and then we'll be back at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates on October 24 and 25. Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. Comments[0] | |
Thu, 11 June 2009 This year ARTC is celebrating its 25th anniversary! Over the course of the next several months we'll be taking a look back at our history, examining our present, and predicting our own future. Stay tuned here for exciting new developments in podcasting and audio drama. This month we bring you another episode of Terra Tarkington, Interstellar Nurses' Corps: Bitch on the Bull Run by Sharon Webb, adapted for audio by Wendy Webb, performed live at Sci-Fi Summer in June 2004. And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! If the monthly newsletter updates are too slow for you, follow us on Twitter! If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be on July 11 at LibertyCon, followed by Dragon*Con on Labor Day weekend, and then we'll be back at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates on October 24 and 25. Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. Comments[0] | |
Thu, 14 May 2009 Size: 12.3M Duration: 26:16Hello and welcome again to the Atlanta radio theatre company's podcast, your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama. We changed the layout of the podcast page a little. We've also made it easier for you to share the podcast with your friends! We hope you like it! This year ARTC is celebrating its 25th anniversary! Over the course of the next several months we'll be taking a look back at our history, examining our present, and predicting our own future. Stay tuned here for exciting new developments in podcasting and audio drama. This month we bring you Ghost Dance by Thomas E. Fuller, performed live at Georgia Pacific on October 31, 2000. And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! If the monthly newsletter updates are too slow for you, follow us on Twitter! If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be on July 11 at LibertyCon, followed by Dragon*Con on Labor Day weekend, and then we'll be back at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates on October 24 and 25. Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. Comments[0] | |
Thu, 9 April 2009 Size: 18.25M Duration: 39:00Hello and welcome again to the Atlanta radio theatre company's podcast, your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama. This year ARTC is celebrating its 25th anniversary! Over the course of the next several months we'll be taking a look back at our history, examining our present, and predicting our own future. Stay tuned here for exciting new developments in podcasting and audio drama. This month we bring you Blues for Johnny Raven. Longtime listeners to the podcast will remember that this was the fifth podcast we ever published, and that we re-ran it later. But this is the 2009 edition, with Daniel W. Kiernan as Johnny Raven, Fiona K. Leonard as Gloria Kinsolving, and Mary Buchanan on live saxophone! This piece clearly illustrates the evolution of ARTC as a live performance audio drama company and the power of audio as a storytelling medium. And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be in July at LibertyCon, followed by Dragon*Con on Labor Day weekend, and then we'll be back at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates in October. Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. Comments[0] | |
Thu, 12 March 2009 Size: 5.7M, Duration: 12:21Hello and welcome again to the Atlanta radio theatre company's podcast, your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama. This year ARTC is celebrating its 25th anniversary! Over the course of the next several months we'll be taking a look back at our history, examining our present, and predicting our own future. Stay tuned here for exciting new developments in podcasting and audio drama. This month we bring you an episode of Mildly Exciting Tales of Astonishment: Baby Boom by Jonathan Strickland along with a song from one of our favorite guest musicians, Juliana Finch! Juliana Finch is an Atlanta musician who has performed with ARTC both as an actress and as a musical guest on many occasions. Check out her website at julianafinch.com where you can pre-order her new full-length album blossoms/apples. We thank her for permission to podcast her song "Something Holy"! And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be in July at LibertyCon, followed by Dragon*Con on Labor Day weekend, and then we'll be back at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates in October. Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. Comments[0] | |
Thu, 12 February 2009 Size: 8M - Duration: 17:19Hello and welcome again to the Atlanta radio theatre company's podcast, your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama. This year ARTC is celebrating its 25th anniversary! Over the course of the next several months we'll be taking a look back at our history, examining our present, and predicting our own future. Stay tuned here for exciting new developments in podcasting and audio drama. This month we go all the way back to 1993 and the Little Five Points community coffeehouse where our listeners enjoyed monthly performances from ARTC. Many of our most memorable series were born here as the writers frantically tried to keep up with this breakneck pace in live performance, including the Adventures of the Crimson Hawk, Rory Rammer Space Marshal, and Bumpers Crossroads. We bring you now two episodes of daniel taylor's gripping serial of the little town that time forgot, beginning with The Traffic Light and concluding with The Developer. And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! The new list is also archived at blog.artc.org. I'll crosspost to both our old Yahoo Groups list and the new one for a while, but you'll want to be on the new one. Trust me. If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be on March 7 and 8 at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates where we'll formally kick off the 25th anniversary celebration by testing the limits of live performance in audio with Blues for Johnny Raven. If you've heard the previous performance on the podcast, you haven't heard anything yet. We'll also be taking a look back of some of our favorite moments in radio history and welcoming back some longtime performers including William L. brown, Fiona K. Leonard, and lots of other surprises. Check our performance calendar at artc.org and comment on this podcast at podcast@artc.org. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 8 January 2009 Size: 10M - Duration: 21:13Happy New Year! Welcome back to another year of original audio drama from the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company! This month we bring you Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: The Atomic Graveyard by Ron N. Butler, performed live at LibertyCon 2008 in Chattanooga, TN. And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! The new list is also archived at blog.artc.org. I'll crosspost to both our old Yahoo Groups list and the new one for a while, but you'll want to be on the new one. Trust me. If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be at Chattacon in Chattanooga, TN on January 24 where we'll be bringing you The Colour Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft, adapted for audio by Ron N. Butler as well as The Gargoyle's Shadow by Katherine Kurtz, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor. We're also trying to squeeze in an episode of Rory Rammer that isn't exactly new, but which very few people have heard. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 25 December 2008 Size: 7M Duration: 14:54Well, here we are. The end of another year of podcasting for ARTC. Ok, fine, we didn't exactly podcast for the whole year, but the point is that we took some needed time off and came back with a better situation than we had before. We're looking forward to podcasting at least monthly and more often when we can. This week we bring you Christmas Rose by Kelley S. Ceccato, performed live at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates, GA, on December 6 and 7, 2008. This story is one of my personal favorites of Kelley's. She's written lots of stuff for us and continues to improve in her craft and we are very lucky to have her. We hope you enjoy it. As we move into the New Year we at ARTC hope that all of you enjoy all of the magic that your imaginations can provide. Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to everyone and we'll see you next year! And now the obligatory self-promotion: We've got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! The new list is also archived at blog.artc.org. I'll crosspost to both our old Yahoo Groups list and the new one for a while, but you'll want to be on the new one. Trust me. If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We make great gifts and stocking stuffers! Give the gift of imagination this holiday season. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be at Chattacon in Chattanooga, TN on January 24 where we'll be bringing you The Colour Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft, adapted for audio by Ron N. Butler as well as The Gargoyle's Shadow by Katherine Kurtz, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor. We're also trying to squeeze in an episode of Rory Rammer that isn't exactly new, but which very few people have heard. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 18 December 2008 Size: 6M Duration: 12:51Hello, and welcome to the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company's podcast, your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama. 'Tis the season for giving, and so we here at ARTC have decided to give you a new podcast every week for the rest of the year. Every Thursday from now until (and including) Christmas Day you can find the newest installments of our holiday show, An Atlanta Christmas conceived by Thomas E. Fuller. This week we bring you Christmas on the High Seas, written for the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company by Jonathan Strickland, performed live at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates, GA on December 6 and 7, 2008. We've also got a brand new mailing list, "Breaking Radio Silence". Sign up at artc.org/lists and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! The new list is also archived at blog.artc.org. I'll crosspost to both our old Yahoo Groups list and the new one for a while, but you'll want to be on the new one. Trust me. If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We make great gifts and stocking stuffers! Give the gift of imagination this holiday season. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be at Chattacon in Chattanooga, TN on January 24 where we'll be bringing you The Colour Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft, adapted for audio by Ron N. Butler as well as The Gargoyle's Shadow by Katherine Kurtz, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor. We're also trying to squeeze in an episode of Rory Rammer that isn't exactly new, but which very few people have heard. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 11 December 2008 Size: 5.7M Duration: 12:11Hello, and welcome to the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company's podcast, your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama. 'Tis the season for giving, and so we here at ARTC have decided to give you a new podcast every week for the rest of the year. Every Thursday from now until (and including) Christmas Day you can find the newest installments of our holiday show, An Atlanta Christmas conceived by Thomas E. Fuller. This week we bring you Rudolphium, written for the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company by Cyd Hoskinson, performed live at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates, GA on December 6 and 7, 2008. How's that for fast service? If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We make great gifts and stocking stuffers! Give the gift of imagination this holiday season. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal And don't forget our own mailing list. Last month we pointed everyone to the Yahoo Groups list we've been using. It's served us well for years, but the time has come to stand on our own two feet. The new list, "Breaking Radio Silence", is at artc.org/lists. Sign up and stay current on all the latest audio drama and ARTC news! The new list is also archived at blog.artc.org. I'll crosspost to both the Yahoo Groups and the new list for a while, but you'll want to be on the new one. Trust me. You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be at Chattacon in Chattanooga, TN on January 24 where we'll be bringing you The Colour Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft, adapted for audio by Ron N. Butler as well as The Gargoyle's Shadow by Katherine Kurtz, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor. We're also trying to squeeze in an episode of Rory Rammer that isn't exactly new, but which very few people have heard. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 20 November 2008 Size: 10M Duration 21:47Hello, and welcome to the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company's podcast, your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama. This month we bring you Nothing-at-All, written for the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company by Kelley S. Ceccato, performed live at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates, GA on October 25 and 26, 2008. As promised, this month we bring you a second podcast with part two of Nothing-at-All by Kelley S. Ceccato. If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We make great gifts and stocking stuffers for you early shoppers out there! We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal And don't forget our own mailing list. Just go to artc.org and sign up in the field on the right to stay current on all things audio! You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be at the Academy Theatre on December 6 and 7 where we will present An Atlanta Christmas, conceived by Thomas E. Fuller. Spread the word on our Facebook Event page! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 13 November 2008 Size: 10M, Duration: 21:28Hello, and welcome to the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company's podcast, your monthly source for the best in free, original audio drama. This month we bring you Nothing-at-All, written for the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company by Kelley S. Ceccato, performed live at the Academy Theatre in Avondale Estates, GA on October 25 and 26, 2008. Due to length, this podcast will be in two parts. But, in the spirit of the upcoming holiday season, we're giving you the gift of TWO podcasts this month. Tune in here this time next week for the concluding part of Nothing-at-All. If you're enjoying these podcasts, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We make great gifts and stocking stuffers for you early shoppers out there! We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be at the Academy Theatre on December 6 and 7 where we will present An Atlanta Christmas, conceived by Thomas E. Fuller. Spread the word on our Facebook Event page! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 9 October 2008 Size: 9.8M Duration: 21:05Hello and welcome again to the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company's monthly podcast, bringing you the best of what your imagination has to offer. This month we're featuring Haunter Hunters by Thomas Berry, which we thought was only appropriate for the month of Halloween. Speaking of Halloween, don't forget that ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. We've specialized in horror and suspense for nearly 25 years now, so pick up your favorite H. P. Lovecraft stories or take a dare with some of our original material. We're easy to find in the following places: artc.org iTunes Audible.com and now Amazon! It's also easier than ever to spread the word about audio drama, New Old-Time Radio, and ARTC. LiveJournal You can also come to one of the live performances featured in these podcasts! Our next one will be at the Academy Theatre on October 25 and 26 where we will present The Colour Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft, as well as the newest story by local audio playwright Kelley S. Ceccato, Nothing-at-All. Spread the word on our Facebook Event page! Thank you for listening. Join us again next month and remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 11 September 2008 Size: 6M, Duration: 13:19The Atlanta Radio Theatre Company podcast - your home for original audio drama, provided monthly. Don't ya just love digital technology? We do a performance and less than two weeks later we can podcast it! This month we bring you two selections from one of our shows at Dragon*Con 2008, recorded live on Sunday, August 31, 2008 at 7pm in Regency 6 and 7. First up we have The National Endowment for Space Art by Ron N. Butler, featuring the voices of Ron N. Butler as Griff Michaels and Laurice White as Jane Handley-Page. Next we bring you a new episode of Mildly Exciting Tales of Astonishment: The Time Board by Jonathan Strickland, featuring the voices of Ron N. Butler as the announcer, Jeff Montgomery as Lord Destructeronimous, Ariel Stewart as Vroomhilda, and Jonathan Strickland as the Algonquin Alchemist. Live Foley sound effects were created by Rachel Bowman, Neil Butler, and Sonya. Recorded effects provided by Henry Howard and Audio Craft Studio. Music was composed and performed by Brad Weage. The floor manager was Lori Emerson, audio engineering by Bob Zimmerman. This podcast was prepared by David Benedict. Remember, ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. Order by mail at artc.org, download at Audible.com or iTunes. You can also make donations by emailing donate AT artc DOT org to help us buy a new sound effects library. Comments on the podcast can be sent to podcast AT artc DOT org. NEW Photo Gallery! Pictures of ARTC performances can be viewed at artc.org/gallery. Create an account, rate the pictures, make comments, or upload your own pictures of audio drama! Remember to tell people about the podcast and that There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 14 August 2008 Size: 10M Duration: 22:07 Welcome to this month's installment of the ARTC podcast. This week we bring you Terra Tarkington, Interstellar Nurses' Corps: Switch on the Bull Run by Sharon Webb, adapted for audio by Wendy Webb and Steve Nesheim. Performed live at TimeGate, May 25, 2008. Featured in the cast were the voices of Clair Whitworth Kiernan, Bill Kronick, Al Przygocki, David Benedict, Daniel Whitworth Kiernan, Jack Mayfield, and Daniel Taylor. Foley sound effects were created by Sonya with Deanna Ameri. Recorded sound effects provided by Henry Howard and Audio Craft Studio, performed by Thomas Berry and William Alan Ritch. Sound engineering by Bob Zimmerman, the floor manager was Lori Emerson, and music performed by Brad Weage. This performance was produced by Nancy Skidmore and Cyd Hoskinson, directed by Ron N. Butler and William Alan Ritch. Don't forget our upcoming live performances at Dragon*Con, Labor Day weekend, featuring "The Doom of the Mummy" by William Alan Ritch and at the Academy Theatre on October 25 and 26 where we will present "The Colour Out of Space" by H. P. Lovecraft, adapted for audio by Ron N. Butler. Remember ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit artc.org, audible.com, or iTunes to find your favorite new old time radio or email donate@artc.org for more information about making a donation to ARTC. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[1] | |
Thu, 10 July 2008 Welcome back! The hiatus is over! ...sort of.After over six months of being off the air the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is bringing its podcast back on a monthly schedule. Why monthly? Because we're still not done with the archiving, but we couldn't bear to be away any longer. How long will the monthly updating last? We'll have to see. Thanks so much to everyone who has hung in there. For now we're going to shoot for the second Thursday of every month by 8pm and in between I'll try to report any news that may be of note. Remember, ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. Order by mail through www.artc.org or make it easy on yourself and us by downloading from audible.com or iTunes. A quick note about iTunes: For some reason you can't search for us by our name, you have to search by title or author. So make www.artc.org your first stop to make your selection, then scoot on over to iTunes for the download. You'll also find audio samples and trailers there, so it's well worth your visit. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 3 January 2008 Duration: 32 Minutes Size: 14.9 M Hey, folks, another rerun this week, but fear not...plans are afoot to bring you new material in a more timely fashion. Plus, possible new podcast-only material! Stay tuned! To Dine with the Devil by Ivan Turgenev Adapted for Audio by Joyce Leigh Performed Live at Sci Fi Summer 2003 in Atlanta, Georgia The old Russian proverb states: "Those who dine with the devil may end up on the menu." If you like H.P. Lovecraft, you'll love this....Not for the squeamish. If you enjoy New Old-Time Radio and audio horror, then pick up one of our adaptations at www.artc.org! Also, remember that you can email podcast@artc.org with your comments, or you can include them here. We'd love to hear from you with questions, comments, concerns, or even complaints. Remember, ARTC is supported by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. Don't just take the podcast for free, the studio quality is much higher! www.artc.org for a physical CD or by download at Audible.com! Credits: Voice Talent (in alphabetical order): David Benedict, Phil Carter, Doug Kaye, Clair Kiernan, Daniel Kiernan, Joyce Leigh, Trudy Leonard Original Music by Alton Leonard and Brad Weage Directed by Doug Kaye Sound Engineering by David Carter and William Alan Ritch assisted by Ray Spitz Sound Effects by Henry Howard Live Foley by Lili and Sonya and assisted by Anthony Fuller There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 27 December 2007 Size: 6.7M Duration: 14:20 Welcome everyone to the last Christmas podcast of the year. We conclude the season with another very recent show, Sunday, December 23 to be exact. And we are proud to bring you a segment of An Atlanta Christmas that has never been presented before. "Civil War Triptych", written by Thomas E. Fuller, follows the Christmas stories of three characters, each with an entirely different situation and take on the season. Again, technical reasons prevented me from including the performer's names in the audio, but they are Clair W. Kiernan, Veronica Byrd, and Jeff Montgomery. Assisting with the song at the end are Dawn Marie and Sarah Taylor. Special thanks to our performance coach, Doug Kaye. We hope you've enjoyed our annual presentation of An Atlanta Christmas. We look forward to doing it again next year. You can help make next year possible with your purchase of one of our CDs through www.artc.org or by download at Audible.com! Let us know what you think at podcast@artc.org. And, as we close the show, allow us to wish you Merry Christmas to all, and to y'all a good night. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 20 December 2007 Size: 15M, Duration: 32:31 Hey, folks, sorry for the multiple repeats this year, but this holiday season is busy busy busy!! Live shows, paying work, shopping, parties...it all adds up. But fear not, new material is coming! Our annual gift to our listeners continues with more excerpts from An Atlanta Christmas. This week we bring you three short pieces and another lovely song. We hope you enjoy it. The Santa Claus Blues, by Thomas E. Fuller Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: A Visit From St. Rex, by Ron N. Butler The Tree Comes to Atlanta, by Thomas E. Fuller O Holy Night, performed by the ARTC Chorus You can see us perform live at Stage Door Players in Dunwoody on Saturday, December 22, 2007 at 8:00pm or Sunday, December 23 at 2:30pm. Tickets are $10 and can be purchased at the door or by calling (770)396-1726. Also, ARTC CDs make great gifts, so be sure to go to www.artc.org and check our catalog for those last minute stocking stuffers. You can get directions to the show there, too! There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 13 December 2007 Size: 4M Duration: 8:52 Hey, folks, technical difficulties are forcing me to post this week's installment without intro or outro crediting information. Hopefully this is just temporary, but we'll see. This week's episode is from an extremely recent show. Like this past weekend. Yes, from December 8, 2007 at 4pm to be exact, we present "Cut-Out Christmas" by Thomas E. Fuller, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor and featuring the voices of Veronica Byrd and Burt Tanner. Foley effects created by Sonya with Caran Wilbanks. Music by Brad Weage. Our next performance is our return to the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody on Saturday, December 22 at 8:00pm and Sunday, December 23 at 2:30pm. Mark your calendars for our yearly celebration of our Family Christmas! Like the podcast? Sound off! Make sure it continues by doing one or more of the following! Buy our CDs! www.artc.org Download at Audible.com! Tell someone about us! Write to us! We're lonely! podcast@artc.org. (seriously, I'd like to get some actual feedback in addition to the spam...) But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 6 December 2007 Time: 22:29 Size: 10.5M Welcome, welcome one and all to our family Christmas! To every family Christmas that ever was or ever will be! Behold the traditional Christmas tree weighted down with ornaments and decorations! Every five year old's Christmas morning writ large and come true! Welcome also to another repeat in our podcasting series. Some things are worth hearing again and this is a busy time of the year. For one day a year, the Theater of the Mind gives way to a warm hearth and a bowl of gingerbread -- and when from the roof there arises a clatter, it's neither a faceless monster nor a Martian. It's Christmas. Christmas is memories. For the next 4 podcasts, ARTC will be bringing you some of our favorite memories from our holiday programming, drawing heavily from Thomas E. Fuller's An Atlanta Christmas, but with a few other surprises along the way.This week we bring you The Ultimate Christmas Pageant and O Tannenbaum by Thomas E. Fuller, and Some Assembly Required, by Daniel Taylor. These were recorded live in 2003 at Stone Mountain Park's Fruitcake Festival. Featured in the cast were the voices of Joyce Leigh, Daniel Taylor, Ron N. Butler, Neil Butler, Colin Butler, Daniel Kiernan, Clair Kiernan, Tamara Morton, Justin Ameri, Katie Brass, Megan Jackson, Juliana Finch, Sarah Taylor, Josh Adams, Jack Mayfield, and Caran Wilbanks. Foley sound effects were created by Lili, Deanna Ameri, and Sheila Ameri. Music performed by Brad Weage. Sound engineering by David Carter, Ray Spitz, and Elayna Little. The show was produced and directed by William Alan Ritch. Please join us for this year's production of An Atlanta Christmas at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody. As mentioned in the audio, we'll be there on December 23 at 2:30pm, but we'll also be there on December 22 at 8:00pm! More information can be found at www.artc.org, and don't forget that our CDs of New Old-Time Radio make great gifts. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 29 November 2007 Size: 4M Duration: 8:47 Back in 2004 ARTC performed an outdoor show at Stone Mountain Park for their Frontier Days festival. We've brought you some of that material here in the podcast before and today we revisit it with Mike Langford's Blazing the Trail of Tears in two parts. The timing of this story for this podcast is not lost on us. It is not a proud part of Georgia or American history, but it is an important one. We hope you enjoy the presentation. Next week we will begin bringing you segments from An Atlanta Christmas, originally written by Thomas E. Fuller and continually expanded by a host of our other writers. Christmas is expanding this year! Our next live performances will be on Saturday and Sunday, December 8 and 9, at 2pm and 4pm at Memorial Hall inside Stone Mountain Park! After that we return to the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody on Saturday, December 22 at 8:00pm and Sunday, December 23 at 2:30pm. Mark your calendars for our yearly celebration of our Family Christmas! Like the podcast? Sound off! Make sure it continues by doing one or more of the following! Buy our CDs! www.artc.org Download at Audible.com! Tell someone about us! Write to us! We're lonely! podcast@artc.org. (seriously, I'd like to get some actual feedback in addition to the spam...) But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 22 November 2007 Size: 6M Duration 12:25 Back in 2004 ARTC performed an outdoor show at Stone Mountain Park for their Frontier Days festival. We've brought you some of that material here in the podcast before and today we revisit it with Mike Langford's Blazing the Trail of Tears in two parts. The timing of this story for this podcast is not lost on us. It is not a proud part of Georgia or American history, but it is an important one. We hope you enjoy the presentation. Next week we will begin bringing you segments from An Atlanta Christmas, originally written by Thomas E. Fuller and continually expanded by a host of our other writers. Christmas is expanding this year! Our next live performances will be on Saturday and Sunday, December 8 and 9, at 2pm and 4pm at Memorial Hall inside Stone Mountain Park! After that we return to the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody on Saturday, December 22 at 8:00pm and Sunday, December 23 at 2:30pm. Mark your calendars for our yearly celebration of our Family Christmas! Like the podcast? Sound off! Make sure it continues by doing one or more of the following! Buy our CDs! www.artc.org Download at Audible.com! Tell someone about us! Write to us! We're lonely! podcast@artc.org. (seriously, I'd like to get some actual feedback in addition to the spam...) But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 15 November 2007 Size: 17M Duration: 37:04 This week ARTC takes a well-deserved break from new podcast material, bringing you instead a re-run of one of our absolute favorite pieces, Blues for Johnny Raven by Thomas E. Fuller. Our next live performances will be on Saturday, December 22 at 8:00pm and Sunday, December 23 at 2:30pm at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody. Mark your calendars for our annual presentation of Thomas E. Fuller's An Atlanta Christmas. Like the podcast? Sound off! Make sure it continues by doing one or more of the following! Buy our CDs! www.artc.org Download at Audible.com! Tell someone about us! Write to us! We're lonely! podcast@artc.org. (seriously, I'd like to get some actual feedback in addition to the spam...) But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 8 November 2007 Size: 5.7M Duration: 12:11 This week we conclude our five part presentation of H. P. Lovecraft's The Shadow Over Innsmouth, adapted for audio by Thomas E. Fuller and Gregory Nicholl. It features the voice of legendary writer Harlan Ellison, as well as anime voice actor Michael Brady. This was performed live at Dragon*Con 2004 and was part of our celebration of our 20th anniversary! We hope you've enjoyed the last several weeks of podcasting. I've been including a wide selection of our adaptations. Beginning next week we will return to our original material and in December we will present once again selections from Thomas E. Fuller's An Atlanta Christmas...along with a few other seasonal favorites from our own in-house writers. Our next live performances will be on Saturday, December 22 at 8:00pm and Sunday, December 23 at 2:30pm at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody. Mark your calendars for our annual presentation of Thomas E. Fuller's An Atlanta Christmas. Like the podcast? Sound off! Make sure it continues by doing one or more of the following! Buy our CDs! www.artc.org Download at Audible.com! Tell someone about us! Write to us! We're lonely! podcast@artc.org. (seriously, I'd like to get some actual feedback in addition to the spam...) But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 1 November 2007 Duration: 17:47 Size: 8.3M This week we continue our five part presentation of H. P. Lovecraft's The Shadow Over Innsmouth, adapted for audio by Thomas E. Fuller and Gregory Nicholl. It features the voice of legendary writer Harlan Ellison, as well as anime voice actor Michael Brady. This was performed live at Dragon*Con 2004 and was part of our celebration of our 20th anniversary! Our next live performances will be on Saturday, December 22 at 8:00pm and Sunday, December 23 at 2:30pm at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody. Mark your calendars for our annual presentation of Thomas E. Fuller's An Atlanta Christmas. Like the podcast? Sound off! Make sure it continues by doing one or more of the following! Buy our CDs! www.artc.org Download at Audible.com! Tell someone about us! Write to us! We're lonely! podcast@artc.org. (seriously, I'd like to get some actual feedback in addition to the spam...) But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 25 October 2007 Size: 8.7M Duration: 18:37 This week we continue our five part presentation of H. P. Lovecraft's The Shadow Over Innsmouth, adapted for audio by Thomas E. Fuller and Gregory Nicholl. It features the voice of legendary writer Harlan Ellison, as well as anime voice actor Michael Brady. This was performed live at Dragon*Con 2004 and was part of our celebration of our 20th anniversary! This Saturday, October 27, ARTC will present The Rats in the Walls by H. P. Lovecraft at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody. Come be a part of the recording of the source material for these podcasts! Like the podcast? Make sure it continues by doing one or more of the following! Buy our CDs! www.artc.org Download at Audible.com! Tell someone about us! Write to us and boost our egos! podcast@artc.org. But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Wed, 17 October 2007 Size: 8M Duration: 17:13 This week we continue our five part presentation of H. P. Lovecraft's The Shadow Over Innsmouth, adapted for audio by Thomas E. Fuller and Gregory Nicholl. It features the voice of legendary writer Harlan Ellison, as well as anime voice actor Michael Brady. This was performed live at Dragon*Con 2004 and was part of our celebration of our 20th anniversary! Please remember that the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. CDs are available by mail order through www.artc.org or by download at Audible.com. Stop by the website to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, and HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. Want to know more about ARTC, New Old-Time Radio, or just want to comment on the podcast? We're easy to reach at podcast@artc.org. If you like this podcast and would like it to continue, please consider supporting ARTC with one of the methods listed above, or just write to us. Knowing you're listening keeps us going. But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 11 October 2007 Size: 8M Duration: 16:54 This week we are pleased to begin a five part presentation of H. P. Lovecraft's The Shadow Over Innsmouth, adapted for audio by Thomas E. Fuller and Gregory Nicholl. It features the voice of legendary writer Harlan Ellison, as well as anime voice actor Michael Brady. This was performed live at Dragon*Con 2004. Please remember that the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions. CDs are available by mail order through www.artc.org or by download at Audible.com. Stop by the website to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, and HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. If you like this podcast and would like it to continue, please consider supporting ARTC with one of the methods listed above. But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 4 October 2007 Size: 8.4M Duration: 17:51 This week we are pleased to continue our podcast of the Dragon*Con 2001 production of Robert A. Heinlein's Solution Unsatisfactory. Guest starring in this production are Peter David and Lisa Getto. Next week will begin our five part podcast of H. P. Lovecraft's The Shadow Over Innsmouth, featuring Harlan Ellison and Michael Brady, recorded live at Dragon*Con 2004. Please remember that the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit www.artc.org to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, and HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. If you like this podcast and would like it to continue, please consider supporting ARTC with one of the methods listed above. But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 27 September 2007 Size: 8.4M Duration: 17:53 This week we are pleased to continue our podcast of the Dragon*Con 2001 production of Robert A. Heinlein's Solution Unsatisfactory. Next week will feature the third and final part. Following this will be our five part podcast of H. P. Lovecraft's The Shadow Over Innsmouth, featuring Harlan Ellison. Guest starring in this production are Peter David and Lisa Getto. Please remember that the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit www.artc.org to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, and HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. If you like this podcast and would like it to continue, please consider supporting ARTC with one of the methods listed above. But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 20 September 2007 Duration: 18:57 Size: 8.8M Back in 2001 we performed an adaptation of Robert A. Heinlein's Solution Unsatisfactory. As you might expect, we were very proud and excited to present a work by such a well-regarded author. And since it was written in 1941 we were already aware that Mr. Heinlein had seemingly seen the future of world events by predicting the use of atomic weapons, although in a different form. Little did we realize how memorable this performance would become. Performed live on August 31, we planned studio time for September 12, 2001. Needless to say we moved this production up in the queue. Guest starring in this production are Peter David and Lisa Getto. Please remember that the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit www.artc.org to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, and HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. If you like this podcast and would like it to continue, please consider supporting ARTC with one of the methods listed above. But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 13 September 2007 Size: 12M Duration: 25:56 Welcome to part three, the final chapter of our 2001 Dragon*Con performance of Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett, adapted for audio by David Benedict, featuring John Rhys-Davies as Lupine Wonse. I hope everyone has been enjoying hearing this as much as I enjoyed adapting it. Being able to share it with a mass audience has brought back a lot of the enthusiasm I had when I was working on the project originally. I occasionally felt as though I were summoning dragons myself as I constructed them out of pure sound. As part of this production, ARTC made a donation to the Orangutan Foundation International, an organization dedicated to the preservation of the orangutan and its natural habitat. But the magic doesn't stop here, oh, no. Next week we'll be bringing you part one of Robert A. Heinlein's Solution Unsatisfactory, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor, a story which has only gotten creepier in light of events over the past few years. Please remember that the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit www.artc.org to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, and HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. If you like this podcast and would like it to continue, please consider supporting ARTC with one of the methods listed above. But no matter what, always remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 6 September 2007 Size: 11.5M Duration: 24:33 Welcome to part two of our 2001 Dragon*Con performance of Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett, adapted for audio by David Benedict, featuring John Rhys-Davies as Lupine Wonse. As I mentioned last week, the adaptation for this production was particularly difficult. It is a full-length novel, rich with character development, humor, plots and subplots, and is considered by many to be a fine starting point for those wishing to get into the Discworld series. When compressing it down into an hour, most of that stuff had to go out the window. When we read the first draft it took over two hours and we didn't finish. That's when I knew I had my work cut out for me. For those of you who have read the original book, I agonized over the scene with the prospective dragon hunters who were all complaining about how you don't get respect from monsters anymore and how one monster's mother actually came round to complain after he was killed and his head put up over the door. For those of you who haven't, don't think this adaptation even begins to cover the depth of this book. Read it. As part of this production, ARTC made a donation to the Orangutan Foundation International, an organization dedicated to the preservation of the orangutan and its natural habitat. Please remember that the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit www.artc.org to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, and HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. Comments[2] | |
Thu, 30 August 2007 Size: 11.2M Duration: 23:57 Wow. It's hard to believe we've been podcasting now for one full year. Fifty two podcasts have come and gone and now we're starting on year two, and we're starting it with a really special one. Back in 2001 we received permission to perform Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett at Dragon*Con. Furthermore, we were very priveleged to have John Rhys-Davies play the role of Lupine Wonse When the performance was over we thought that was it...a copy of the recording was sent to Mr. Pratchett, but other than that we thought it would remain locked in the vast, cavernous ARTC archive vault. But then we started podcasting. And so I wrote to Mr. Pratchett and asked permission to distribute the recording and happily he agreed. What you are about to hear, in three parts, is something I will always be proud of. I worked very hard on the adaptation, and believe me, cutting a novel-length book down to an hour is hard work, especially when you have an attachment to the material like I did. I'd like to thank Mr. Terry Pratchett for permission to do the adaptation, performance, and the podcast. I'd also like to thank the late Thomas E. Fuller for his assistance with the adaptation. And I'd like to thank all of you for helping us reach one full year of podcasting, with hopefully many more to come. Please remember that the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit www.artc.org to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, and HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. Comments[0] | |
Fri, 24 August 2007 This week we delve into the realm of ...superheroes? Well, it greatly depends on how you define the term, really. We've brought you installments from these great series before, but we like them (and we hope you do, too!) so here's some more! First up, The Brotherhood of Damn Sassy Mutants in Episode One - "Flame Out", by "Sketch" MacQuinor. Then, hold onto your dry-erase markers, as we bring you Mildly Exciting Tales of Astonishment - "A Consultation with Eeeeevil" by Jonathan Strickland. Both of these were performed live at Sci-Fi Summer 2005. Please remember that the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit www.artc.org to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, and HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers, including the aforementioned "Sketch" and Jonathan. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. There is Adventure in Sound! Direct download: ARTCs_Podcast_52_-_Superheroes_-_META__BDSM.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 12:07 AM Comments[0] | |
Thu, 16 August 2007 ARTC Podcast 51 Duration: 18:08 Size: 12.4 MB This week: the finale in a 3-part Bumper's Crossroads, followed by Rory Rammer, Space Marshall: in Murder by Meteor. In two weeks, we celebrate our first year of podcasting with a very special audio adaptation. Presented with permission: the live performance of the ARTC adaptation of Terry Pratchett's "Guards, Guards." With extra-notable super-special guest voice, John Rhys-Davies. This will be presented in two parts, one before and one after ARTC's live performance at Dragon Con here in Atlanta GA, on Friday September 1, 2007, right after the Opening Ceremonies. And next week, we revisit our roots in horror, when ARTC's Podcast will present another of the works of H.P. Lovecraft. So don't miss out. And remember... There is Adventure in Sound. Comments[1] | |
Thu, 9 August 2007 ARTC Podcast 50 Time: 18:33 Size: 12.7 MB
Hey, our one year podcasting anniversary is in a few weeks, and we have a special surprise for you. Check back next week for further details.
This week's presentation, from Necronomicon 1998:
Rory Rammer, The Doomsday Planet (a.k.a. the Planetoid of Doom) by Ron N. Butler.
and Bumper's Crossroads. Comments[1] | |
Fri, 3 August 2007 ARTC Podcast # 49 - www.artc.org
duration: 12:05 Size: 8.2 MB
From Necronomicon 1996:
Ron N Butler's Rory Rammer, Space Marshall. The episode entitled, Runaway Rockets. It says part one in the introduction, but there is no part two. I checked.
And, part one of three of Bumper's Crossroads, from Necromonicon 1998. Comments[1] | |
Thu, 26 July 2007 www.artc.org --- Tell a friend! The Adventures of the Crimson Hawk: Compliments of the Vixen, Chapter 2. Time: 16:56 Size: 11.6 MB.
Note: This is a newer version of this file, the first had been cut short in the mixdown process. Comments[0] | |
Thu, 19 July 2007 ARTC's Podcast #48 - The Crimson Hawk, Compliments of the Vixen, Chapter One. Time: 14:05. Size: 9.7 MB. www.artc.org Comments[0] | |
Thu, 12 July 2007 Show 46 - visit on the web at www.artc.org.
Time: 12:57 File Size: 8.9 MB
To find us on iTunes, open iTunes on your computer, go to the iTunes store and search for artc.
The Asteroid of Love (written by Ron N Butler) originally contained a song of the same name, which was a parody of an Andrew Sisters song. Obviously, this was not podcast safe. For our February 2007 show, musician Alton Leonard composed a _new_ song to replace the parody. And he performed it here with the Android Sisters, and our guests for that show, the Radio Ramblers. Of which, he is a regular member.
The cast:
Announcer - Hal Wiedeman
Rory Rammer - David Benedict.
"Skip" Sagan - (and show host) - Daniel Whitworth Kiernan.
Lavernw - Ariel Stewart.
Maxine - Sarah Taylor.
Patty - Clair W. Kiernan.
Molly Pohl (Womanist) - Trudy Leonard.
Space Marines Lieutenant - Al Przygocki.
Live Foley by Lili, Sonya & Deanna Ameri. Recorded sound effects performed by Thomas Berry & Rachel Boman, provided by Henry Howard / Audio Craft Studio.
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Thu, 5 July 2007 The Brides of Dracula, by Thomas E. Fuller (Conclusion)
File Size : 17.3M
Duration: 28:35
Cast
Dracula: David Benedict,
Olga: Sarah Taylor,
Maria: Ariel Stewart,
Elizabeth/Woman: Trudy Leonard,
Mina Murray: Fiona Karanina Leonard Brown,
Lucy Westernra: Clair W Kiernan,
Jonathan Harker: Hal Woedeman,
Dr. Jack Seward: Jonathan Strickland,
Abraham van Helsing: Daniel Taylor,
Man/Minister/Announcer: Daniel W. Kiernan,
Second Man: Al Przygocki,
Foley Artists: Lili, Sonya, & Deanna Ameri, Foley mixed by Caran Wilbanks.
Recorded effects provided by Henry Howard & Audio Craft Studio, performed by Thomas Berry & Rachel Bowman.
Produced by David Benedict.
Directed by William Alan Ritch.
Floor Management Lori Emerson.
Live music composed & performed by Alton Leonard.
Live & studio audio engineering by Robert W Zimmerman. Comments[2] | |
Thu, 28 June 2007 The Brides of Dracula (Part 2 of 3) written by Thomas E. Fuller. Time 29:51 File Size: 20.4M ARTC will be performing in Kansas City Missouri on July 7 & 8, 2007 at the Robert A. Heinlein Centennial Convention. Among many other offerings, ARTC will be performing The Menace from Earth, and All You Zombies. Visit http://www.heinleincentennial.com/index.html for more information. Our next live show after that will be LibertyCon, near Chattanooga TN. This is the weekend of July 27-29, 2007. http://www.libertycon.org/ And of course, look for us at DragonCon during Labor Day weekend, right here in Atlanta GA. www.dragoncon.org Also visit www.artc.org and buy something. ;-) Oh yes. And tell a friend about us. And a neighbor. And a coworker.... a relative... and someone you don't know very well.
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Thu, 21 June 2007 The Brides of Dracula, by Thomas E. Fuller. (presented in three parts.) Duration 21:27, File Size 14.9M Quite possibly one of the most ambitious ARTC projects, the February 2007 live performance at Stage Door Players required extra personnel: a stage/floor manager, 3 foley artists instead of the usual one or two, a second sound engineer and mixing board solely for the foley sound, and two people to manage the digital effects. Plus extra consideration for the Brides singing parts, and our guest musicians - another rare event. The outcome? Judge for yourself. Brides of Dracula was the featured story for this show, and comprised the entire post-intermission show. If you're really adventurous, try listening with headphonones...
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Thu, 14 June 2007 Length: 14:05 Size: 6.6M Hello again! This week, in honor of Fathers Day, we bring you selected scenes from The Passion of Frankenstein, by Thomas E. Fuller. It's going to be a little different this week, though. We're going to feature some scenes, but we're also going to highlight a little bit of what goes into creating the audio drama that we all know and love. We'll take a few short clips from the raw voiceover and then transform them with music and sound effects into new old-time radio. Whereas we normally bring you material from our live productions, the source for this material comes from the studio. Speaking of the studio, ARTC is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit www.artc.org to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers, including The Passion of Frankenstein. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. Our next live appearance will be at the Heinlein Centennial convention in Kansas City, MO, on July 7 and 8, followed by a celebration of the release of the final Harry Potter book at the Barnes and Noble near Perimeter Mall right here in Atlanta on July 20. If you are enjoying these podcasts please remember that we need to hear from you so that we can improve. Tell us what you like. Tell us what you don't like. Tell us your ideas. We have a few of our own, but we want to bring you what you want to hear. You can reach us at podcast@artc.org As always, thank you for listening, and remember, There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 7 June 2007 Duration: 15m53sec Size: 10.9M What can I say about this podcast? Well, it's the first sixteen minutes of a fairly recent live show: at StageDoor Players this past February (2007.) The underlying theme for this show was seduction. Originally it was supposed to have been Love, but due to scheduling difficulties, it wasn't performed in the theater until after St. Valentines Day. The opening music has been removed as it was not podcast safe, and there are a few other minor edits, but otherwise, the material presented is pretty much in the order that it was originally performed. Our host/announcer is Daniel Kiernan, who (upon reflection) *does* look a bit like Garrison Keillor.
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Thu, 31 May 2007 Length: 27:26 Size: 12.8M Last week we celebrated the upcoming Memorial Day holiday with a few timely pieces, and this week we conclude that celebration with a wonderful piece entitled Unaccustomed to Fear, written by Terry Quinn, performed at Stone Mountain Park's Memorial Hall on May 29, 2005. Unaccustomed to Fear was originally performed at the National Audio Theatre Festivals audio theatre workshop in June of 2002 and it made quite an impression on me. When an opportunity for us to perform at Stone Mountain on the Memorial Day weekend, I knew this was the perfect piece for us to bring to our audience. I contacted the author and was luckily able to negotiate the rights to perform it again. Unfortunately I was not able to reprise my role as the narrator as my cousin was getting married in Boston at the time. The story is based on true events and we hope you enjoy it. If you ARE enjoying these podcasts please remember two things. First, we need to hear from you so that we can improve. Tell us what you like. Tell us what you don't like. Tell us your ideas. We have a few of our own, but we want to bring you what you want to hear. You can reach us at podcast@artc.org Second, ARTC is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit www.artc.org to see our wide selection of work by HP Lovecraft, Robert A. Heinlein, HG Wells, as well as original material by our own in-house writers. Or just tell someone about us. Supporting ARTC means spreading the word about New Old-Time Radio and it doesn't cost you a cent. Just point them in the direction of our website or this podcast. Nothing could be simpler or more helpful. Our next live appearance will be at the Heinlein Centennial convention in Kansas City, MO, followed by a celebration of the release of the final Harry Potter book at the Barnes and Noble near Perimeter Mall right here in Atlanta. As always, thank you for listening, and remember, There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 24 May 2007 Duration: 19:19 Size 9M On Sunday, May 29, 2005 ARTC performed a tribute to heroes at Stone Mountain Park's Memorial Hall. This week we bring you a portion of that show. We begin with Bumpers Crossroads: Grandma's Diary by Daniel Taylor and proceed to Chief Burnley's History Lesson by Ron N. Butler. If you like this podcast and would like for it to continue, please remember that ARTC is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Visit our website at www.artc.org and hear what we have to offer. But also remember that buying stuff isn't the only way to support us. Doing something as simple as telling people about our podcast goes a long way towards helping us towards our goal of revitalizing New Old-Time Radio. Our next live performance will be at the Heinlein Centennial convention in Kansas City, MO, where we will bring you All You Zombies... and The Menace From Earth, both by Robert A. Heinlein, as well as a few other surprises. Thanks for listening. If you have questions, comments, or concerns, please address them to podcast@artc.org or just leave a comment on this blog. We have exciting things planned for the podcast in the future, so stay tuned and remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 17 May 2007 Length: 15:36 Size: 7.3M Hey, sorry for the delay, folks, but never fear, your weekly foray into the soundscape is finally here courtesy of the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company. This week we bring you an amalgam of various short pieces culled from various venues. First up, Nikki's Place: Into the Blue Forest by Gerald W. Page, performed at Stone Mountain Park in 2004. Next, Standing Peachtree by Ron N. Butler, performed at the Tomato Festival at Stone Mountain Park in 2004, and we finish up with another Ron N. Butler classic, Rory Rammer, Space Marshal in Eye in the Sky performed at Sci Fi Summer in 2003. Don't live in Atlanta but want to see us live? ARTC will next appear at the Heinlein Centennial in Kansas City, MO, where we will present All You Zombies... and The Menace From Earth, both by Robert A. Heinlein, as well as a few other surprises yet to be determined. If you're enjoying this weekly foray into the soundscape, please remember that ARTC is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio work on CD. Stop by www.artc.org and round out your collection, or just let us know what you think by emailing us at podcast@artc.org. Want to support us but don't see something you like? Drop us a line and tell us! We do it all, from SF to fantasy to romance to horror to your generic everyday drama and comedy. Want to support us but don't have any money? No problem! Helping ARTC is as easy as telling your friends and your neighbors, your enemies and your internet girlfriends/boyfriends about the Magic of Radio. Just point them at this podcast and share the wealth of imagination. Thanks for listening, we'll be back next week, and remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 10 May 2007 Length: 22:18 Size: 10.5M Eureka, fiction believers! It's time for another installment of the Brotherhood of Damn Sassy Mutants, by "Sketch" Quinn! This issue is entitled "Enter: Mindgames" and it was performed at both Sci Fi Summer and Dragon*Con in 2005. You'll be hearing the Dragon*Con performance. Don't live in Atlanta but want to see us live? ARTC will next appear at the Heinlein Centennial in Kansas City, MO, where we will present All You Zombies... and The Menace From Earth, both by Robert A. Heinlein, as well as a few other surprises yet to be determined. If you're enjoying this weekly foray into the soundscape, please remember that ARTC is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio work on CD. Stop by www.artc.org and round out your collection, or just let us know what you think by emailing us at podcast@artc.org. Want to support us but don't see something you like? Drop us a line and tell us! We do it all, from SF to fantasy to romance to horror to your generic everyday drama and comedy. Want to support us but don't have any money? No problem! Helping ARTC is as easy as telling your friends and your neighbors, your enemies and your internet girlfriends/boyfriends about the Magic of Radio. Just point them at this podcast and share the wealth of imagination. Thanks for listening, we'll be back next week, and remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[1] | |
Thu, 3 May 2007 Duration: 12:12 Size: 5.7M Back in 2004 we did a show at Stone Mountain Park called "Frontier Days". We got a lot of great new material out of it because the theme of the festival was Georgia between the Revolutionary War and the Civil War...not exactly a haven for our usual SF and Fantasy stuff. We also performed it outdoors...predictably, it rained. But we still got a good show, and we're bringing it to you in installments. This time we bring you The Turn Out by Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor. It takes place at Easter, which we missed by about a month, but it also deals with school, and with school about to let out for summer, we thought this would still be a good time to trot this out. Don't live in Atlanta but want to see us live? ARTC will next appear at the Heinlein Centennial in Kansas City, MO, where we will present All You Zombies... and The Menace From Earth, both by Robert A. Heinlein, as well as a few other surprises yet to be determined. If you're enjoying this weekly foray into the soundscape, please remember that ARTC is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio work on CD. Stop by www.artc.org and round out your collection, or just let us know what you think by emailing us at podcast@artc.org. Thanks for listening, we'll be back next week, and remember... There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 26 April 2007 Time 16:42 Size: 11.4 MB The second installment of "The Country of the Blind" by HG Wells, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor.
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Thu, 19 April 2007 Duration 18m 18s File Size: 12.5 M This is the first installment of The Country of the Blind, by H.G. Wells, adapted for audio by Daniel Taylor. Visit us at www.artc.org to learn about our live shows, and browse our product catalog.
Correction: The original show notes credited Victor Koman for the audio adaptation of "Country of the Blind." In actuality, Daniel Taylor gets the credit. Victor Koman did the adaptation of Heinlein's "All you Zombies," which is previewed in this episode. Sorry, Daniel.
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Thu, 12 April 2007 Duration: 18:40, Size: 8.7M Everything must come to an end. And so it goes with the serial we've been bringing you for the last three weeks, "The Adventures of the Crimson Hawk: The Crimson and the Red" by Thomas E. Fuller [EDIT 4-21: Whoops! This episode was written by William Alan Ritch!]. This is the third and final installment in this particular saga, but there's plenty more where that came from. We currently have almost twenty adventures of the Crimson Hawk, so if you like them be sure to let us know! You can reach us at podcast@artc.org. Also this week we bring you an ARTC favorite, "Bumpers Crossroads: Hide, A Cow's Outside" by Daniel Taylor. The last word on the end of a lot of bad jokes. This was recorded live at the Gwinnett History Center back in 1999. And lest you forget that we have more recent work available, there's also a short sample from our studio release of Robert A. Heinlein's "The Menace From Earth". Want to be in on the recording of the source material for these podcasts? Come on by to one of our live shows! The next one will be April 28 and 29 at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody. Full details and directions at www.artc.org. We'll be bringing you Robert A. Heinlein's "All You Zombies..." adapted by Victor Koman. Remember, we're supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio CDs, but you can also support us just by telling someone else about us. Help us get the word out, because we can't do it without you! There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 5 April 2007 Duration: 18:03 Size: 8.5M Hello again, and welcome to another ARTC podcast. This week I've chosen to call the episode "Continuity" for a couple of reasons. First, we'll be continuing the episode of "The Crimson Hawk" that we began last week by playing part two of "The Crimson and the Red" by Thomas E. Fuller [EDIT 4-21: Whoops! This episode was written by William Alan Ritch!]. Next we'll bring you "Unresolved Mysteries, Solved While U Wait: A Very Special Creation" by Ron N. Butler, which, without giving too much away, deals with the continuity of the universe. Our next live show will be on April 28 at 8:00pm and April 29 at 2:30pm at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody. We will bring you Robert A. Heinlein's "All You Zombies..." adapted for audio by Victor Koman. Come be a part of the live recording of this science fiction classic! Like our stuff? Buy our stuff! ARTC is supported entirely by people like you through the sale of our studio productions on CD. Already have the whole collection? Give the gift of New Old-Time Radio anytime, and be on the lookout for new releases coming soon! Full details on future live shows and access to our online catalog are both available at www.artc.org. Poor? Can't afford to support us monetarily? Some of the best support you can give is by simply spreading the word! Tell someone about ARTC and this podcast and ask them to do the same! There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 29 March 2007 Length: 18:52 Size: 9M Welcome again! This week we bring you tales of Heroes and Villains in the Big City. We begin with Thomas E. Fuller's "The Adventures of the Crimson Hawk: The Crimson and the Red" episode one [EDIT 4-21: Whoops! This episode was written by William Alan Ritch!]. This is a three part serial, so be sure to tell us how you like it at podcast@artc.org. This was performed live at the coffeehouse in Little Five Points in Atlanta. This is one of our older recordings, and we're not exactly sure what year, but it was pre-1996. Next up is Jonathan Strickland's "Mildly Exciting Tales of Astonishment: Subterranean Subterfuge" recorded live at Sci Fi Summer in 2005. Like our stuff? Buy our stuff! Studio recordings for sale at www.artc.org. Already have the whole catalog? ARTC CDs make great gifts anytime, or you can give us the best (and cheapest) support possible: tell someone about us and this podcast. Want to be in on the next recording of the source material for this podcast? Our next live show is at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody on April 28 and 29. We will present Robert A. Heinlein's "All You Zombies..." adapted for audio by Victor Koman. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 22 March 2007 Duration: 17:32 Size: 8.25M St. Patrick drove the snakes out of Ireland (but not on a plane...unless you mean a 2-dimensional surface...nevermind). But did he miss one? Just what is the Loch Ness Monster? Assuming it even exists. Last week we brought you part one of The Dweller in the Depths, by Thomas E. Fuller, recorded live at Eddie's Attic in Decatur, GA. This week we bring you part two of the story, but this performance was recorded at Stone Mountain Park in 2005. Did you like hearing the story broken up over two performances? Would you like to hear more of the evolution of ARTC? Or not? Write to us at podcast@artc.org and let us know! Like our stuff? Buy our stuff! Support New Old-Time Radio with your purchase of one of our studio CDs at www.artc.org. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 15 March 2007 Duration: 16:43 Size: 8M Ah, St. Patrick's Day. Leprechauns, shamrocks, pots o' gold, and green things everywhere. Well, everywhere except here. We've just got lots of blarney because this week our podcast features a story set in that fabled land of...Scotland. This week: Part one of The Dweller in the Depths, by Thomas E. Fuller. This episode was recorded live at Eddie's Attic in Decatur, GA back in 1997. Next week we'll bring you part two of the story, but the performers will be a lot different because it will have been recorded at Stone Mountain Park in 2005. We hope you'll hear how far we've come in those 8 years. Like our stuff? Buy our stuff! Support New Old-Time Radio with your purchase of one of our studio CDs at www.artc.org. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 8 March 2007 Size: 7M - Duration: 15:16 Myths and legends are our subject this week. Hope you enjoy them. Unresolved Mysteries, Solves While U Wait: Loch Ness Plato's Cave: Down and Out in the Elysian Fields both by Ron N. Butler Tell us how you liked it at podcast@artc.org, or show us how you liked it by supporting us with your purchase of one of our CDs at www.artc.org. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 1 March 2007 Time: 29:39, Size: 13.5 MB If you didn't catch "Brides of Dracula" live at Stage Door Players last weekend, you missed out. Fortunately, our studio version of this audio drama can be purchased here: http://artc.org/products/BridesofDracula.html What free bits do we have for you this week? Hmm... Let's see.... Bumper's Crossroads: Mow Better Blues. Chief Burnley's Cake Sale. Nikki's Place: The Big Homicide. And Bumper's Croassroads: The Early Days. Comments[0] | |
Thu, 22 February 2007 Duration: 18:46 Size 8.59 MB In the words of William Brown, "Due to technical problems beyond our control, we now join our regularly scheduled program." This week's show is entitled "A Bridge into the Past." Why? Because I needed a name and that's what I came up with on short notice. Bridge: Actually, one of the things you don't usually get to hear in our podcasts, Dear Listener, is the "bridging material." The short, often one-use scripts that ARTC producers insert into the live shows as buffers in between our more known stories. There is a small but healthy sampling included. Past: This week's features are a little older than our normal fare. And like the bridging material, they are also things we don't usually podcast. ARTC has had many varied venues in its past. And veteran ARTC performers may (or may not) wax nostalgic about places such as "Eddie's Attic," or tip a mug of Collins Best Coffee in a remembrance of ARTC's Coffee House Days. Or of Guerilla Radio Theater at Manuel's Tavern. Included: "The Adventures of Hercule Perot." (Last name not a typo, any similarities to any Texas businessman are coincidental.) "UnResolved Mysteries Solved While You Wait: Phrenotherapy." And "A Girl and Her Griffon."
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Thu, 15 February 2007 Size - 14.3 MB, Duration - 31:19 Send the kids to bed early, because this week's steamy offering of audio ear candy is a suspenseful story called "Can You Hear Me," written by Thomas E. Fuller.
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Fri, 9 February 2007 Duration: 27:24, Size: 12.5M Hey, the credits are actually on the recording this week. So either listen to the podcast or just check last week's entry to see who is responsible for this production. Next week we'll continue our celebration of the month...but with a seductive twist. And don't forget our next live show is at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody on Saturday, February 24 at 8:00pm and Sunday, February 25 at 2:30pm. We will present Thomas E. Fuller's The Brides of Dracula. Tickets are $10 and details are available at www.artc.org. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 1 February 2007 Length: 29:11 - Size: 13.5M Kissed by a Stranger was written by Fiona Karanina Leonard Brown, produced by David Benedict, and directed by William Alan Ritch. Featured in the cast were the voices of Megan Jackson, Geoffrey M. Brown, Clair Whitworth Kiernan, Phil Carter, Trudy Leonard, David Benedict, and Fiona Karanina Leonard Brown. Also heard were the voices of Terry Sanders, Daniel Taylor, Alton Leonard, Joyce Leigh, Kelley Swilley, Jack Mayfield, and "Sketch" Quinn. Soundscaping, editing, and mixing by David Benedict. Recording engineering by William Alan Ritch. Foley sound effects created by Geoffrey M. Brown and David Benedict. Recorded effects provided by Henry Howard and Audio Craft Studio. Original music composed and performed by Alton Leonard. Floor managers were Sheila Ameri and Elayna Little. We hope you have enjoyed part 1 and look forward to the conclusion next week. ARTC will next appear live at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody on Saturday, February 24 at 8:00pm and Sunday, February 25 at 2:30pm. We will present Thomas E. Fuller's The Brides of Dracula. Tickets are $10 and details are available at www.artc.org. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 25 January 2007 (Time 31:45, Size 14.5 MB) Please click the following link to dramapod and leave us a rating: http://www.dramapod.com/item.php?catid=165 * Bumper's Crossroads: Whole Lotto Shakin' Going' On by Daniel Taylor. * Nikki's Place: In a Bit of a Jam by Ron N. Butler. * The Crimson Hawk: The Widow's Web by Ron N. Butler (based on characters originated by Thomas E. Fuller.) Incidentally, if you *are* a fan of this genre of crime-fighter shows like the Crimson Hawk, (or The Shadow, or the Green Hornet,) I recommend "The Red Panda Adventures." Sadly, this is not an ARTC show in any way, shape, or form. (But then neither is The Shadow or the Green Hornet.) The Red Panda can be found at http://www.decoderringtheatre.com/ You could tell them ARTC sent you, but I'm sure they'd say, "Uh... who?"
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Thu, 18 January 2007 Saturday Morning Kid Shows: 28 minutes, 12.8 MB First, a plea for attention: If you get us through iTunes, please..... go to the iTunes store, search for "ARTC" (artsy... it's a pun. Why haven't you gotten that yet?) and write us a review. It doesn't even have to be a long review. Just tell us your favorite episode or something. Also, however you listen to us, go to the ARTC page at dramapod.com and leave a rating here, too. And now... No voice intro for this show. Despite miscommunication and general behind the scenes random mayhem, this week's podcast is NOT canceled. There *was* a voice intro recorded. It was meant to sound off the cuff and laid back and funny, but it ended up sounding half-planned and disorganized. (It was.) Anyway, the show lineup has changed several times in the last few hours. In no particular order: We have 2 episodes of "Rory Rammer, Space Marshall:" written by Ron N. Butler. One is "The Island of Dr. Marceau" and the other is only ever talked about in hushed, furtive whispers: "The Lost Episode." And, an episode of "Mildly Exciting Tales of Astonishment," by Jonathan Strickland: Ps and Q's. Also included are a pair of Public Service Announcements from the "Brotherhood of Damn Sassy Mutants," by Sketch Quinn. No time for credits. If you want to know, you'll just have to ask nicely.
Direct download: ARTCShow21_-_Saturday_Morning_Kid_Shows.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 7:59 PM Comments[2] | |
Thu, 11 January 2007 To Dine with the Devil (32 Minutes, 14.9 M) by Ivan Turgenev Adapted for Audio by Joyce Leigh Performed Live at Sci Fi Summer 2003 in Atlanta, Georgia The old Russian proverb states: "Those who dine with the devil may end up on the menu." If you like H.P. Lovecraft, you'll love this....Not for the squeamish. If you enjoy New Old-Time Radio and audio horror, then pick up one of our adaptations at www.artc.org! Also, remember that you can email podcast@artc.org with your comments, or you can include them here. We'd love to hear from you with questions, comments, concerns, or even complaints. Join us for a live presentation of The Brides of Dracula Saturday, February 24, 8:00pm Sunday, February 25, 2:30pm Stage Door Players 5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Road Dunwoody, GA 30338 Call (770)396-1726 for Tickets! Credits: Voice Talent (in alphabetical order): David Benedict, Phil Carter, Doug Kaye, Clair Kiernan, Daniel Kiernan, Joyce Leigh, Trudy Leonard Original Music by Alton Leonard and Brad Weage Directed by Doug Kaye Sound Engineering by David Carter and William Alan Ritch assisted by Ray Spitz Sound Effects by Henry Howard Live Foley by Lili and Sonya and assisted by Anthony Fuller ARTC is a non profit 501(c)3 corporation which depends upon listener support from people like you. Donations to ARTC are tax-deductible to the extent allowable by law. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 4 January 2007 Size: 18.2M Duration: 39:55 Hope everyone is having a happy new year. To start out 2007 we're going to get back to our roots by presenting The Colour Out of Space by H. P. Lovecraft, adapted by Ron N. Butler, and performed live at Dragon*Con 2006. This was our only show at Dragon*Con this year, so if you missed it then this is your chance! We've performed at every Dragon*Con since the first, and Lovecraft has always been one of our mainstays. If you enjoy the work of H. P. Lovecraft, or if you just like ARTC, then pick up one of our other adaptations! Also, remember that you can email podcast@artc.org with your comments, or you can include them here. We'd love to hear from you with questions, comments, concerns, or even complaints. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[4] | |
Thu, 28 December 2006 Size: 11.4 MB Time: 25:00 One last look at Christmas for the year... Opening Music: An Old Atlanta Christmas, Alton Leonard. USO Christmas, Thomas E. Fuller and performed by William Brown & Lou Brock. Are You Lonely Tonight, written by Thomas E Fuller and Daniel Taylor, performed by Daniel & Clair Kiernan. The Experts, by Ron N Butler featured the voices of Kelly Swilley, Lou Brock, and Daniel & Clair Kiernan. (Useless trivia: The Kiernans played characters with the same first names as those in Are You Lonely Tonight. But now they're actually Mr. & Mrs. Zabrinski.) My apologies to Hal Wiedeman who went uncredited in the podcast: He played the towtruck driver.
Direct download: ARTCShow18_-_An_Atlanta_Christmas_No_5.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 6:07 PM Comments[0] | |
Thu, 21 December 2006 Size: 15M, Duration: 32:31 Our annual gift to our listeners continues with more excerpts from An Atlanta Christmas. This week we bring you three short pieces and another lovely song. We hope you enjoy it. The Santa Claus Blues, by Thomas E. Fuller Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: A Visit From St. Rex, by Ron N. Butler The Tree Comes to Atlanta, by Thomas E. Fuller O Holy Night, performed by the ARTC Chorus You can see us perform live at Stage Door Players in Dunwoody on Saturday, December 23, 2006 at 8:00pm. Tickets are $10 and can be purchased at the door or by calling (770)396-1726. Also, ARTC CDs make great gifts, so be sure to go to www.artc.org and check our catalog for those last minute stocking stuffers. You can get directions to the show there, too! There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 14 December 2006 Time: 27:36 Size: 18.9 MB Pour youself some of Collins' Best Coffee (Christmas Blend) and stay tuned. Because this week's podcast contains a special episode of Bumper's Crosroads: Ernie the Christmas Snail - by Daniel Kiernan. This is followed by Davey Crockett and Me - written by Thomas E. Fuller. We have a musical portion of the showtoo: The Carol of the Birds. (traditional)
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Thu, 7 December 2006 Time: 27:05 Size: 12.7M An Atlanta Christmas Episode 02 The Elves Strike Back. <<Cue Music (Something ominous from John Williams that ARTC can't possibly afford the rights to) - and then Under the Narrator>> In addition to the plays of Thomas Fuller's Atlanta Christmas, the writers of ARTC have produced a number of shorts which provide a comic counterpoint. Think of this as the lighter side of Christmas. All of these pieces are surreal (as if the entire concept of Santa Claus and the Northpole Workshop isn't). Some (all?) may be in questionable taste. One of these pieces will be performed in this years Christmas show program. There can be only one. <<Cut Williams Theme; Cue Kazoos and Seal Horns for two bars of Holiday Music with Whoopee cushion finale and out for>> You have been warned. <<Rory Rammer Echo effect>> << Cue ARTC theme - Something NPR-ish with strings and horns - and under for >> This podcast includes the following pieces from our live performances at Stone Mountain and Parkview High School. "Roger, the Jolly Little Christmas Elf" by Gerald W Page (2000) "The Legend of the Poinsettia" by Brad Strickland (2004) "Unresolved Mysteries Solved While U Wait - the Grinch" by Ron N. Butler (2000) "Zen Santa Claus" by Tracy V Wilson (2005) SHAMELESS PROMO FOLLOWS (We gotta pay the bills....) The Atlanta Chistmas program (including brand new material) will be presented at Stage Door Players. Atlanta Christmas 2006 Saturday December 23 at 8:00pm Stage Door Players 5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Road Dunwoody, GA 30338 Tickets are $10 at the Door or call (770)396-1726. ARTC is a non profit 501(c)3 corporation which depends upon listener support from people like you. Donations to ARTC are tax-deductible to the extent allowable by law. Our CDs and tee shirts also make very nice stocking stuffers. Also, please let us know what you think of this podcast by emailing us at podcast@artc.org. Good, bad, or ugly, all feedback is welcome and encouraged. There is Adventure in Sound! <<ARTC Theme Music Up and Out>> Comments[0] | |
Thu, 30 November 2006 Time: 22:29 Size: 10.5M Welcome, welcome one and all to our family Christmas! To every family Christmas that ever was or ever will be! Behold the traditional Christmas tree weighted down with ornaments and decorations! Every five year old's Christmas morning writ large and come true! For one day a year, the Theater of the Mind gives way to a warm hearth and a bowl of gingerbread -- and when from the roof there arises a clatter, it's neither a faceless monster nor a Martian. It's Christmas. Christmas is memories. For the next 5 podcasts, ARTC will be bringing you some of our favorite memories from our holiday programming, drawing heavily from Thomas E. Fuller's An Atlanta Christmas, but with a few other surprises along the way.This week we bring you The Ultimate Christmas Pageant and O Tannenbaum by Thomas E. Fuller, and Some Assembly Required, by Daniel Taylor. These were recorded live in 2003 at Stone Mountain Park's Fruitcake Festival. Featured in the cast were the voices of Joyce Leigh, Daniel Taylor, Ron N. Butler, Neil Butler, Colin Butler, Daniel Kiernan, Clair Kiernan, Tamara Morton, Justin Ameri, Katie Brass, Megan Jackson, Juliana Finch, Sarah Taylor, Josh Adams, Jack Mayfield, and Caran Wilbanks. Foley sound effects were created by Lili, Deanna Ameri, and Sheila Ameri. Music performed by Brad Weage. Sound engineering by David Carter, Ray Spitz, and Elayna Little. The show was produced and directed by William Alan Ritch. Please join us for this year's production of An Atlanta Christmas at the Stage Door Players in Dunwoody. More information can be found at www.artc.org, and don't forget that our CDs of New Old-Time Radio make great gifts. There is Adventure in Sound! Comments[0] | |
Thu, 23 November 2006 Size: 15.05 MB Duration: 32:54 Recorded at Camp Will-A-Way inside Ft Yargo State Park. This was one of my favorite shows, because the audience was especially appreciative, and I think that adds to a performance as much as anything else. Also, we performed outside and it didn't rain, which is always a plus. We also got a nice introduction from Annie Maxwell, which I have included. This week's shows: Rory Rammer, Space Marshall in "The Lance of Justice." and Time for Station Identification.
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Thu, 16 November 2006 Size: 13.6M Time: 29:08 Ah, the ever-popular technical difficulties, how we do love thee. So if you read the post that was previously in this spot you are expecting another episode of "Rory Rammer, Space Marshal". Unfortunately we're having to push that back a bit, so look for it next week. Sorry. In the meantime, we bring you this. In May of 2004 we were invited to perform at Stone Mountain Park's Frontier Days Festival. We eagerly accepted the opportunity...and then learned that the theme was Georgia between the Revolutionary War and the Civil War. With our specialties being in the area of science fiction, fantasy, and horror...well, our selection of available material was a bit thin. But our writers rose to the challenge and wrote us 11 new scripts, including rehearsals and rewrites, in about three months. It was an exciting time and we got some great new material out of it. Today we bring you a bit of historical bridging, "A Sage Conversation" by Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, "A Feast at Sycamore Grove" by Bill Arp, and we finish with "The Triumph of Natural Justice" by Ron N. Butler. Oh, and we performed it outdoors on the Plantation Grounds, which just goes to prove that we can do a show just about anywhere. Please remember to tell your friends about the podcast and that you can support our other projects by purchasing CDs from our website at www.artc.org. Comments[1] | |
Thu, 9 November 2006 Time: 36:50 Size: 17.2M This program was recorded live at the Sandy Springs Public Library on Saturday, November 9, 2002 at 2:00pm. Four years ago today we presented a selection of short subjects including Rory Rammer: The Last Vampire, Philip Meow-Lowe, PI, both by Ron N. Butler, and An Arkham Home Companion by Brad Strickland. We also included a taste of the history of radio drama and a short sound effects demonstration. In previous podcasts we presented fragments of shows, but this episode features the entire performance just as it exists in our archives. We hope you enjoy it. Please remember to tell your friends about the podcast and that you can support our other projects by purchasing CDs from our website at www.artc.org. Comments[1] | |
Thu, 2 November 2006 Time: 24:04 Size: 27.55 MB You say you can't get enough Trick or Treating? You say that you spent most of October looking for TV special with the "Round-Headed Kid" on DVD? You say haven't slept for 48 hours because of the insane sugar rush? Is that's what's troubling you, Pilgrim? Seriously though. We have two shows from Into the Labyrinth 2005: Farm Report of the Worlds by Brad Strickland and Penny Dreadful, by Kelly Swilley Farm Report of the Worlds: Imagine you're waking up to AM Radio... the morning *after* the night that H.G. Wells' Martians attacked. Penny Dreadful: And what happens when a lost book by an unknown author suddenly and mysteriously appears on a library shelf?
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Thu, 26 October 2006 Time: 28:19 File size: 12.97M Performed live at Sci Fi Summer 2005, so controversial that it had its own late night time slot, and so funny that we just couldn't keep it to ourselves. ARTC presents the Brotherhood of Damn Sassy Mutants, episode 2: Miss Rorschach if You're Nasty by "Sketch" Quinn. Comments[0] | |
Thu, 19 October 2006 "Guerrilla Radio Theater" was commissioned by the Fellowship of Reason (www.fellowshipofreason.com) and perfomed at Manuel's Tavern in Atlanta on March 19, 2003. "Guerrilla" could (but oddly enough doesn't) refer to ARTC's ability to set up a live studio complete with foley, amplifiers, BIG speakers, a dozen microphones, mixers, samplers, keyboards and digital recording equipment anywhere in under two hours, perform and then tear down in another hour. ARTC has performed in coffee houses, churches, outdoor pavilions, hotel ballrooms, stages and bars. If there's empty space and room for an audience, ARTC has probably performed in it. It reminds some people of either the Normandy Landing or dozens of clowns emerging from the little car at the circus.... time: 23:02 (10.55 MB) Comments[1] | |
Thu, 12 October 2006 time: 15:24 (7.05 MB)
A few years ago ARTC had an opportunity to perform a Halloween show for the public. We try to perform in October whenever possible as it is a month especially suited to our horror and science fiction roots. Our forte has always been conventions and other semi-private events where our time slot was somewhat limited and so we usually only had time for one feature piece, or maybe a series of shorts. We always performed them just once. Comments[1] | |
Thu, 5 October 2006 ![]() ARTC presents:
From Into the Labyrinth 2005, recorded at Stone Mountain Park, Stone Mountain GA. time: 30:29 (13.96 MB)
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Thu, 28 September 2006 This week we bring you Blues for Johnny Raven, by Thomas E. Fuller, starring Daniel Kiernan as Johnny Raven and Megan Jackson as Gloria Kinsolving. This recording was done at Sci Fi Summer, Saturday May 31, 2003. time: 37:04 (16.97 MB) Comments[2] | |
Thu, 21 September 2006 The Atlanta Radio Theatre Comany presents the conclusion to The Dancer in the Dark. time: 21:33 (9.87 MB) Comments[0] | |
Thu, 14 September 2006 The Atlanta Radio Theatre Company Presents: Part 2 of The Dancer in the Dark, by Thomas E. Fuller. time: 23:13 (10.63 MB)
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Thu, 7 September 2006 The Atlanta Radio Theatre Company (ARTC) is proud to present a performance performed and recorded live at SciFi Summer Con 2002: Thomas E. Fuller's radio play, The Dancer in the Dark. Be sure to check back next Thursday (September 14th) for the second installment. time 3:01 (10.54 MB)
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Thu, 31 August 2006 Rory Rammer, Space Marshal: The Meteor Surfers was written by Ron N. Butler and performed live at Dragon*Con 2003. It features anime voice actor Michael Brady! time: 21:21 (9.78) Comments[4] | |


Length: 10:26, Size: 7M
