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Rod Serling's First TV Drama Aired Here 65 Years Ago

Rod Serling
Provided by Mark Dawidziak
/
CBS Television
Rod Serling
Rod Serling
Credit Provided by Mark Dawidziak / CBS Television
/
CBS Television
Rod Serling

Rod Serling's first Cincinnati TV drama, "The Keeper of the Chair," aired on WKRC-TV's "The Storm" drama series 65 years ago, on July 10, 1951.

Serlingwas a staff writer at competitorWLW, where he wrote for TV and radio sitcoms, travel shows, documentaries, "MidwesternHayride" and other lighter programs. So he started writing for "The Storm," a live weekly drama produced by Taft Broadcasting'sWKRC-TVin the Taft family's Cincinnati Times-Star newspaper building at 800 Broadway.

Serling would write more than 25 scripts for "The Storm," produced by Bob Huber, until it ended in April 1952. He honed his skills to produce scripts for live network telecasts such as his "Patterns" (1955) and "Requiem For A Heavyweight" (1956), before creating "The Twilight Zone" (1959). "Requiem" was the first TV script to win a Peabody Award (in 1957).

"Keeper of the Chair" had been rejected by several radio series before it was produced on "The Storm," says Nicholas Parisi, who has researched all of Serling's TV and radio scripts for his upcoming book, "Dimensions of Imagination: A Journey Through The Life, Work and Mind of Rod Serling." The episode involves a prison guard who, after 10 years supervising executions on death row, becomes obsessed by the question of whether he has ever executed an innocent man. "This marked the first time that Serling would delve into a potentially controversial social issue -- in this instance, capital punishment -- in his work," Parisi tells me.

Credit Provided by Nick Parisi

AnotherSerlingbook -- "Everything I Need to Know I Learned in The Twilight Zone" by Cleveland Plain Dealer TV critic MarkDawidziak-- will be published in February by Thomas Dunne Books.

Serling was hired by WLW-AM in 1950, after graduating from Antioch College. He quit in late 1951 to freelance from his Springfield Township home on Long Lane.  After success writing for live network TV dramas, he moved his family to Connecticut in 1954. They relocated to Los  Angeles before "The Twilight Zone" premiered.

He died too young at age 50 on June 28, 1975.

Copyright 2021 91.7 WVXU. To see more, visit .

John Kiesewetter joined the WVXU news team as a TV/Media blogger on July 1 2015, after nearly 30 years covering local and national broadcasting for The Cincinnati Enquirer. He’ll be posting news about Greater Cincinnati TV, radio and movies; updating your favorite former local TV/radio personalities or stars who grew up here; and breaking news about national TV, radio and media trends. You’ll also learn about Cincinnati’s rich broadcasting history.