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October 20, 2011 | 1:10 am
Posted by Tom Tugend

Norman Corwin, 1973. Photo by James Duncan/Wikipedia
Norman Corwin, whose soaring plays gave luster to the golden age of radio in the 1930s and ‘40s, died Tuesday at his home in Los Angeles. He was 101.
The son of a Jewish immigrant from London, he was born in Boston as Norman Lewis Corwin in a traditional Jewish home, but dropped out of Hebrew school before his bar mitzvah.
Though Corwin was not observant, many of his works were infused by the concepts and personalities of the Hebrew prophets, and he wrote about Israel with fervor and admiration.
Starting as a cub newspaper reporter at 17, without even a high school degree, in 1938 Corwin started his decades-long association with the CBS Radio Network, at a time when radio was the primary medium of news and entertainment for most Americans.
Two of the most admired works of the multi-faceted writer, director and producer, still cited as classics of the genre, were the 1941 “We Hold These Truths,” marking the 150th anniversary of the Bill of Rights, and the 1945 “On a Note of Triumph,” celebrating the Allied World War II victory in Europe.
Corwin was acclaimed as the “Bard of Broadcasting” and “Radio’s Poet Laureate,” and Hollywood’s brightest stars vied to be in one of his productions.
“There is not an actor who will not drop what he is doing to be in one of Norman Corwin’s radio stories,” actor Charles Laughton said. “We all look up to him as a writer of the greatest importance.”
During the early 1940s, CBS presented “26 by Corwin,” which required him to write, cast, direct and produce a completely new play every seven days for 26 weeks.
Corwin expressed his Jewish sensibilities in a prayer concluding “On a Note of Triumph,” which was later incorporated into the Reform prayer book.
As part of the “Columbia Presents Corwin” series in 1944, Corwin penned an ardently Zionist tribute to Tel Aviv, and in 1960 he wrote the screenplay for “The Story of Ruth,” based on the biblical heroine. In another presentation, he explored the meaning of prayer in “The Secretariat.”
In 1947, Corwin organized resistance to the congressional witch hunts with a program “Hollywood Fights Back.”
Corwin was the recipient of numerous honors, including the One World Award, Peabody Medal, Emmy and Golden Globe and received an Academy Award nomination for the screenplay for “Lust for Life,” wit Kirk Douglas portraying painter Vincent Van Gogh.
Corwin moved permanently to Los Angeles in 1948 and until his 100th year taught classes at USC.
He was married to Broadway actress Katherine Locke, who died in 1995, and is survived by two children, Diane and Anthony.

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