![]() One Man's Family (NBC) Unknown number of episodes in which Sam appears. Sam plays recurring character Dave Franklin. (1938-1939) Western Drama from San Francisco. Sons of the Lone Star (NBC Pacific) Unknown number of episodes. Regular supporting cast members include Sam Edwards, Howard McNear, John Gibson, Hanley Stafford, Elliott Lewis. Together they flew all over the world in their airship, the Flying China Clipper, trying to apprehend the arch villain. Clint Barlow was Speed’s uncle, an agent of the International Secret Police. Speed Gibson was a fifteen-year-old pilot whose quest was to capture the master criminal "The Octopus" and his ruthless gang of henchmen. Unknown number of episodes in which Sam appears. Speed Gibson (of the International Secret Police) (Syndicated) Sam Edwards, playing Billy Sherwood, would likely have been on some time from 1937-1941. (1935-1942) A San Francisco-based daytime drama about a Scottish-American family. Hawthorne House (NBC Pacific) Unknown number of episodes in which Sam appears. Jack Edwards Sr., Edna Park Edwards, Florida Edwards, Sam Edwards, Jack Edwards Jr. (1937-1941) All family members played themselves, doing mostly domestic situation plots both dramatic and comedic. The Edwards Family or The Five Edwards (NBC Pacific) Unknown number of episodes. Later redone live over KFSD in San Diego and concurrently recorded each weekend for syndication at RCA Victor Studios in Hollywood 1935-1936. First done live in San Antonio, Texas and rebroadcast in Shreveport, Louisiana, 1933-34. Jack Edwards as Sonny, Sam Edwards as Buddy. Sonny and Buddy (San Antonio live & later KFSD/RCA Syndication) (1933-1934 & 1935-1936) 100 total episodes. They are arranged alphabetically as a chronology cannot be accurately ascertained. The second part of this listing includes shows he was known to have appeared on, but with no date or episode information. Other names are included as a reference of the actors he often worked with. A small synopsis plus Sam's role is included where it could be found. For the first part of this listing, the shows are listed followed by episodes, if known, and are roughly in chronological order starting with his first appearance on that show. ![]() When he was a frequent but not episodic cast member, specific dates are hard to pinpoint because of how casting was indexed, and in some cases not all voices were acknowledged. Some are more difficult to ascertain, since they comprised regular continuing series over a number of years. There are many, many more to be discovered, either through casting call sheets, old scripts, newspaper notices, or the like, and they will be added as we find them. note: Adding it to calendar.What is contained on this page is only a partial listing of radio shows or specific episodes that Sam Edwards appeared in. Should you purchase and/or watch this disc? It would be a great fit for today (“Demons & Ghosts”) this Thursday (“Free Space”) or next Thursday, June 28 (“Free Space”) during Junesploitation-but alas-there is no day devoted to “Tedious and Clichéd.” How about it, Patrick? Maybe next year? ( Ed. The supplements are a tasty dessert designed to end the “main course” of this feature film on an up-note. Scream Factory even tracked down lead actress Peggy Webber for an on-camera interview in which she describes how she was tricked into appearing in The Screaming Skull and how disappointing she found the finished film. Daniel Griffith’s Ballyhoo Productions supplies a neat 15 minute documentary titled “This Film May Kill You: The Making of The Screaming Skull,” in which many of the talking heads interviewed remember seeing the film when they were kids and how much it scared them. ![]() We get the complete MST3K episode in which Mike Nelson and the ‘bots watch the film for laughs. And repetitive.Īs if anticipating our disappointment with the film itself, Scream Factory has added some tasty extras. The film resembles nothing so much as an earnest community theatre troupe doing a budget version of Cat and the Canary and being asked to stretch the material to five acts instead of three. Director Nichol was a Broadway actor sick of the parts he was being offered, so he decided to make his own movie and give himself a part. The problem? The Screaming Skull isn’t very good. ![]() But that’s all over now that Scream Factory has released this pristine new transfer. Yes, I have seen bad-looking versions of this title, F-Heads. I remember Svengoolie saying he’d like to put it on his show but could never find an acceptable print. ![]() First-time director Alex Nichol never actually copyrighted the film, so it has seen release by half a dozen video companies in the last twenty years. Scream Factory’s Blu-ray release of perennial public domain eyesore The Screaming Skull is a cause for celebration… and pain. ![]()
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