Luxradiotheatre1945 05 07 482singyousinners
# Sing You Sinners – May 7, 1945
Picture yourself settling into your favorite listening chair on a spring evening in 1945, the radio's warm glow casting soft light across the parlor as the unmistakable Lux Radio Theatre signature theme swells through the speaker. Tonight brings a treasure: Cecil B. DeMille's adaptation of *Sing You Sinners*, a tale of ambition, redemption, and family bonds that will tug at your heartstrings across sixty electrifying minutes. Listen as the orchestra builds tension and emotion in equal measure, as characters confess their deepest secrets and struggle against the temptations that threaten to tear them apart. The sound of a gentle piano melody, the crack of desperation in a young man's voice, the warmth of brotherly devotion—all rendered in that golden age of radio when actors' voices alone could paint entire worlds.
For over a decade, the Lux Radio Theatre had reigned as America's premier dramatic showcase, with DeMille himself introducing each week's presentation with the gravitas of a master showman. By 1945, with the nation deep in World War II, listeners hungered for these theatrical escapes, these reminders that virtue could triumph and that human connection still mattered. The production values were lavish—a full orchestra, sound effects artists creating worlds from thin air, and often the finest actors of the era giving their talents freely for the Lux brand. This episode exemplifies the show's golden period, when radio drama stood shoulder-to-shoulder with any theatrical performance on Broadway.
Don't miss this remarkable window into American entertainment history. Tune in now and experience *Sing You Sinners* as audiences did seventy-five years ago—with rapt attention, racing pulse, and the knowledge that they were witnessing something truly special.