Assabe and Sabina
Genre | Comedy |
---|---|
Running time | 15 minutes per episode |
Country | United States |
Home station | WSAN |
Starring | Dr. Harry Hess Reichard, Paul R. Wieand |
Created by | Lloyd A. Moll |
Written by | Lloyd A. Moll, the Rev. Clarence R. Rahn |
Air dates | 1944 to 1955 |
Assabe and Sabina was a regionally popular Pennsylvania German dialect radio program that was broadcast from radio station WSAN in Allentown, Pennsylvania in the United States from 1944 until 1955.
The show centered on the relationship between Der Assabe Mumbauer, a Pennsylvania German farmer, and his wife, Die Sabina Mumbauer. The character of Assabe was a "humorous prankster who frequently was in difficulty with his wife or with his neighbors."[1]
History
Lloyd A. Moll created the program, and played the role of Der Assabe until his death, just a few weeks after the show's launch.[1] Dr. Harry Hess Reichard, professor of German at Muhlenberg College and noted Pennsylvania German scholar, then assumed the role of Assabe.[1] Paul R. Wieand, a local teacher, author and writer of dialect plays, played the role of Die Sabina, Assabe's wife.[1]
The show was first broadcast on January 16, 1944, and ran until 1955. It ran each Sunday, from 1:00 p.m. to 1:15 p.m.[1]
After Moll's death, scripts were written by the Rev. Clarence R. Rahn. These scripts are archived in the Shadek-Fackenthal Library of Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster.[1]
Cultural influence
Assabe and Sabina was extremely popular amongst the Pennsylvania German-speaking populations of Lehigh and Northampton counties, and thousands listened to the program weekly.[1] The show served to sustain interest in Pennsylvania German language and culture in the period during, and immediately after, World War II.
See also
References
- Rosenberger, Homer Tope (1966). The Pennsylvania Germans: 1891-1965. Lancaster, PA: Pennsylvania German Society. OCLC 1745108.