[citation needed] In addition to announcing, he became a program director and wrote scripts for “Suspense,” “Lights Out,” “The Whistler,” and other shows from the golden age of American radio.
"[3] Fifield was a conscientious objector during World War II, working at three Civilian Public Service camps.
worker number, 2819, shows that he was interned at the Metropolitan Research Unit, New York Medical College from February 1945 through January 1946.
[8] The fellowship funded a stay of one to six months at an artists' colony in Rustic Canyon, a residential neighborhood in Los Angeles, California.
[10] The Paris Review published his interviews with Picasso, Cocteau, and Graves, reprinting the last two in the literary magazine’s Writers at Work book series.