Gerry Decker was an NBC TV-Burbank staff art director during the 1950-60s period of live television production. Gerry Decker was associated with the Luxe Video Theatre, an hour daytime anthology drama presentation, usually with scripts based (adaptations) upon famous novels, films, and plays. NBC Burbank broadcast these productions in color, staged in Studio 1 and Studio 3, which were separated by a mutual corridor-hallway where the costume wardrobe room was adjacent to the makeup-hair room, and adjacent - first floor, basement and mezzanine cast dressing rooms. The stage sets were principally furniture, chaise, couches, chairs, tables, desks, book cases, chandeliers, torchieres, sculpture, and hand props as set dressing. Architectural scenic elements, door frames, window walls with drapery treatments, fireplaces, hanging (on wire-floating) mirrors, portraits, paintings, arranged for actors motivation within the framework of a stage set. No actual set walls were ever used, with black duvyteen two-and-three fold scenic flats surrounding the staged area. Floor treatments, including carpets, painted wood, stone, marble, and grass, created a set's perimeter. Lighting was extremely important conveying scenic atmosphere lighting the actors in the set confines. Usually employing four to eight color RCA Color Cameras with camera engineer operators, two to four sound boom operators, which were divided between the playing areas. With this type of scenic presentation, black backgrounds with props and architectural frames comprising the production areas, became known as a "Luxe" production style of presentation. Nearly a theater-in-the-round style of camera-capture story telling depiction.