Month: April 2013

EP0923: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Molly K Matter, Parts Three and Four

Bob Bailey

Captain Brawley tries to hinder Johnny’s investigation as he finds there’s more than meets the eye for the sinking of the Molly K.

October 12 and 13, 1955

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EP0922: Frank Race: The Adventure of the Night Crawler

Paul Dubov
Race takes on a whimsical case of dying worms threatening a partnership that sells canned worms. The mob gets involved and murder follows soon after.

Original Air Date: November 26, 1949

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EP0921: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Molly K Matter, Part One and Part Two

Bob Bailey

A freighter was sunk and Johnny doubts the accident story.

Original Air Date: October 10 and 11, 1955

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Radio’s Most Essential People Countdown #5: Virginia Gregg

Previous Posts 6,78,91012-1114-1316-1518-1720-19,22-2124-2326-2528-2730-2933-3136-34,

39-37,42-4045-4348-4651-4954-5257-5560-5865-6170-66,  71-7576-80,

81-8586-9091-9596-100

 

Virginia Gregg

5) Virginia Gregg

Virginia Gregg was many things over radio. She landed recurring roles most often playing detectives’ girlfriends and girl Fridays. She was Nicki Porter to Lawrence Dobkin’s Ellery Queen, Clarie Brooks to Bob Bailey’s George Valentine, she was Helen Asher to Dick Powell’s Richard Diamond, and then she was Betty Lewis to Bob Bailey’s Johnny Dollar.  She was also Miss Wong,  the Chinese Girlfriend of Ben Wright’s Hey Boy on Have Gun Will Travel.

As impressive as these numerous recurring and ongoing rolls were, it barely touches on the depth of what she contributed. She was a true artist, a character actress par excellence. She could play a dozen femme fatales opposite Jack Webb’s Pat Novak for Hire, but also old ladies, heart broken mothers, busybodies, and little girls.

Virginia Gregg was the type of actress that made radio work.  She was the type of professional that radio depended on.  She could counted on to play any role and play it to the hilt. Jack Webb on Dragnet could call on Gregg to be tough as nails, quirky, or heartbroken, and she’d do it. During the Yours Truly Johnny Dollar serials, Gregg appeared regularly. One week she’d play a girl gone wrong, the next she’d play a big and rowdy Irishwoman who ran a dive.

Certainly Gregg wasn’t the only actress who could do this. But she was one of the most prolific, and she was the best. Without her performances, the Golden Age of radio wouldn’t have shined near as much. So she is clearly one of radio’s most indispensable people.

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EP0920: The Line Up: The Silver Swan Case

William Johnstone

Guthrie and Grebb try to solve a murder that took place near a dance hall.

Original Air Date: February 22, 1951

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Book Review: Three Witnesses

This Nero Wofe novella collection published in 1956 contained Nero Wolfe stories originally published in 1954 and 1955.

“The Next Witness” finds Wolfe called as a witness to a peripheral matter in a murder trial. While being out and watching the trial, he becomes convinced that the prosecution’s case is wrong and leaves the courtroom with Archie, with going on the run from the law while Wolfe tries to find the truth.

“The Next Witness” is truly a top notch story and it shows Wolfe at his wiliest and most resourceful as he’s forced to stay in a strange house, travel around in a car, and question witnesses in strange places. The payoff scene in the courtroom is a brilliant strategem.

Rating: Very Satisfactory

“When a Man Murders”-

This is Nero Wolfe’s Enoch Arden case as a millionaire husband returns from after being declared Killed in Action in the Army. However, the wife has a new husband and needs Wolfe’s help in trying to reason with the old one. When the old husband’s found murdered and suspicion falls on the couple that benefits most, Wolfe is hired to investigate. The Enoch Arden plot has been done quite a bit in mystery fiction. This one is fairly well thought out.

Rating: Satisfactory

“Die Like a Dog”

A man accidentally takes Archie’s coat rather than his own. Archie goes to switch coats and finds homicide crawling detectives  all over the scene and given his history, he leaves. However, a dog follows him home.  Wolfe bends over backwards to try and keep the dog while making Archie the one to blame for it. However, Inspector Cramer throws a monkey wrench it when its revealed the dog belongs to the man murdered at the apartment.

This one is good for the characterization as  Wolfe’s interplay with the dog is definitely a humanizing factor. The solution seems pretty simple in retrospect but if you read the whole story with everyone walking around it, it seems clever by the time you reach it.

Rating: Satisfactory

The last two stories are above average but the Next Witness is enough to carry the collection to:

Rating: Very Satisfactory

 

You can find all the Nero Wolfe books in Kindle, Audiobook, and book form on our Nero Wolfe page.

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EP0919: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The McCormack Matter, Part Five and Policewoman

Bob Bailey

First:  Lt. Mary Sullivan investigates the disappearance of a woman and a lonely hearts club racket.

Original Air Date:  June 29, 1947

Then Johnny Dollar closes in on the culprit in the McCormack burglary—and a murder.

Original Air Date:  October 7, 1955

 

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EP0918: Sherlock Holmes: The Second Stain

John Gielgud

Holmes investigates the disappearance of a letter that could plunge England into war.

Original Air Date: January 30, 1955

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EP0917: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The McCormack Matter, Parts Three and Four

Bob Bailey

Johnny searches for an ex-con who may be the key in a safe burglary.

Original Air Date: October 5 and 6, 1955

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EP0916: Frank Race: The Adventure of The Count Trafanno Chest

Paul Dubov

Frank Race helps out a paroled con and finds himself involved in a mystery involving a mysterious ring and murder.

Original Air Date: November 19, 1949

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EP0915: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The McCormack Matter, Parts One and Two

Bob Bailey

Johnny gets a tip  on an unsolved  safe burglary from a dying inmate.

Original Air Dates: October 3 and 4, 1955

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Radio’s Most Essential People Countdown #6: Gale Gordon

78,91012-1114-1316-1518-1720-19,22-2124-2326-2528-2730-2933-3136-34,

39-37,42-4045-4348-4651-4954-5257-5560-5865-6170-66,  71-7576-80,

81-8586-9091-9596-100

6) Gale Gordon

Gale GordonFor fans of classic television, Gale Gordon earned a reputation for playing crochety authority figures. He was the second Mr. Wilson on the classic Dennis the Menace series and in his association with Lucille Ball in programs like Theodore Mooney in The Lucy Show and Harrison Carter in Here’s Lucy.

Some of this began over radio with his role of Osgood Conklin in Our Miss Brooks as Rudolph Atterberry. However as memorable as these roles were (particularly Conklin), Gordon’s repertoire was more multi-faceted than that. He was the first actor to play Flash Gordon over the radio. He played Mayor La Trivia on Fibber McGee and Molly. He also was chosen to play the suave amateur detective Gregory Hood in 1946 for Petri Wine and Mutual. There were countless other appearances in a wide variety of character roles that established Gordon as equally talented as a dramatic and comedic actor on programs ranging from Tarzan to Burns and Allen, and Suspense.

To be sure, his performances as Osgood Conklin were inspired and some of radio’s most hilarious performances, but when taken with the amazing depth and breadth of Gordon’s radio performances, he earn the sixth highest spot on our countdown.

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EP0914: The Line Up: The Cigar Box Case

William Johnstone
Guthrie and Grebb investigate a series of pharmacy robberies.

Original Air Date: February 15, 1951

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Telefilm Review: Dead Man’s Folly

In Dead Man’s Folly, Hercule Poirot (Peter Ustinov) and Hastings (Jonathan Cecil) head to a small island where Adrienne Oliver (Jean Stapleton) has set up a murder hunt game but fears a real murder is in the offing. Her fears are confirmed and Poirot investigates to solve this real-life crime.

This was a decent made-for-television film, carried as usual by the talents of Sir Peter Ustinov and the mystery as told by Agatha Christie. Jean Stapleton was kind of hard to believe as Oliver, but perhaps that’s because she’s been typecast in my mind as Edith Bunker. However, that doesn’t detract much from an enjoyable mystery.

It’ll be interesting to see David Suchet’s version of this story next year as it is one of few Poirot mysteries he hasn’t done. Filming is set to begin in May 2013.

Rating: 3.75 out of 5.00

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EP0913: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Transpacific Matter

Gerald Mohr

Johnny Dollar investigates a suspicious fire in the orient.

Audition Date: August 29, 1955

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