Welcome to the Great Detectives of Old Time Radio! A podcast featuring the best vintage detective radio programs. Each week from Monday through Saturday, we feature six of Old Time Radio's great detective series from the beginning of the show to its very last episode. And as a bonus, twice a month we also post a public domain movie or TV mystery or detective show video.
Along the way, I'll provide you my commentary and offer you opportunities to interact.
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- Your host, Adam Graham
Listen to "The Great Detectives of Old Time Radio" on Spreaker.
Currently Featuring
YOURS TRULY, JOHNNY DOLLAR THE FALCON DANGEROUS ASSIGNMENT DRAGNET MR. CHAMELEON MEET MISS SHERLOCK… and more!
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Recent Posts
CBS, Podcast, Yours Truly Johnny Dollar, YTJD Add
EP1573: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Price of Fame Matter
by Yours Truly Johnny Blogger • 1 Comment
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Vincent Price calls for Johnny’s help to locate a priceless stolen painting.
Original Air Date: February 2, 1958
When making your travel plans, remember http://johnnydollarair.com
Mutual, Nick Carter, Podcast
EP1572: Nick Carter: The Man Who Died Twice
by Yours Truly Johnny Blogger • 0 Comments
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Nick Carter finds a man killed in an auto accident in Florida was also killed in Ohio.
Original Air Date: January 18, 1948
CBS, Philip Marlowe, Philip Marlowe OTR, Podcast
EP1571: Philip Marlowe: The Little Wishbone
by Yours Truly Johnny Blogger • 1 Comment
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Marlowe falls in love, but the woman he’s in love with has a secret.
Original Air Date: December 10, 1949
CBS, Podcast, Procedural, The Line Up
EP1570: The Line-Up: The Aching Arthritic’s Anxious Antic
by Yours Truly Johnny Blogger • 0 Comments
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A parolee is fingered for being behind a bank robbery.
Original Air Date: June 3, 1952
(more…)
NBC, Podcast, The Saint
EP1569: The Saint: The Carnival Murder
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A Carnival performer whose act is being buried alive pleads for help and Simon sets out to help her, but will have to work around several characters in the Carnival.
Original Air Date: February 4, 1951
Dragnet, Podcast, Procedural
EP1568: Dragnet: The Big Job
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Joe Friday and Ben Romero searches for a fugitive who has killed a police officer.
Original Air Date: April 27, 1950
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Golden Age Article, Hercule Poirot, Telefilm Review
Telefilm Review: Curtain
by Yours Truly Johnny Blogger • 1 Comment
Curtain is a story many don’t want to read and don’t want to see. It’s Poirot’s last tale, the story in which Poirot meets his final end.
Poirot returns to Styles, where he solved his first great English case decades before. This is a different Poirot as far as we can tell, an invalid with a new valet whose days are numbered. Yet, he’s got one more case to solve and he turns (with reluctance) to his oldest and dearest friend, Captain Hastings.
David Suchet turns in a superb performance as this much older, ailing, and far less sunny Poirot. He’s more grumpy and snaps at Captain Hastings, who he has no choice but to depend on. Despite his inability to observe as he once did, it’s clear the little gray cells are still working.
Hugh Frasier delivers a great performance as Captain Hastings, no longer the dim-witted sidekick, he’s charged with grief over the death of his wife, with concern for Poirot, and with his daughter’s coldness and involvement with an amoral man. Hasting is driven to his limit and Frasier plays this beautifully, taking advantage of a script that makes Hastings a far juicier part than the typical comic sidekick.
The mystery itself is unusual. It’s hard to follow or to even figure out if there’s a pattern to what’s going on until we get the solution. Then the nature of the evil Poirot faces is exposed, and we’re brought face to face with the shocking choice to make at the end of his days.
Poirot’s final scene is beautifully done, as he’s a man dying hoping only for forgiveness. It’s only later that we learn what for.
Curtain is a solid production, and probably the best of the season.
I’ve enjoyed the entire series, and mystery fans own a large debt of gratitude to David Suchet, who didn’t come to Poirot of remaking him, rather Suchet has said that he understood his job as an actor was to serve the writer (and in the case of the Poirot stories, his creator) by bringing the character to life as they intended it. His job was to truly to be Agatha Christie’s Poirot. While there are quite a few adaptations (particularly in Series 9 and 10) where the story was often very different from Christie’s vision, in all of these tales, Suchet remained superb and succeeded in being Agatha Christie’s Poirot.
Rating: 4.5 out of 5.0
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