Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

EP1005: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Duke Red Matter, Parts One and Two

Bob Bailey

Johnny Dollar is called in to investigate the destruction of a race horse and begins to run into resistance.

Original Air Days: January 23 and 24, 1956

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A Look at Nick Carter

In in a little less than two weeks, the Great Detectives of Old Time Radio will turn its attention to an almost forgotten character who appeared in books, radio, and movies for over a century.

Nick Carter made his debut in 1886, the year before Sherlock Holmes came on the scene in London. That’s where the comparison ends.  None of Carter’s mysteries or adventures were in the ballpark of the greatest detective of them all, but what Carter didn’t have in quality, he made up for (as best he could) in quantity with hundreds of novels and short stories being written.

Scores of Carter’s books from his first 37 years are in the public domain.  The Nick Carter Collection from  Halycon Press for Kindle has one and only one virtue: you can find all the books therein  without having to search for them in online. Otherwise, most of these can easily be obtained off Project Gutenberg for free.

Nick Carter was a corporate property with multiple authors writing the stories and what exactly Nick’s adventures liked really seemed to depend on who was writing the story and probably the trends of the day.

Looking at the novels in the  Nick Carter Collection,  The Crime of the French Cafe and Nick Carter’s Ghost Story are both somewhat typical classic mystery stories. The solutions aren’t amazing, but they’re not weak stories either.

The Mystery of St. Agnes’ Hospital adds an element of the macabre and wasn’t as good a story. The Great Spy System decided to become an espionage adventure acting on behalf of the President (then Theodore Roosevelt) to track down some Japanese spies.  Both of these stories contained an inordinant amount of racial stuff with on World Wars to even justify it.  The  racism seemed to be more or less isolated to these two novels, at least among the ones I read.

The novel, The Link of Steel  was only a so-so detective adventure story.  The final book in the collection was actually the best which is unfortunate if you’re buying the collection as many people will have stopped reading hundreds of pages before they arrive at this one. In A Woman at Bay, Nick Carter goes undercover to capture the king of a criminal empire of hobos to find out the king is actually a teenage girl named Black Madge. He’s able to capture her, but that’s just the beginning of the story.  She won’t stay captured.  If you want a really fun adventure story, A Woman at Bay is actually a diamond in the rough.

The Carter stories were discountinued in 1915, brought back from 1933-36, then in 1939 and ’40, there were three movies made. In 1943, Carter came to radio with Lon Clark as the star. The main thing the radio series borrowed from Carter was the Nick Carter brand that people had read in their childhood, for the better part of sixty years. They also borrowed the name of Nick’s assistants from the books, but made a key change. The Patsy introduced in the 19th century was a male detective, Patsy in the radio series was a female assistant. The series for an amazing 12 years.

But the Nick Carter brand wasn’t done. Nick Carter-Killmaster became a very successful spy series that would last from 1964-1990 and publish 260 paperback books.

For more than 100 years, Nick Carter brought excitement and action to Americans. There was little of what we call continuity. The Carter character like so many corporate properties was made and remade to suit the tastes of the public.  The Nick Carter I read about had very little relation to the one I heard on the radio. The only continuity in Nick Carter was action and adventure.

However,  by 1990, the Spy Genre was in decline and the Carter series was cancelled for good. Thus, the end of the Cold War succeeded in doing was hundreds of criminals and madmen around the world had failed to do:

Kill Nick Carter.

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TV Series Review: Banacek

More than a decade prior to becoming universally associated with the character of Colonel John “Hannibal” Smith, George Peppard played Thomas Banacek, a Boston-based Polish proverb-spouting insurance investigator who made a comfortable living solving cases the insurance company couldn’t crack and collecting ten percent of the insurance company’s savings.

The series aired from 1972-74 and it focused on classic impossible mysteries. How does a football player on the field disappear in front of thousands of fans? How does a million dollars in cash vanish from behind a locked display case? And how does $23 million in paintings vanish from a truck transporting it? These are just a few of the stories that occupied Banacek’s time and how he made his money. Banacek takes no case where the missing item is less than a million dollars in value. While a murder usually happens in the course of the investigation, it’s not guaranteed. The focus is on the big property crime, not on violence.

Banacek was part of NBC’s Mystery wheel, so its original running time with commercials was 90 minutes, with the shows themselves running a shade over 70 minutes in length. This allows for plenty of development, particularly in the early episodes, without a lot of fluff. A grand total of 13 films were recorded.

Throughout the series Peppard was supported by Ralph Manza who provided the comic relief as Banacek’s chauffeur and erstwhile sidekick who would occasionally take a crack at the solution that would be invariably offbase. Murray Mattheson played Felix Mulholland, a book store owner that seemed to know everything about everything.

In addition to the mystery, Banacek was portrayed as God’s gift to women, at least those who weren’t looking for a serious relationship. Among the Banacek women was future Lois Lane Margo Kidder. However, actual scenes in bed were avoided throughout the series, as mere verbal hints were all that would be allowed.

The second season did see some changes. In the first season, the insurance company was more than happy to hand over six digit checks in order to avoid seven digit losses. However, in the second season, an insurance company exec tried to thwart Banacek with the help one of his own investigator Carlie Kirkland (Christine Belford) who tried to maintain an on-again, off-again romance with Banacek while trying to beat him out of his exorbitant fees.

This was a bad move, as it tampered with the show’s dynamic, slowed down the stories and didn’t add anything to the plot. Kirkland wasn’t particularly likable. In one story, she wormed her way into an investigation asking to learn from Banacek while on a leave of absence from the company  and then tried to sell him out to her insurance company. The character didn’t appear in the last two episodes of the second season which were set outside of Boston.

The second season disc for Banacek contains the original pilot which shows a bit of the original conception. The insurance company executive who began using Carlie as a foil for Banacek in the second season was played as respecting Banacek to an uptight investigator who hated Banacek horning in on their cases even though Banacek managed to solve them. In the original conception, Banacek only worked cold cases that hadn’t been solved in sixty days and the executive commented on how much money the insurance company has squandered on investigators’ pay and expenses searching for millions of dollars in gold. Perhaps this is why the producers went with a format where Banacek came on with a promise of reward soon after the items were stolen. It made more economic sense. In the case in the pilot, they ended up out all the money they paid the investigators plus the reward.

Peppard played Banacek differently in the pilot. He was quieter, less flip character. He spent a good fifteen minutes straight on screen at one point saying nothing. He spoke with conviction explaining why he didn’t change his last name to something less obviously Polish.

Jay and Carlie were also in the pilot. Jay was quite different. He owned a limo rental business based in Dallas rather than being Banacek’s employee and simply drove him around. He also pulled a classic doublecross when he bribed the operator to listen in to Banacek’s phone call and overheard a key clue which he used in hopes of collecting the reward. Definitely a different conception than the loyal, albeit dimwitted character who’d appear in the rest of the series.

Carlie was staying in Banacek’s hotel room and was pretending to be asleep. She’d wormed her way into the room with use of feminine wiles and then tried to pounce on the lead just ahead of Jay. At the scene of the dig, Banacek (prematurely) congratulated Jay. She asked why Banaceck didn’t congratulate her. Banacek replied that all he and Jay had shared was a limo.

At least, the Carlie character was consistent.

Overall thoughts:

Banacek is certainly not an essential mystery series. Unlike Columbo or Monk, Banacek is one of those shows you can take or leave.

Peppard is at his best as the wise-cracking detective who stays one step ahead of cops and official insurance investigators while hunting down items of unbelievable value.

The first season is a solidly performed series with great mysteries, solid plots, and great solutions. The second season has too much airtime taken up by Carlie Kirkland and that drags down the stories. Still, even that season has the great entry, “If Max Is So Smart, Why Doesn’t He Tell Us Where He Is?” as well as the fairly good, “Rocket to Oblivion.”

Overall, I’d give the series three 3.5 stars out of 5.0 with Season 1 getting 4 stars and season 2 getting a 3.

In terms of availability, the Banacek series has gone out of print, so the DVDs are absurdly over-priced. The best way to view the series is through a Netflix subscription.

If you don’t subscribe to Netflix, the best bargin as of this writing is the Best of Banacek DVD which is selling on Amazon for $6.05 plus shipping with a very limited supply remaining. The DVD comes with 4 episodes from the first season.  Given that the complete 17 episode series is selling for $150 + shipping on Amazon, it’s a decent deal-while it lasts.

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EP1004: The Line Up: The Holstedter Case

William Johnstone
Guthrie and Grebb search for a gang who committed a $100,000 bank robbery and shot a guard.

Original Air Date: December 20, 1951

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EP1003: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Ricardo Amerigo Matter, Part Five and High Sky Hoodoo

Bob Bailey

A second fiddle leads Johnny Dollar to the truth.

Original Air Date: January 20, 1956

Whitney plans to test pilot the next flight to rend himself of the “jinx” label.

Original Air Date: Week of December 20, 1957

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EP1002: Suspense: The Mystery of Marie Roget

Cornel Wilde

Auguste Dupin investigates the murder of a young woman found floating in a Paris river.

Original Air Date: December 14, 1953

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EP1001: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Ricardo Amerigo Matter, Parts Three and Four

Bob Bailey
Is the violin Johnny found in the swamp real or a fake?

Original Air Date: January 18 and 19, 1956

 Note: There was an error on the initial post where Part Five was posted instead of Parts 3 and 4. This issue has been corrected. Please download the updated episodes.

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EP1000s: Screen Guild Theatre: Call Northside 777

Jimmy Stewart plays a cynical reporter turned crusader who seeks to clear a man wrongly convicted of murdering a police officer. This episode was based on the 1949 Edgar Award Winning Movie of the same name.

Original Air Date: October 7, 1948

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The movie can be purchased here.

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EP1000: Mr. Moto: Project 77

Mr. Moto investigates the case of a missing man who possesses a dangerous military secret.

Original Air Date: July 8, 1951

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Orson Welles Pays Tribute to Jimmy Stewart

Welles at a Dean Martin celebrity roast for Jimmy Stewart.

EP0999: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Ricardo Amerigo Matter, Parts One and Two

Bob Bailey
Johnny investigates the disappearance of an insured musician and his $40,000 violin.

Original Air Date: January 16 and 17, 1956

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Our Ten Most Dramatically Powerful Episodes

We continue our march to 1000 episodes and our look back at our best shows.

In previous posts, we’ve examined our most exciting episodes,  our most humorous,  and our best mysteries.

This time we take a look at our most dramatically powerful episodes. Many of our shows are light entertainment, but some go to another level. Some are thought provoking, heart warming, or heart breaking. They’re  stories that move us, inform us, and challenge us. They engage the mind and heart. They are brilliantly conceived and executed. Whittling this down to ten was challenge, but here’s my list:

10) Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Trans-pacific Export Matter

This script was the basis for both John Lund and Gerald Mohr’s auditions, but for my money no one did it better than Edmond O’Brien in 1950 who deals with tragedy when a beautiful young woman is murdered as a result of his investigation of an apparent insurance fraud.

9) The Abbotts: The Dead White Flame 

The Abbotts are involved in a plane crash that sees a famous psychiatrist die. However, Pat suspects there’s more to this murder than meets the eye. And Pat and Jean get a peak at how dangerous this new post-war world is when they get Pat admitted to a sanitarium.

8) Barrie Craig:-A Time To Kill

Barrie finds a beautiful girl in his car, and someone is after her. She tells him one amazing whopper after another while at the same time,  Barrie takes a beating from his pursuers. The episode at times seemed like one of his biggest oddball cases, yet the ending is one of Craig’s most moving and tragic.

7) Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Broderick Matter, Parts 1-2, 3-4, and 5

Johnny begins with a simple case that seems to have the making of a heart warming tale. A poor man who sold newspapers took out a $1500 on his life with the beneficiary a sweet 11 year-old girl who helped him sell his papers one day.  He paid his policy faithfully and Johnny sets out to find her.  He quickly runs into disillusionment as he learns that her life didn’t seem to justify the old man’s faith as she’s left behind a line of frauds, thefts, and spurned lovers. When he finally finds her, can he stop her from making the greatest mistake of all?

6) San Francisco Final

There are many unaired pilots that are in circulation among OTR fans. Some you know exactly why they weren’t picked up. Others just make you scratch your head. Such was the case with San Francisco Final.  This pilot not only had star power in Jeff Chandler but a brilliantly written and acted first script that told the tale of Chinese American families hit by blackmail that drove them to crimes of violence and passion. Reporter Mike Rivera looks for the root of the problem. The solution is shocking and the denouement of the story is brilliantly done.

5) Box 13: The Treasure of Hang Li

Dan Holiday follows the instructions in a letter to purchase “the Hang Li” piece. The shop owner gives it to Holiday and insists he not pay for it.  It’s a very surprising story, and perhaps the most profound of the series.

4) Frank Race: The Istanbul Adventure

Frank Race flirted with many women during the course of the series, however he fell hard for a woman named  Lisel in this episode.  She’s engaged in vital work as she’s trying to get medicine to suffering people in post-war Europe but they’re facing ruthless black marketeers who are selling weak and ineffective medicines that are spreading death and misery.  The program brings home the pain and suffering the black market inflicts on the wold. The episode ends with a mix of tragedy and irony that makes the episode a true dramatic gem.

3) Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Valentine Matter, Parts 1 and 2, Parts 3 and 4, and Part 5.

Johnny has a chance encounter with an ex-boot legger who has retied from crime and chosen to live a quiet,  simple life. However, someone’s determined not to allow him to. Assassins come after him with no known motive.  He ends up meeting the daughter of the gangster: a lovely and unassuming young woman who didn’t know she was the daughter of the infamous  Dan Valentine until he was shot down in cold blood. The story is a tragic one and it’s a powerful story because the impact of each death is felt, unlike many episodes where person X dies. The story explores the humanity of Johnny Dollar and is almost a meditation on the destructive power of hate and unforgiveness, as well as that there can be good even in some people who have done bad things.

2) Pat Novak for Hire: Little Jake Siegel

This episode is not technically complete. The sound quality isn’t great and the last few seconds of Novak’s closing monologue are missing. That said, what we have is an amazing story that’s groundbreaking. It’s a modern tradition, dating to perhaps the 1980s or 90s to have a powerful season finale and certainly series finale, that shakes the lead character’s world up.  No one did this in 1949. Characters continue to be pretty much who they were regardless of what happened.

However, in the Summer of 1949, Pat Novak for Hire was headed off the air for the Summer, and because Jack Webb was forced to take up work on a new summer show called Dragnet, this would turn out to be Pat Novak’s last episode, and writer Richard Breen penned a very different story.

Novak visits a church at the request of a priest. A gunman enters and shoots a nine year old altar boy who died saving Novak’s life. Novak sets out to find out who the killer is. There’s less humor in this episode and Novak is believably more intense as he’s determined to square for things for Little Jake. At the end of the day, it seems unlikely that things could ever be the same again for our wisecracking waterfront hero. It’s a tour de force, and hopefully the whole episode will be available in a complete form some day, but even with its flaws, it remains an amazing story.

1) Sherlock Holmes: The Guileless Gypsy

Basil Rathbone was stuck with Sherlock Holmes, which could limit this talented star. However, Rathbone’s New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes provided many touches such as Rathbone performing other works as  Holmes, or the use of music, or the show’s meticulous research on mysteries. All this came together in a beautiful package called The Guileless GypsyA powerful man  asks Holmes to investigate and accuses a band of gypsies of threatening to kidnap his nephew, the heir to his brother’s fortune. Holmes visits the gypsy camp and strikes up a friendship with a beautiful gypsy woman. In one of the best radio scenes ever, they get acquainted and break through the ice with music. First Holmes plays what passes for gypsy music in London. Then she plays the real thing, and then the two violins play together in a beautiful and moving melody. There’s no romance in this story, but genuine affection. The story also had a timely yet timeless message about bigotry and inciting race hatred. In 1946, Americans no doubt would remember that Gypsies were a group singled out for persecution by the Nazis. This episode speaks to the common humanity and both Holmes and the girl, with a powerful twist in the plot. This episode features  Basil Rathbone at his dramatic best in this series.

That concludes our series. I’d love to hear what your favorite episodes were. Let me know in the comments.

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Audio Drama Review: The History of Harry Nile, Set 3

This 3rd Set of Harry Nile stories starring Phil Harper follows Jim French’s Private Detective on adventures from October 1950 to the Summer of 1952. These stories take a turn. There’s one double length episode in this set and that’s it. The episodes become shorter in length. With 19-22 minute self-contained shows becoming the new normal.

When I saw the track length, I was really nervous. Towards the end of the golden age of radio, many shows including Yours Truly Johnny Dollar and Have Gun Will Travel had their lengths of actual performance cut to that level and the results were really poorly written condensed material. That’s why I think that Jim French deserves big time plaudits because he succeeded in making the scripts really pop and fitting a complete mystery into such a small amount of time.  Jim French really does a superb job on these episodes that makes them worth listening to.

This set rings true to the Golden Age setting of the stories.  In addition, there are some solid guest stars in Gilligan’s Island Alumni Dawn Wells and Russell Johnson, and the distinct voice of Night Court’s Harry Anderson is heard on a couple episodes as well.

Tight acting, great writing, and most episodes recorded before a live studio audience are just some of the reasons why this set is a must buy for fans of radio drama.

Rating: 5.0 out of 5.0 stars

Purchasing Information:

The set is available at French’s website for $49.95 on CD or as a digital download for $25.

The History of Harry Niles, Set 3  (along with Sets 1,2  and 4-6) are available on Audible for $19.95 for members or 1 Credit. I bought this set with my an Audible listener Credit ($14.95).

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EP0998: The Line Up: The Railroad Roundhouse Round-Up Case

William Johnstone

Guthrie investigates the death of a woman found dead in a car trunk.

Original Air Date: November 29, 1951

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EP0997: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Todd Matter, Part Five and High Sky Hoodoo

Bob Bailey
Johnny is shot and the the thief is caught but where is the loot from the Todd burglary?

Original Air Date: January 13, 1956

A Korean war hero is suspsected of being a jinx on an unfortunate aircraft.

Original Air Date: 1958 or 1959

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