Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

EP0906: Sherlock Holmes: The Case of the Red Headed League

John Gielgud

Sherlock Holmes investigates when a League for Red Headed hires a pawn broker and then promptly disappears.

Original Air Date: January 16, 1955

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EP0905: Let George Do It: Dead on Arrival

Bob Bailey

While going to pick up Brooksie at the bus station, George meets up with an old man in trouble. He takes him to a hotel where he dies-from gunshot wounds.

Original Air Date: November 10, 1952

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EP0904: The Cases of Mr. Ace: The Man Named Judas

George Raft
Ace is hired to deliver a package to Chicago for sale and finds trouble every turn.

Original Air Date: June 25, 1947

 

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EP0903: Frank Race: The Adventure of the Pharaoh’s Staff

Paul Dubov

Race is hired to guard some valuable Egyptian relics.

Original Air Date: November 5, 1949

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EP0902s: X Minus One: Protective Mimicry

Mandell Kramer

In the 25th Century, a Treasury Agent seeks to find the truth behind the re-appearance of counterfeit currency.

Original Air Date: October 3, 1956

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Radio’s Most Essential People Countdown #8: Fibber McGee and Molly

Previous Posts:
9, 1012-1114-1316-1518-1720-19,22-2124-2326-2528-2730-2933-3136-34,

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

81-8586-9091-9596-100

8) Fibber McGee and Molly

Fibber McGee and MollyJim and Marion Jordan starred in the roles of Fibber McGee and Molly. Their show was an outstanding comedy hit that introduced Americans to the town of Wistful Vista with its memorable cast of characters. The most memorable was, of course, the lovable blowhard Fibber who was famous for such antics as his never quite clean closet. Their program was one of those most referenced by other comedy programs.

Fibber McGee and Molly was one of the first programs in history to spawn spin-offs with both The Great Gildersleeve and Beulah having their genesis as secondary characters on Fibber McGee and Molly.

The Jordans managed to survive the transition from the depression to World War II to the hopeful post-war era. Along the way, they made some memorable guest appearances including doing an appearance on the Family Theatre as Fibber McGee and Molly and also appearing in totally different characters in a well-done episode of Suspense. While other programs such as Burns and Allen, Life of Riley, and Our Miss Brooks made the move to television, the Jordans kept performing as Fibber McGee and Molly to an ever-shrinking audience in the mid-to-late 1950s as the show became a fifteen minute daily serial and then a series of shorts on NBC’s Monitor program. A television version was tried without them, but the play failed. America would not except substitutes.

With hundreds of episodes in circulation from their SC Johnson Wax sponsored runs, the duo remain one of radio’s most memorable couples to this day.

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Book Review: The Valley of Fear

The Valley of Fear is the last Sherlock Holmes novel. It was originally published in 1915 but is set prior to the events of “The Final Problem.” Doyle ignores at least one fact stated by Watson in, “The Final Problem” where Watson claims not to have heard of Moriarity. Here, Holmes introduces Watson far before that as the two go to a castle to investigate the murder of a mysterious American.

The mystery at the castle is well-laid out with a lot of intriguing clues and some nifty deduction. However, the Holmes portion of this story is fairly light. It reads like a slightly longer Short Story rather than a novel. The rest of the novel, much like in A Study in Scarlet is consumed by a look at the back story of the crime which began in America.

The idea of solving a mystery and then telling us the story behind the crime is rarely a good writing method. I had to really slog through Doyle’s use of in A Study in Scarlet. I put the book aside when I came on it when a child and didn’t pick it up for 20 years. However, this story is more interesting with its focus on the Scowrers, an American secret society that terrorized Pennsylvania and a mysterious stranger that joined them. It was quite riveting reading, so I didn’t mind the digression much.

However after that great story, the ending of the book left a bad taste. The 1935 movie, The Triumph of Sherlock Holmes was based on this story but gave a radically different end and with good reason. Without spoiling the end I will say, that  for the first time that for all concerned, everyone would have been better off had Holmes not investigated the case.

Rating: 4.0 out of 5.0

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EP0902: The Line Up: The Mad Bomber

William Johnstone

Someone is using high explosives to local political leaders and Ben Guthrie has to find out why.

Original Air Date: January 11, 1951

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EP0901: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Radioactive Gold Matter

John Lund

Johnny races to find a deadly gold radioactive isotope.

Original Air Date:  July 27, 1954

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EP0900: Sherlock Holmes: A Scandal in Bohemia

John Gielgud

Sherlock Holmes seeks to find scandalous photographs that endanger the king of Bohemia.

Original Air Date: January 9, 1955

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EP0899: Let George Do It: Calle Reposo

Bob Bailey

George is hired to go to Havana to bid on a rich tobacco crop, but he has to deal with a disreputable mobster.

Original Air Date: October 20, 1952

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EP0898: Cases of Mr. Ace: Key to a Boobie Trap

George RaftAce is hired to guard the key to a bus locker by a man who has confessed to murder.

Original Air Date: Sometime in 1947

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EP0897: Frank Race: The Adventure of the Gold Worshipper

Paul Dubov

Frank Race searches for the missing daughter of a rich man.

Original Air Date: October 29, 1949

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Radio’s Most Essential People Countdown #9

Previous Posts: 1012-1114-1316-1518-1720-19,22-2124-2326-2528-2730-2933-3136-3439-37,

42-4045-4348-4651-4954-5257-5560-5865-6170-66,  71-7576-8081-8586-9091-9596-100

9) Elliott Lewis

Elliott LewisLewis was often known as Mr. Radio. His career over the air was multi-faceted and has left an indelible mark. He was a talented dramatic actor. He played Captain Philip Kearney in the well-remembered Voyages of the Scarlet Queen. He also took his turn as a radio detective in both The Casebook of Gregory Hood and played Archie Goodwin in Mutual’s Amazing Nero Wolfe, and then starred with his then-wife Cathy Lewis in On Stage which pushed him into a wide variety of genres.

He was also a great comic actor, providing fantastic character work on Burns and Allen, in addition to enjoying a memorable recurring role on the Phil Harris and Alice Faye show.

Yet, with all that said, Lewis did not particularly enjoy acting. He wanted to produce and direct radio. In the 1950s, this happened as he served as producer/director of Broadway is My Beat, a program that captured the full flavor of New York’s diverse population and where characters often spoke in memorable  and brooding poetry. He took the helm at Suspense and pushed the show in different directions including adapting Othello and the Moonstone in multi-part episode, doing a two part episode that proposed an ending to Charles Dickens’ unfinished novel The Mystery of Edwin Drood, and giving guest spots to comedy actors like Bob Hope and Jack Benny who rarely got dramatic roles.

While he worked in television, his dedication to radio and his reputation for excellence continued. When Rod Serling experimented with radio drama in 1973 with his Zero Hour  series, Lewis once again found himself as producer/director.  And he also got the call for 1979’s Sears Radio Theater. 

Elliot Lewis, a talented actor, and great producer of radio dramas well deserves his ranking as one of radio’s ten most essential people.

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Telefilm Review: Murder on the Links

We continue our look at the the great Poirot Telefilm series over ITV as I eagerly await the new episodes coming later this year. Murder on the Links was the third of four films released during Poirot’s sixth series.

In Murder on the Links, Poirot while vacationing in Deauville France is approached by a wealthy man who has received certain undisclosed threats. The next day, Captain Hastings finds the man murdered and lying in a sand trap. Poirot sets out to solve the murder and this time he has the rival, the pompous Inspector Giraud and the stakes are high: if Giraud solves the case first, Poirot must shave his trademark mustache.

This was another solid story with the battle with Giraud being played for great comedic effect. In addition, Captain Hastings holds back information from Poirot and it’s open question as to whether Captain Hastings has helped a murderer escape. The solution is satisfyingly complex and exactly what we expect of Agatha Christie and this series.

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.0

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