Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

EP0896: The Line Up: The Case of Frankie and Joyce

Willliam Johnstone
Guthrie investigates of a woman found murdered soon after announcing her engagement.

Original Air Date: January 4, 1951

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EP0895: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Jeanne Maxwell Matter

John Lund

Johnny has to find out whether the death of an insured young woman was murder or suicide.

Original Air Date: July 20, 1954

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EP0894: Sherlock Holmes: Dr. Watson Meets Sherlock Holmes

John Gielgud

Dr. Watson recalls his first meeting with Sherlock Holmes as Watson assists Holmes in a case of notorious blackmailer, Charles Augustus Milverton.

Original Air Date: January 2, 1955

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EP0893: Let George Do It: The Dead of Night

Bob Bailey
George responds to  a 4 a.m. phone call and finds himself smack in the middle of a murder investigation.

Original Air Date: October 13, 1952

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EP0892: A Life in Your Hands: Alderman Murdered

Carlton Kadell

An alderman is murdered and suspects abound.

Original Air Date: August 28, 1952

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EP0891: Frank Race; The Adventure of the Undecided Bride

Paul Dubov

Race and Donovan investigate when a bride is seen running through the town in the dead of night carrying a gun.

Original Air Date: October 22, 1949

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Radio’s Most Essential People Countdown: #10: Joseph Kearns

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10) Joseph Kearns

Joseph KearnsJoseph Kearns was one of radio’s most talented and most used actors. His first classic role was in the children’s Christmas radio serial, The Cinnamon Bear when he played Crazy Quilt Dragon in 1937.

It wouldn’t be the last radio classic with Kearns’ fingerprints on it. He would be the first Man in Black on Suspense, as the show’s sinister host. He also wrote and acted in numerous episodes of the Series, playing a wide variety of roles. He also would play the Whistler in a similar narrator role as the man in black.  He played Jack Benny’s out of touch security guard Ed.

Beyond that his wide variety of radio roles are simply too numerous to mention. From appearing in the pilot of Let George Do It to playing Moriarity to Basil Rathbone’s Sherlock Holmes to being one of the great highlights as old Doc Yak Yak on the Harold Peary show, Kearns was a vital radio character player.
While Kearns enjoyed some success on television before his untimely death (playing Mr. Wilson on Dennis the Menace and Superintendent Stone on Our Miss Brooks.), it’s Kearns’ radio work that is his lasting legacy.

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Radio Drama Review: Dossier on Dumetrius

In Dossier on Dumetrius, an International criminal known as Dumetrius comes to London from occupied Berlin. However, MI-5 discovers that he committed a murder in killing an officer in Berlin. Dumetrius seeks to kill off anyone who saw him on the flight other than his confederates and collect one million pounds of stolen Nazi loot.

This 1951 Australian radio production has a lot to commend it. It’s 104 part epic that is chock full of action, suspense, and foreign intrigue. We follow Major Gregory Keen (Bruce Stewart) of MI-5 as he follow Dumetrius’ trail with the aid of Sgt. Tommy Coutts and a cast of characters. At the same time, Keen has fallen hard for femme fatale Heddy Bergner, one of Dumetrius’ cohorts.

Like all good serial dramas, Dossier on Dumetrius is highly addictive with well-written and well-timed cliffhangers that keep you chomping at the bit, excited to find out more. Series Star Bruce Stewart was a native of New Zealand and it’s said that parliament adjourned early that day to hear the concluding episode.

The great downside of the series is the character of Keen who for the first seventy percent of the serial isn’t too kean at all. First he engages in a pursuit of Peter Ridgeway, a man obviously in the wrong place at the wrong time. Then, he falls for Heddy Bergner and quickly acts more like a twelve year old boy in love with a circus bareback ride than an agent of MI-5. In part twenty, Coutts goes out after hours to investigate and makes more progress in that one episode than Keen had in the prior nineteen. While everyone else can obviously see Heddy is playing him for a sucker, including Coutts, the good Major remains oblivious.

When Coutts gets Heddy in his basement for interrogation at the moment she’s about to crack, Keen rescues her. With MI-5 having tapped her phone, Heddy takes refuge at Keen’s house during the day and is able to use Keen’s phone while he’s out to contact Dumetrius. And after Keen does realize that Heddy is playing him and she is captured unconscious. His hurt feelings allow him to let Dumetrius and his accomplice get close enough to an unconscious Heddy to put a knife to her throat, and the villains escape due to Dumetrius’ threat to kill Heddy.

Keen’s opinion of Heddy is not entirely unjustified. She does show some redeeming qualities towards the end of the series. However, the fact remains that the vast majority of the numerous deaths in this series are the results of Keen’s uncanny naiveté and incompetence. The only other downside was that  many of the characters such as Sally Wright and the fat little French Men get lost in the script.

That said, despite Keen’s thickness, the serial is nonetheless an entertaining cat and mouse game that’s worth a listen.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5.00

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EP0890: The Line Up: The Elsner Case

William Johnstone
Guthrie and Grebbs investigate the seemingly senseless death of a 60 year old woman.

Original Air Date: December 28, 1950

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EP0889: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Carboniferous Dolomite Matter

John Lund

Johnny investigates mining sabotage in Indonesia.

Original Air Date: July 13, 1954

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EP0888: Sherlock Holmes: The Duke of Hollywell

Ben Wright

An indiscreet duke asks Holmes to find out who is blackmailing him.

Original Air Date: March 22, 1950

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EP0887: Let George Do It: The Four Seasons

Bob Bailey

George is hired to protect some valuable miniature artwork but quickly finds himself arrested and charged with grand theft.

Original Air Date: October 6, 1952

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EP0886: A Life in Your Hands: Professor Allenby Murdered

Carlton Kadell

The murder of an archeology professor at his alma mater is the latest case investigated by Jonathan Kegg.

Rehearsal of show that aired August 21, 1952

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EP0885: Frank Race: The Adventure of the Candy Killing

Paul Dubov
Frank Race to goes to a small town to help a friend whose mistress has been found dead with him looking like the most likely suspect.

Original Air Date: October 15, 1949

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Radio’s Most Essential People Countdown: #12 and #11

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12) Al Jolson

Al JolsonJolson was one of America’s premier entertainers beginning with his days in Vaudeville and his starring role in the first feature length talkie, The Jazz Singer.  Jolson also brought his unique musical style to radio in 1932 for Chevrolet. He’d continued to be a ratings draw for many years with programs such as Shell Chateau and the Kraft Music Hall. Jolson’s popularity in the early 1940s but picked up after the war with the release of The Jolson Story and then Jolson Sings Again. This made Jolson in demand both as  a star and as a guest performer. Throughout his career, he remained one of his era’s greatest entertainers, and also one of its most beloved radio stars.

11) Jack Webb

Jack WebbJack Webb came to radio at the right time in 1946. He began in San Francisco on the historic KGO-AM.  The station was trying to compete for national radio attention in a national radio market dominated by Hollywood and New York. He tried out several formats including a Comedy/Variety show and a news commentary program before with writer Richard Breen, he created the role of Pat Novak for Hire. The sardonic sometimes detective Novak spoke in a way that was unique to that time or any other.

His association with KGO ended as he went to Hollywood to find his fortune and the Novak series struggled on without him. He starred in a copycat series of Novak called Johnny Madero that went nowhere for Mutual, and then in 1948 landed the lead role in another detective series in CBS’ Jeff Regan.  In Hollywood, he played a lot of tough guys and hoods. On the CBS Series Escape he  appeared in a variety of episodes that have become classics such as his legendary work on “A Shipment of Mute Fate” and “Operation Fer de Lys.”

In 1949, he returned to his signature role as Pat Novak in a national series that added to his acclaim. However, the series was set to go on Summer hiatus and Webb needed money. Of this necessity was born Webb’s greatest creation, Dragnet. 

Influenced by a conversation he’d had with an LAPD officer and movie consultant who didn’t particularly care for radio private eye shows and their portrayals of incompetent or brutal cops, Webb had been challenged to make a show that showed how policeman really worked.

So in June 1949, NBC premiered Dragnet which would last for more than six years over the radio. Webb as producer/director brought listeners the highest quality of sound effects and took them right to the scene of the crime on the side of the law. Unlike most crime shows, Dragnet didn’t focus exclusively on homicides but covered nearly every area a detective might work in including missing persons, bunco, and robbery.

Dragnet’s portrayal of the police as ordinary middle class heroes offered a fresh contrast from prior portrayals which portrayed police alternately as super cops or as bumbling fools.  Dragnet changed the shape of the crime drama and it would have many imitators such as 21st Precinct, Tales of the Texas Ranger, and The Line Up.

Had it not been for television, Webb’s entire career may have been defined over radio as the vanguard of a new generation of radio producers. His radio work waned and ended in 1955 as he focused on Dragnet over television and several film projects. Still, in his years on the radio, Webb raised the bar for excellence for everyone who would come after.

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