Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

Telefilm Review: A Nero Wolfe Mystery: Christmas Party

“Christmas Party,” is set in the 1950s. Archie Goodwin (Timothy Hutton) agrees to create a fake marriage license to allow an enchanting dancing partner to press her boss and hot and cold romantic interest to give her a firm answering on marrying her. She invites Archie to the Christmas party of the design company her boss owns. When his boss, legendary private detective Nero Wolfe gets too pushy in insisting Archie instead drive him to an appointment, Archie to uses the license to make Wolfe believe he’s about to get married and to Wolfe’s horror, bring a woman to live in Wolfe’s house or leave Wolfe’s employ for good.

Things go wrong for Archie when the boss is murdered and the license (which could prove Archie a forger) is missing and could be found by police. It’s only when he arrives home that Archie finds how bad things are and that the honor and dignity of Nero Wolfe are at stake if they don’t solve the murder…and quickly.

This is a bit of an oddity in my Christmas viewing habits. I tend to go for uplifting traditional feel-good Christmas stories. However, “Christmas Party” is in the words of the froggy-voiced victim, “My secret public vice” entertainment-wise as I mention watching it on Twitter nearly every year.

Part of the pleasure is having an excuse to touch base with one of the best TV mystery series ever. I’d argue it’s the last great faithful adaption of old school detective fiction that we’ll ever see. The high points of the series are all present in this episode: There’s the stylish costuming and generally elegant set design that gives the series an authentic feel. There’s the marvelous ensemble cast that make up the bulk of guest characters each week. And there’s the writing that faithfully conveys Stout’s stories with a minimum of tampering.

As for the plot itself, it’s a pretty standard Rex Stout plot. Stout is the master of creating all these little worlds (usually within the realm of New York City) which are civilized on the surface but one homicide away from all the pent up hostility and petty rivalries within the group exploding to the surface. The solution is stylistic and bold, but not particularly brilliant. What makes this story standout is the Wolfe-Goodwin relationship. Despite Archie’s constant ribbing and the way they get on each other’s nerves, it transcends the mere employer-employee relationship. Mentor/mentee and Surrogate Father/Son are certainly fair ways to describe it. This story highlights the hidden warmth of what’s often a tempestuous relationship in a way that’s true of the clever subtlety of Rex Stout, and that aspect does more than anything else to make it fit the season.

There are minor quibbles to be had with it. The portrayal of Lilly Rowan, a semi-important recurring character in the books, as jealous of Archie having a dance partner on another night is far from book-accurate, although it does serve to provide the episode a nice TV original bookend. And of course, the plant rooms appear and reminds fans of the one way the early 2000s series fails in comparison to its much less-regarded 1980s predecessor: in its portrayal of Wolfe’s famous room full of orchids.

This doesn’t detract from its status as a solid entry in the TV show.

Rating: Satisfactory

Note: In a crime against great television, A Nero Wolfe Mystery is not available legally on any streaming service and the DVDs are all out of print. However, the series is worth seeking out however you can find it whether through your local library, an eBay auction, or fan-posted YouTube video.

Guest Star: First Song: Orpheus Takes a Holiday (AWR0210)

Amazing World of Radio

A program of holiday music featuring David Rose and his orchestra, and Frank Sinatra.

Radio Broadcast Date: December 19, 1948

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Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Jan Brueghel Matter (EP3955)

John Lund

Today’s Mystery:

Johnny goes to Detroit to make a deal for the return of a stolen painting.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: July 6, 1954

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Philo Vance: The Grey Glove Murder Case (EP3954)

Today’s Mystery:

Philo Vance is called to investigate the report of a man strangled by a grey glove in mid-air.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: Decemmber 13, 1949

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AFRS Christmas 1947 (AWR0209)

Amazing World of Radio

Today’s Golden Age of Radio Episode:

Servicemen stationed in Germany after World War II plan a Christmas Party for local children.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: December 25, 1947

Written by Steve Allen

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Dangerous Assignment: Get Gouda Before the Gunrunners (EP3953)


Today’s Mystery:

Steve goes to Bombay to get in touch with the key witness who got an American businessman convicted of gunrunning.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: August 23, 1950

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Christmas in America 1946 (AWR0208)

Amazing World of Radio

A combined Christmas program of four soap operas sponsored by Proctor and Gamble including Life Can Be Beautiful, Ma Perkins, Pepper Young’s Family, and Right to Happiness with the Christmas reflections interspersed.

Original Air Date: December 25, 1946

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Dr. Tim, Detective: The Mad Maltese and Guest in Number Two (EP3952)

Today’s 1st Mystery:

Dr. Tim, Jill, and Sammy have to find a man who was bitten by a rabid Maltese cat.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: February 27, 1950

Today’s 2nd Mystery: A mysterious lodger in the mysterious room is shot.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: March 6, 1950

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Ozzie and Harriet: The New Radio Phonograph (AWR0207)

Amazing World of Radio

Ozzie and Harriet make a pact to count their new radio phonograph as their joint Christmas present.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: December 19, 1948

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Sam Spade: The Fairly Bright Caper (EP3951)

Today’s Mystery:

Sam is hired to attend and keep peace at a combined Halloween and celebrity engagement party.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: October 31, 1948

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Burns and Allen: Gracie Sends Sam Spade to Jail (EP3950s)

Today’s Mystery:

George Burns and Sam Spade explain to a police lieutenant how Gracie got them thrown into jail for murder.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: February 10, 1949

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Audio Drama Review: The Great Gildersleeve, Volume 4

Radio Archives’ The Great Gildersleeve, Volume 4 collects twelve episodes of The Great Gildersleeve from late November 1941 to late February 1942. Two episodes are missing from the collection; one, “Cousin Octavia Visits”, is in circulation but with much weaker sound quality than the ones in this collection. Still, I recommend listening to that one online because it shows how much the show’s focus and tone began to shift as America entered World War II. The contrast between the episode that was written before Pearl Harbor (but aired with breaking news bulletins, creating an odd contrast) and the one that followed it was striking.

“Cousin Octavia Visits” is a typical sitcom plot, where a spoiled child relative acts sweet initially but turns into absolute hellion once Mommy’s gone. The next episode finds the family in a financial crunch after Gildersleeve (Harold Peary) draws out most of their savings to buy defense bonds, while the housekeeper, Birdie (Lillian Randolph), shares her dark fantasy of poisoning Japanese soldiers. Don’t get me wrong, this volume’s not all patriotism and bloodlust. This set features some very funny episodes, but most episodes after Pearl Harbor reflect the subtle and not-so-subtle ways the War changed people’s lives.

The plots have a lot of great humor that center around comic misunderstanding, Gildersleeve throwing his weight around, and his inability to back out of an embarrassing situation. They also make good use of the fact that no one seems to communicate, which leads to, for instance, multiple people trying to sell the same Iron Deer statue from scrap metal. In another episode, the family ends up in a hilarious bidding war when Gildersleeve decides to surprise his daughter Marjorie (who is getting Red Cross training) with a bedroom makeover, only to find out that Marjorie (Lurene Tuttle) has hired someone else to do the job for her after they’ve already purchased a new bed. Gildersleeve’s son Leroy’s (Walter Telley) childhood hijinks serve as the basis for two episodes, one where he gets hold of Gildersleeve’s cigars, and another where he runs away from home.

The series also tries an expansion of the cast. Arthur Q. Bryan (best known as the voice of Elmer Fudd) arrives in the Cousin Octavia episode and stays on for another episode before departing. He’d return without the classic Elmer Fudd speech impediment later on in the series.

My three favorite episodes in the box set were: “Arrested as a Car Thief”, where a simple task of driving Leroy and some rabbits he’d been raising to an agricultural exhibit becomes a massive ordeal, involving horrible roads and multiple cases of mistaken identity; “Leroy Runs Away”, which has some similarities with mistaken identity, and not just of people, and also allows Harold Peary a rare dramatic moment and he doesn’t disappoint; and, my favorite, “Selling the Drugstore”, where Gildersleeve has been lecturing Leroy about the value of honesty and George Washington. Leroy takes the lesson to heart and then begins to hold Gildersleeve accountable for telling the truth. It leads to a lot of funny moments, but it also has a moral without being too moralizing. It also has one of the best comic twists in the set.

My least favorite episode (though by no means a bad one) is one where Marjorie’s Red Cross group needs education in fixing cars, and because Gildersleeve has been overheard talking about his prowess fixing sewing machines, he gets roped into teaching a class of female Red Cross trainees how to work on automobiles. It has some humorous moments and fun jokes but it’s just a little too contrived and disconnected from any sort of reality or logic for my taste.

Overall, this another solid set of restored episodes that really showcase the foundation of The Great GIldersleeve as one of America’s great radio sitcoms.

Rating: 4.5 out of 5

 

 

Tales of the Texas Rangers: Bright Boy (EP3950)

Today’s Mystery:

Jace searches for a teenager who has stolen several cars and stabbed the owner in his latest theft.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: February 24, 1952

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Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Woodward Manila Matter (EP3949)

John Lund

Today’s Mystery:

Johnny goes to Manila to investigate a $75,000 safe burglary.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: June 29, 1954

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Philo Vance: The Birdcage Murder Case (EP3948)

Today’s Mystery:

A woman warns Vance that  her fiancé will be murdered, and Vance is present when he’s murdered at a party.

Original Radio Broadcast Date: December 6, 1949

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