176 search results for "nick carter"

EP1074: Nick Carter: Nine Hours to Live

Lon Clark

Nick Carter investigates whether a man on death row is truly guilty and he only has nine hours until the man is executed.

Original Air Date: January 15, 1944

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EP1068: Nick Carter: Double Disguise

Lon Clark

Nick Carter tries to help a down on his luck man that’s become a mugger and ends up investigating a deadly robbery and impersonating a two bit hood.

Original Air Date: January 8, 1944

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EP1062: Nick Carter: The Substitute Bride

Lon Clark

A friend of Nick Carter’s suspects his fiancee’ may be an imposter.

Original Air Date: November 17, 1943

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EP1056: Nick Carter: The Drug Ring Murder

Lon Clark
A murdered man washes up on shore with the only thing to identify him being one of Nick Carter’s business cards.

Original Air Date: November 10, 1943

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EP1050: Nick Carter: The Body on the Slab

Lon Clark
Nick Carter investigates the case of a husband who disappeared at a bar and finds a sinister conspiracy.

Original Air Date: November 3, 1943

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EP1044: Nick Carter: An Angle on Murder

Lon Clark

Nick is walking a businessman to his office to confront one of his partners over stolen funds when the businessman is gunned down.

Original Air Date: October 25, 1943

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EP1038: Nick Carter: State’s Prison Evidence

Lon Clark

Nick goes undercover in prison to prove a suicide was actually a murder and conspiracy.

Original Air Date: October 18, 1943

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EP1032: Nick Carter: The Flying Duck Murders

Lon Clark
Nick Carter investigates a series of accidents at a mine.

Original Air Date: October 4, 1943

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EP1026: Nick Carter: The Glass Coffin

Lon Clark

Nick Carter visits a movie studio that’s been abandoned for years and finds a murder.

Original Air Date: September 27, 1943

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Nick Carter: Murder in the Crypt (EP1020)

Lon Clark

Nick investigates a dead body found in front of a statue of Anubis.

Original Air Date: August 2, 1943

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Nick Carter

Listen to “The Great Detectives Present Nick Carter” on Spreaker.

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.

The Nick Carter franchise would eventually be featured in Hollywood films in 1939-40, a 1960s film, a 1972 telefilm, and a series of 206 spy novels.

Nick Carter’s radio series was perhaps his best-known incarnation from 1943-55. It was a New York-based radio drama by the mutual network that managed to survive from 1943-55 as the radio detective genre went through a wide variety of phases from the romantic detectives to the hard boiled series to the realistic procedures.

 

Stars:

Lon Clark (1912-98): Lon Clark was a veteran New York radio and stage actor. He was best known for his role in the Nick Carter programs from 1943-55. Outside of this, he appeared as a character actor with distinguished roles in radio programs such as Words at War and later programs such as The CBS Mystery Theatre and Theater Five.

 

 

 

Radio Episode Log: (Right-click to download)

 

Christmas Episode (played out of order):

 

Log courtesy of OTRSite.

*Played out of order.

**Episode announced with wrong date. Date in log reflects updated information.

EP1014: Nick Carter: The Echo of Death

Lon Clark

Nick Carter flies to beautiful Echo Canyon to investigate the disappearance of a famous financial correspondent.

Original Air Date: July 6, 1943

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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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It’s Another Case for Nick Carter or Nick Carter and the Case of the Missing Serials

There were few radio detectives with more endurance than Nick Carter as played by Lon Clark. It’s first airing was April 11, 1943 in the middle of World War II and it went off the air on September 25, 1955, 5 days after Dragnet aired its last episode. Clark made more than 722 appearances as Nick Carter, a detective character who predated Sherlock Holmes by 1 year.

Nick Carter’s radio adventures are usually some of the most cleverly written detective stories on the radio, with excitement, thrills, and taut cleverly written mysteries.

Carter, like many other radio detectives has a lot of lost episodes. However, unlike the Rathbone-Bruce Sherlock Holmes episodes, missing Nick Carter stories aren’t mostly or entirely from the World War II era. Given the rare World War II episodes of Sherlock Holmes, The Thin Man, and Mr. and Mrs. North, Nick Carter has to have done well during World War II. About 50 World War II episodes of Nick Carter are floating about. These generally feature one of radio’s most distinctive openings:

(Pounding on the Door)

Woman: What is it? What is it?

Man: It’s another case for Nick Carter, Master Detective.

There are some missing war episodes and among the most curious are those from a 20-week period where Nick Carter went to a five day a week 15-minute serial format from April to September 1944. Outside of the 56 Yours Truly Johnny Dollar serials, the only intact radio detective serial stories are a 1936 Charlie Chan story and a 1954 Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Person story. The rest exist only in fragment and none of the Carter serials are in circulation.

However, it’s the post World War II shows that are in much shorter supply.  Particularly those shows after 1948. After episode 366, “A Clue Called X”, 354 of the next 356 episodes are missing including the last 312, with no Carter episode from the 1950s in circulation.

The number of Carter radio plays is circulation is somewhere between 85 and 135 episodes depending on whose set you’re looking at. There are a lot of duplicates and mislabeled shows, so it’s tough to say for sure. This is why Lon Clark as Nick Carter didn’t make my 100 club list  as I haven’t verified the episodes and there hasn’t been a clear independent audit of the Carter shows. That leaves near to 600 episodes missing from general circulation. The good news of this?

Many of these episodes may not be lost forever, but may only be out of circulation. The Radio Goldindex of radio shows usually tracks pretty closely to what’s in circulation, but on Nick Carter, Goldin has far more Carter episodes than are currently circulation. He catalogs 358 episodes or nearly triple what’s in circulation. Among the episodes Goldin lists are several of the Nick Carter serials which are either complete or complete enough to listen to. In addition there are more than 100 episodes from 1949-50 that Goldin has listed that aren’t in general circulation. This gives hope that the shows exist within collecting circles and will eventually become available to fans of the master detective.

My Top Six Most Wanted Missing Old Time Radio Episodes

A version of this article was posted in 2018.

In podcasting, few things make me happier than getting word more detective radio programs have come into circulation. Over the last few seasons, we’ve revisited several series where I’d done every available episode only for more episodes to come available.

The list of series I would love to have new episodes for is vast. I’d love more episodes of series that have 90% of their episodes missing, such as The Fat Man and The Thin Man. I’d love episodes for shows for which we have only dozens of episodes out of hundreds, such as The Saint, Barrie Craig, and Nick Carter. I’d love more episodes of series where we already have most of them such as The Adventures of Philip Marlowe, Dragnet, Richard Diamond, and Johnny Dollar.

When it comes to specific missing episodes, the list is far shorter. We have no idea what the missing episodes are about, so in theory, one missing episode could be as good as another. Yet, we do have tantalizing details about some specific episodes, and I’m particularly curious about them. Here are my top six:

6) Dragnet: Production 1, June 3, 1949

We are missing the very first episode of Dragnet from the radio series that ran for six years and led to four different TV series, a major motion picture, and a successful spin-off in Adam 12. “Production 1” is one of only eleven lost episodes of the radio show, but it’s such a historic broadcast, and it’s a shame we can’t hear it. The only reason it ranks so low is that we do have “Production 2”, which gives us a hint of what “Production 1” was like, with its very different opening theme and somewhat different style. Production 1 isn’t Dragnet as most people know it, but it’s still the beginning of the series, and I’d like to be able to hear it.

Note: This episode is one various site frequently claim to have for sale, but when you listen to the episode, it’s actually “Production 2”.

5)Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Lonely Hearts Matter, Episode 4: April 28, 1956

The fifteen-minute Johnny Dollar serials with Bob Bailey are the best audio dramas of radio’s Golden Age. Thankfully, they are almost entirely intact, with only four installments missing. Three of these missing episodes are Parts Two or Three. If a chapter is going to be missing, one of these middle chapters is best, as most plot developments are readily captured in recaps.

However, “The Lonely Hearts Matter” is missing Episode Four. In my opinion, that’s the second-worst episode to be missing. The worst possible episode to not have is the final episode of the serial since you don’t know how the story ends. But Episode Four is critical, as it’s in this episode that Johnny begins to move towards the solution, and the drama of the final chapter is set up. As it is now, “The Lonely Hearts Matter” is not a satisfying listen. The leap from parts three to five is a huge one. We can read about what happened in Episode Four thanks to John C. Abbott’s definitive book on Johnny Dollar. However, there’s nothing like actually hearing the episode.

4) Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Curly Waters Matter, February 1, 1949

After the end of the serial era, the show resumed the typical half-hour format. Most episodes were entirely self-contained. So while we may not have all the episodes, we don’t need them to understand the episodes we do have. One exception to this is “The Curly Waters Matter”. This episode is missing and that’s bad for two reasons. First, it introduces Betty Lewis, who would be a recurring character for the last year and a half of the Bob Bailey era, as Johnny’s first and only ongoing girlfriend. In addition, the plot for next week’s program (“The Date of Death Matter”) is a bit of a sequel to this one. Many of the events are recapped, so you can understand what went on in that episode, but it’s disappointing we couldn’t hear these events for ourselves.

3) Let George Do It: George Meets Sam Spade, September 26, 1947

Dennis at the Digital Deli located a tantalizing ad from a newspaper for the radio series Let George Do It with the caption “George Meets Sam Spade.”

The radio show doesn’t exist in circulation (only one episode of Let George Do It from 1947 does), so we’re left with a lot of questions. Was this an actual team-up between George Valentine and Sam Spade despite being on different networks? Was it a guest appearance by Sam Spade actor Howard Duff on Let George Do It? Was it a situation where a parody of Sam Spade appeared, perhaps voiced by Elliott Lewis, who worked for Mutual around this time and could be a soundalike for his friend Duff? We’ll never know until the episode is found.

2) Dragnet: The Big Cop, August 2, 1951

This is the only radio/television episode of Dragnet from the 1950s to tackle the issue of police corruption. A listener emailed me with the theory that the radio and TV versions of this episode were being suppressed. It doesn’t require a conspiracy. Hundreds of thousands of hours of 1950s radio are missing. That said, I’d love to see how Dragnet dealt with this topic in the 1950s.

Note: This is another episode that is often listed as being available for sale, but the episode sold is an unrelated burglary case.

Since I first wrote this article, the Gotham Radio players produced a solid recreation (heard thirty-five minutes into this broadcast from WBAI). It gives the script a believable treatment and it’s a good one. I’d so love for the original to appear.

1) Matthew Slade: The Day of the Phoenix, Part Three, July 1964

This episode concluded the 1960s detective series Matthew Slade, Private Investigator. It aired in 1964, a couple years after the official end of the Golden Age of Radio. The absence of the concluding episode, “Day of the Phoenix”, is why I’ve held off on doing this series.

This episode is tantalizing because there’s evidence it exists. It’s listed in the Digital Deli’s log, and I saw the episode for sale on a now-defunct website that offered Old Time Radio MP3 CDs. I didn’t buy it because of the seller’s shady setup, but it does give hope that the show is out there.

We’re running out of great detectives that we haven’t done yet, so we may end up running Matthew Slade without “Day of the Phoenix”.

If you have any of these episodes, I’d love to hear them and to share them with my audience. Before emailing me, please be sure that you’ve listened to the episode and verified it is what it purports to be (particularly with the missing Dragnet episodes).