Nominate Us in the Podcast Awards

It’s that time again, time for the Podcast Awards nominations. I encourage you to nominate us in the Arts and Culture Category and nominate any other podcasts you enjoy. The deadline is February 15th.

We’ve had a fantastic year with a growing audience. We’ve brought you some extraordinary episodes and specials including:

We also honored the passing of some radio greats in the past twelve months:

  • For radio writer Norman Corwin, we played, “Murder in Studio One” a play Mr. Corwin wrote for the Columbia Worskhop.
  • For the famous newsman Mike Wallace, we presented two pilot episodes  for a radio detective series called, “Crime on the Waterfront

We’ve also featured a wide variety of short but entertaining shows including Candy Matson, Leonidas Witherall, Pete Kelly’s Blues and the Fat Man.

In addition to that, we’ve supplemented the site, with dozens of articles on a wide variety of topics including Detective book reviews, reviews of golden age music collections, a countdown of the top Perry Mason movies,  reviews of old time radio programs, and our current series on Radio’s Most Essential people.

If you’ve enjoyed the podcast and would like to nominate us, go to http://www.podcastawards.com before October 15th in the Culture/Arts category.

Thank you so much for all your support over the past year.

Telefilm Review: Thirteen At Dinner

In Thirteen at Dinner, Jane Wilkinson (Faye Dunaway) , an actress who is associated with a “dumb blonde” persona wants to divorce her husband, Lord Edgeware and asks Poirot (Peter Ustinov) to try and reason with her husband who she says is refusing her a divorce. Poirot, finds to his surprise that Lord Edgeware has long since dropped his objection.

When soon after this, Lord Edgeware’s murdered, suspicion falls on Wilkinson who has an airtight alibi, having been at a dinner with twelve other guests. Poirot has to unravel the mystery and find out who really killed Lord Edgeware.

Ustinov had portrayed Poirot in two motion pictures and this was the first of three outings for Television. The decline in overall quality is noticeable. The program is supposed to be set in the 1980s, but it feels like it was only half way updated, giving it a feel that’s neither contemporary nor old style.

Faye Dunaway is okay, but not at her best in this film. The appearance of David Suchet as Inspector Japp was a treat, although he doesn’t quite fill the bill with this Japp being quite a bit more grumpy and less trusting of Poirot than he’s been elsewhere portrayed and much more like the typical police detective. Amanda Pays made a brief appearance. The rest of the supporting cast was no help at all with Jonathan Cecil turning in a weak performance as Captain Hastings.

What ultimately saved the production was the story and the performance of Peter Ustinov as Poirot. And even then, the overall package is mediocre at best.

Rating: 3.25 out of 5.0

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Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Celia Woodstock Matter (EP0770)

John Lund
Johnny is sent out to investigate at the request of the older husband of an insured 28 year-old woman.

Original Air Date: January 12, 1954

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Sherlock Holmes: The Fabulous Celebrities (EP0769)

Holmes could be the next target of a serial killer who is killing off celebrities.

Original Air Date: January 17, 1949

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Television Series Review: Elementary

Sherlock Holmes living and working in modern day New York? That’s the premise of CBS’ new Drama, Elementary which stars Johnny Lee Miller as Holmes and Lucy Liu as Ms. Watson, a former surgeon.

Holmes gets out of drug rehab and Liu is assigned to be his companion during a six week recovery period. Holmes has a wealthy father who is footing the bill for the companion and allows him to live in New York City.

We learn that Holmes was a consulting detective in London and he plans to carry on with the job in New York City and Holmes is promptly allowed on the crime scene and the game is afoot.

Review:

The obvious comparison that will occur is between this program and the BBC’s Sherlock. However, I’d suggest the most apt comparison would to Dick Wolf’s LA Dragnet. LA Dragnet really had nothing to do with the original series and was really just another police procedural. It had  characters named Joe Friday and Frank Smith but really didn’t imagine, What if Joe Friday had grown in the 1960s rather than the 1930s. The use of Dragnet was thought to give the show an edge.

In the same way, Elementary  represents such a radical departure from the Holmes story that it’s really just another detective show trying to capitalize on the Holmes character. The program had more in common with Monk in the early Sharona days  than Holmes with a trained female medical professional helping a quirky fallen detective get back on his feet as a police consultant. The writers even left room for a tragedy involving a woman leading to Holmes’  downfall in London.

In Elementary, Holmes is the black sheep of a very wealthy family. Holmes is well-tattooed (which can make the whole master of disguise thing a challenge) and declares that he needs sex in order to think. Holmes is also prone to childish tantrums in this episode, crashing into a suspect’s car out of frustration.

The program is not without its strengths. Jonny Lee Miller delivers a solid performance. He’s not quite Jeremy Brett or Tony Shalhoub but his gestures and characterization are solid. Lucy Liu turns in a good performance as the complex Dr. Watson. The mystery and its solution are also pretty clever. The show’s big weakness may be that it’s really not Sherlock Holmes and Elementary would probably have a better chance of making if it didn’t include a character named Sherlock Holmes.

In terms of content that may concern parents, the pilot episode included some moderate sexual innuendo and a crime scene portrayal that was a little bloodier than what you’d typically see on Monk but not as extreme as has appeared on other crime shows.

The first episode of Elementary had solid ratings but its future remains uncertain.  The program is definitely more of a traditional detective show than another NCIS, but it remains an open question whether the show will survive by finding its voice and displaying the type of charm and style that’s required for long-term success.
Overall, I’ll rate the show 3.0 out of 5.0.

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Let George Do It: Surprise! Surprise! (EP0768)

Bob Bailley
A beautiful young woman is promised a wonderful surprise by an uncle with a wicked sense of humor. She asks George to accompany her. When she arrives, she finds her uncle is dying.

Original Air Date: February 4, 1952

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The Fat Man: A Window for Murder (EP0767)

J Scott Smart
When Brad dines with an old schoolmate, she witnesses a murder.

Original Air Date: October 3, 1947

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Frank Race: The Adventure of the Reckless Daughter (EP0766)

Tom Collins

Race needs to get an old friend to accept the job of Prime Minister in a war-torn country but his rebellious daughter threatens to plunge the country into a dictatorship.

Original Air Date: May 14, 1949

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Radio’s Most Essential People Countdown: #75-#71

Previous Posts: 76-8081-8586-9091-9596-100

75) Fanny Brice

Vaudevillian Fanny Brice was a talented comic singer, but her greatest contribution was the creation of Baby Snooks, a mischevious little girl who drove Daddy (played by Hanley Stanford) bananas with her comic antics and misbehavior with famous lines like, “Tell me a story, Daddy.” and constantly asking why.  The character began as an act on the Maxwell House Program in the late 1930s and in the 1940s, Snook would get her program. Radio was the perfect medium for Brice.  The act would simply not work on television as Brice played Snooks as about 7 and when she tried to adapt Snooks to television, she was 59 years old. However, in radio, everything was possible and Snooks is forever precociously young and hilarious and the work of Fanny Brice lives on.

Lionel Barrymore74) Lionel Barrymore

The legendary star of stage and screen starred in the 1940s Drama Mayor of the Town where he portrayed the real painful reality of war with uncommon humanity and then in the late 1940s and early 50s, he recreated his film role as Dr. Gillespie in MGM’s syndicated Dr. Kildare series. He also showcased his talents in numerous anthology shows. However, Barrymore’s position on this list is secured by being radio’s Ebenezer Scrooge. He was the definitive Ebenezer Scrooge, performing the role live all but two Christmases between 1934-53. Barrymore’s success as Scrooge made him a natural to play the villainous Old Man Potter in It’s a Wonderful Life. It’s a pity that’s movie role’s all most people know of his great body of work,.

73) Gene Atury

Hollywood’s quintessential singing cowboy had a rich career over radio. Autry’s Melody Ranch program ran for sixteen years. (1940-56). Autry’s success included not only him, but his horse Champion got his own radio and TV series. Autry was admired by many who wanted to emulate him, so Autry created the cowboy code, ten rules for patriotic and moral living. By doing this, Autry showed the type of class that made him one of America’s most beloved entertainers.

William Johnstone72) William Johnstone

William Johnstone is best known as the second voice of the shadow in 1938 and those four seasons is what he’s best known for. However, Johnstone’s performances go far beyond that. Johnstone was also a solid and indispensable character actor appearing regularly on a wide variety of programs from Cavalcade of America to Yours Truly Johnny Dollar. In 1950, he got his second starring role for CBS in The Line Up playing Lieutenant Ben Guthrie for 3 seasons.

71) Anne and Frank Hummert

Their work has many detractors among modern fans, particularly their detective shows, but what Anne and Frank Hummert lacked in quality, they made up with the quantity of their productions. The Hummerts produced a dizzying array of shows. Many were in the soap opera genre such as the long-running Ma Perkins program (1937-60), Just Plain Bill, and Amanda of Honeymoon Hill. However, they also were the force behind many mystery programs such as Mr. Keen Tracer of Lost Persons (1937-55), Mr. Charmelon, and Inspector Thorne, comedies such as Easy Aces, and even the iconic juvenile series Little Orphan Annie (1930-42). Anne Hummert had dozens of shows running concurrently, kept track of them, and outlined all plot twists on the daytime serials and directed her army of writers to make the changes. While it’s easy to make fun of the melodrama on some of the Hummerts’ soaps, it’s hard to dismiss their amazing success.

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50th Anniversary of the End of the Golden Age of Radio (EP0765s)

Mandel Kramer

On September 30th 1962, the golden age of radio came to an end with episodes of Yours Truly Johnny Dollar and Suspense.  In the “Tip-Off Matter,” an ex-con tells Johnny the location of his loot. In “Devilstone,” a rich young Irishman is having trouble renting a house that is rumored to be haunted.

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You Ought to be on DVD: Nero Wolfe

Previous: Vintage Detective Movie Serials, I Heard it on Radio

If one great fictional detective has been slighted in terms of DVD and Home video releases, it is Nero Wolfe. The fine A&E Television series is available on DVD, but everything else isn’t. The following are missing:

Two 1930s Movies
1959 TV Pilot with Kurt Kasner and William Shatner as Archie Goodwin
The 1979 TV movie with David Thayer
The 1981 TV Series with William Conrad

It has been a challenge to adapt Wolfe stories into popular visual media, so many of these efforts have not worked.

However, it won’t do to say that poor quality should keep these adaptations off of DVD. After all, some fans may be right when they think William Conrad’s Nero Wolfe is off-base. However, the rest of us should be able to decide the question for ourselves. Even Galactica 1980 has been given a DVD release.

Perhaps, the one film that looks dreadful based on clips and ratings is 1937’s League of Frightened Men with a miscast Lionel Stander as Archie Goodwin and an equally poorly cast Walter Connolly as Nero Wolfe. The movie is only rated a 5.0 on IMDB which is the same as Henry Silva’s unthrilling 1965 thriller The Return of Mr. Moto. (Which by the way did it make its way to DVD.)

Beyond this, those fans that have seen 1936’s Meet Nero Wolfe (6.7), Thayer’s Nero Wolfe TV Movie based on The League of Frightened Men (7.0) and Conrad’s Nero Wolfe Series (7.3) have enjoyed them. And no doubt, a wider audience would enjoy them as well. They may not all perfectly match the tone of the books but even the A&E series doesn’t do that.

Another great opportunity would be to put the foreign Nero Wolfe programs on Region 1 DVD. Nero Wolfe movies have been made in Russian, Italian, and Germany. My particular interest would be in the 1960s Italian Series. A few clips have shown up on Youtube and the show looks very well done in classic black and white. Personally, I’d love to watch these films with subtitles to enjoy the cadence of the original actors while still knowing what’s going on. The best of that particular series is that of the ten stories they did, eight were not done by A&E, so it would make interesting viewing as would all of the unreleased Nero Wolfe material included the Kasner-Shatner pilot which hasn’t been seen in more than fifty years.

There’s a lot of Nero Wolfe that should be released and it’s about time for Hollywood to get started.

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Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Fairway Matter (EP0765)

John Lund

Johnny tries to assign responsibility in the case of bomb that blew up on an airplane, killing more than 13 people.

Original Air Date: January 5, 1954

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Sherlock Holmes: The Knife Of Vengence (EP0764)

A man selling a knife sharpening service is murdering his customers.

Original Air Date: January 10, 1949

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Let George Do It: The Common Denominator (EP0763)

Bob Bailley

A woman is getting premonitions prior to murders being committed and George is hired to find out what the reason is.

Original Air Date: January 28, 1952

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The Fat Man: The Crooked Horse (EP0762)

J Scott Smart

A woman hears a murder and comes to Brad for help when the room appears like it hasn’t been occupied.

Original Air Date: September 9, 1946

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