Tag: Old Time Radio

EP0862: A Life in Your Hands: Truck Engine Murder

Carlton Kadell

A ruthless construction company owner is found dead and Jonathan Kegg acts as amicus curiae before the coroner’s jury.

Original Air Date: July 17, 1952

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EP0861: Frank Race: The Adventure of the Fairway Beauty

Paul Dubov

While golfing, Race and Donovan meet two beautiful women and stumble into a murder.

Original Air Date: September 17, 1949

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Radio’s Most Essential People Countdown:#20 and #19

Previous Posts: 22-21, 24-23, 26-25, 28-27, 30-29, 33-31, 36-34, 39-37, 42-40, 45-43, 48-46, 51-49, 54-52, 57-55, 60-58, 65-61, 70-66,  71-75, 76-80, 81-85, 86-90, 91-95, 96-100

20) Lum ‘n Abner

Lum n Abner“And now let’s see what’s going on down in Pine Ridge.” With these words, millions of Americans were taken on a journey to the land of Pine Ridge and two leading storekeepers named Lum ‘n Abner who couldn’t quite keep to minding the store, starting gold mines, and even building a rocket ship to the moon.

Lum ‘n Abner were really two genuine Arkansas Boys named Chester Lauck and Norris Goff. So actually were most of the rest of the town’s regular citizens including Caleb Weehunt, Milton “Grandpappy” Spears, and Squire “M.K.” Skimp. This guaranteed that the show’s core cast would be together as long as Lauck and Goff both wanted to do the show.  There were some guest actors infrequently.  Perhaps the greatest recurring voice role was played by Clarence Hartzell who played Benjamin Withers from 1946-49.

Lum ‘n Abner came to radio in 1931.  In planning their audition, Lauck and Goff planned to do  a black face act but ditched it for country storekeepers based on characters they knew back home in Arkansas.  Lum ‘n Abner became a huge hit nationally. The show, at its peak, was fifteen minutes long and aired between 3-5 times a week with a variety of sponsors and networks. They told serialized adventures including starting a mining company and a matrimonial bureau, or a counterfeiter operating out of the Jot ’em Down Store.  The stories thrived on comic misunderstanding by Abner of everyday sayings and wordplay that rivaled Abbott and Costello. But Lum ‘n Abner thrived on genuine loyalty, sentiment, and patriotism.

The show was a sensation. The unincorporated area of Waters, Arkansas was renamed to Pine Ridge in honor of the show. It’s Christmas episode became such an American tradition that when the show was on hiatus to make the first of their seven movies, they returned to the air for one night just to do that special. They made history in July of 1938 when they returned to the air again in the middle of a Summer break. With Lauck in England and Goff in the United States, they did the first ever transatlantic simulcast with Lum and Abner doing a live show from thousands of miles apart.

When the War came, few programs did more to spur the national war effort than Lum and Abner who communicated government needs and messages with characteristic good humor. War also came to the town of Pine Ridge. In one poignant episode, Lum had decided to get together a drive to send birthday cards to all the local soldiers. He called the home of one soldier’s family to ask and there was a stunned silence.  Lum reported solemnly, “Robert Blevins won’t have any more birthdays,” and then rallied listeners to buy war bonds.

The two kept going strong until 1948 when CBS gave them a half hour weekly program to create an unbeatable night with Lum ‘n Abner in the same line up as Jack Benny and Amos ‘n Andy. The new show offered opportunities for characters that had only been talked about to be heard. However, the show’s producer slowly began to jettison what made Lum ‘n Abner legendary. The humor quickly lost its charm, heart, and rural roots. Soon, the additional characters Lauck and Goff had created were jettisoned and replaced by people playing themselves such as Zasu Pitts, Andy Devine, and Opie Cates. They were cancelled after two season.

Lauck and Goff would make another couple tries at radio. They recorded a pilot for an hour long country music DJ show in the early 50s and later they’d revive their serials as syndicated shows in the mid-50s, but radio was moving on but so did they. However Lum ‘n Abner remain one of the few old radio shows in constant replays in Chicago and Mena. And there’s still annual Lum ‘n Abner festival in their honor as well as a museum at the site of the old Jot ’em Down Store.

19) Lurene Tuttle

Lurene Tuttle
Lurene Tuttle was best known for playing Sam Spade’s brilliantly clueless  secretary Effie.  She played with both Spades (Howard Duff and Steven Dunne). Her radio acting career began in the 1930s and lasted into the 1960s with her appearances on the Salvation Army’s Heartbeat Theater.  She returned in the late 1970s to appear on The Sears Radio Theater. Tuttle’s ability to play characters ranging from the serious to the silly and the sublime and at all ages made her an invaluable commodity.  This illustrated by her radiography. In one example Radio Gold Index, she appeared in her regular role on Sam Spade in addition to making guest spots in a romantic story on Hallmark Playhouse, an appearance on Red Skelton’s comedy show, and then an appearance on Mutual’s suspenseful Let George Do It. 

Tuttle’s radio work did not go unnoticed. In 1960, she was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her radio work.

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EP0860: The Line Up: The Candy-Store Murder

William Johnstone
Guthrie and Grebb try to cut through conflicting identifications to find out who committed a robbery/murder.

Original Air Date: November 16, 1950

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EP0859: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Temperamental Tote Board Matter

John Lund

Johnny invesitgates the case of an insured found dead holding a winning race track for a long shot.

Original Air Date: June 1, 1954

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EP0858: Sherlock Holmes: The Adventure of the Three Garridebs

A man left a will leaving his fortune to men who share his unusual last name of Garrideb.

Original Air Date: May 9, 1949

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EP0857: Let George Do It: Seed of Destruction

Bob Bailey
George investigates the case of a man whose been missing for three weeks.

Original Air Date: August 18, 1952

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EP0856: A Life in Your Hands: Gangster Murdered

Carlton Kadell

Jonathan Kegg tries to take a vacation on a quiet Caribbean Island, but finds himself serving as amicus curiae in the case of the murder of a notorious gangster.

Original Air Date: July 10, 1952

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EP0855: Frank Race: The Adventure of the Six Week Cure

Paul Dubov

Frank Race is in Nevada where divorcees are waiting for their divorces to come through including an old friend. When one is murdered, Race investigates.

Original Air Date: September 10, 1949

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EP0854s: Murder Clinic: The Holloway Flat Tragedy

Alfred Shirley
Max Carrados doesn’t buy an obvious explanation that a man was murdered by the boyfriend of his lover.

Original Air Date: August 18, 1942

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Radio’s Most Essential People Countdown: #22-#21

Previous Posts: 24-23, 26-25, 28-27, 30-29, 33-31, 36-34, 39-37, 42-40, 45-43, 48-46, 51-49, 54-52, 57-55, 60-58, 65-61, 70-66,  71-75, 76-80, 81-85, 86-90, 91-95, 96-100

22) Fred Allen

Fred AllenFred Allen was one of radio’s most remembered and most beloved satirists, and most successful personalities. Beginning in 1929, Allen embarked on a 20 year career in radio beginning with the Little Show and proceeding through a wide variety of sponsors from Hellman’s Mayonaise to Texaco Fire Chief Gasoline. Allen famously “feuded” with fellow-comedian Jack Benny for years creating some of radio’s most memorable comedy moments. Allen also original Allen’s Alley which had a small town of hilarious characters offer their witty comments on the news of the day with the most famous citizen being Alan Reed’s Falstaff Openshaw. Allen often ran into difficulty with network censors over the issues that would seem trivial today. In one instance, censors objected to his wife Portland Hoffa saying she’d wasted a day at the rodeo for fear of offending rodeo fans. Thankfully for everyone, Allen was talented enough to work around the network’s pettiness and most Americans had a far better sense of humor than the networks as evidence by Allen’s long-term radio success.

21) Mel Blanc

Mel BlancMel Blanc is perhaps the greatest voice in Warner Brother’s golden age of animation but he was just as vital to comedy on radio. He’s radio credit list reads like a Who’s Who of radio comedy with him appearing of the programs of such stars as Abbott and Costello, Jack Benny, Burns and Allen, Danny Kaye, the Great Gildersleeve, and Bob Hope. He also had a show of his own from 1946-47. He had many notable characters including the “Happy Postman” for many years on the Burns and Allen show. Of course, his cartoon work came into play. During one episode of Abbott and Costello, Bugs Bunny actually appeared in the day’s story. And for the Armed Forces Radio Services programs such as GI Journal, Blanc took the stuttering of his Porky Pig characted and amped it up to create the create the character of Private Sad Sack. For both civilian and military audiences, Blanc provided unforgetable characterization and great comic timing that has made him an indispensable part of radio’s golden age.

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EP0854: The Line Up: The Supermarket Murders

William Johnstone
Guthrie and Groebs try to catch a gang that’s been holding up local all-night stores and gas stations. The chase intensifies when they commit a murder.

Original Air Date: September 23, 1950

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EP0853: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Punctilious Firebug Matter

John LundJohnny is dispatched to look into a series of arsons and suspicion begins to fall on head of the local insurance company office.

Original Air Date: May 25, 1954

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EP0852: Sherlock Holmes: The Adventure of the Blood-Soaked Wagon

Holmes and Watson pursue a murderer who has made off with a fortune in invalid currency.

Original Air Date: May 2, 1949

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EP0851: Let George Do It: The Mystic

Bob Bailey

George is hired to expose a mystic “advising an elderly woman” as a fraud, but this isn’t any ordinary phony.

Original Air Date: June 16, 1952

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