Saturday, December 21, 2024

1955-03-29 Give Me Liberty

This is the second performance of a highly regarded script about a man who escapes incarceration but cannot find a way to shed his handcuffs. This Herb Meadow script was originally broadcast on 1948-10-21. It stars Tony Barrett.

The man steals $250,000 and is sentenced to prison. He never reveals where he hid the money, and counts the days to his release when he can retrieve it. While being transferred by train, he escapes when there is an accident. He swaps his identification papers with a person killed in the tragedy, and then heads toward the location where he hid the money. But those handcuffs keep getting in the way!

Details about the original performance with William Powell, and background about the author Herb Meadow can be found at

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP550329

THE CAST

Tony Barrett (Earl French), Michael Ann Barrett (The Girl), Lou Merrill (Detective on train / Police Chief), Helen Kleeb (Train passenger / Woman with dog), Richard Beals (Boy), Jack Carol (Conductor / Search party / Trooper), Larry Thor (Narrator)

NOTE: Keith Scott notes that in the end credits that Larry Thor mistakenly pronounces the surname of Herb Meadow as “Meadows.” It is also typed in the script as “Meadows.”

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Friday, December 20, 2024

1955-03-22 The Cellar

This episode has circulated among classic radio enthusiasts for decades as a poor aircheck recording from an Armed Forces Radio station, likely in Asia. The recording had significant background noise and station drift and made it difficult to understand. Its poor sound likely contributed to the idea that the episode was a lesser Suspense entry.

This new copy is an excellent sounding recording from an Armed Forces Radio Service transcription (AFRS#525) and can finally be enjoyed and appreciated. The disc was part of a purchase made by a group of collectors in 2023. No network recording is known to have survived.

The storyline opening is somewhat similar to Back for Christmas and the upcoming Variations on a Theme about an unhappy husband murdering or planning to murder his annoying wife, then burying the body in the cellar of their home. Each of those episodes are different in the way they proceed from their starting premise.

Much of the dialogue is tongue-in-cheek, making the gruesome subject somewhat lighter than it would actually be. One of the funnier lines is that the killer husband, Oscar, has an exchange with the woman he is now free to run away with, Aggie. At about 15:30 she says “Imagine me going with a married man and a murderer. You are going to marry me, aren’t you, Oscar?” He says “Marry you? What a question! I got me morals, same as the next bloke. Of course I’m going to marry you!”

Radio researcher, enthusiast, and modern day performer Patte Rosebank notes that Antony Ellis based this story on a real incident in England around the turn of the Twentieth Century. Ellis was born and raised in Britain and would have been familiar with the case because it remained in conversation and media decades after it happened. Patte notes:

[This episode] deals with a notorious murder, but with the names and enough details changed to avoid a lawsuit from the people connected with the actual event.

To me, The Cellar was obviously inspired by the real-life story of Dr. Crippen, who murdered and dismembered his wife, and fled across the Atlantic Ocean to Canada with his mistress.

The wife’s torso was found buried in the basement, and her other body parts were never found. As the ship arrived in Canada, it was met by authorities, and Crippen and his mistress (disguised as a boy) became the first fugitives to be captured with the aid of telegraphy.

Crippen was executed in 1910, and some listeners in 1955 would still know of the case, which is still notorious, even today. And the forensic evidence used to convict him is quite suspect.

The Suspense episode changed the characters' names, the murderer's nationality (Crippen was an American, living in England), and the ship's destination. It also added the meddling mother-in-law.

The Crippen case was still a touchy subject in 1955, not least because Crippen's mistress had been acquitted of being an accessory, and was still alive.

In 1961, there was a musical in England, called Belle -- or The Ballad of Dr. Crippen. It was a flop, because Crippen's real-life mistress was still alive, and was outraged that her life was being exploited in such a coarse and disrespectful manner. She was interviewed about it by the media, and the public was outraged that this poor old lady (who'd been acquitted, after all) was being so shamefully treated. The musical was doomed. A cast recording exists, and it's quite good. It starred Rose Hill, who would later become best known for playing the bedridden mother-in-law of René, on Allo, Allo!

Wikipedia has a summary of the Crippen case, and also details the numerous treatments of the story in print, on stage, radio, and screen. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawley_Harvey_Crippen There is speculation that the details of the actual case are not as originally believed at the time. Modern day forensics bring some of the original findings into doubt.

Classic radio enthusiast John Barker notes that the story is not what it seemed to be [note how the story turns at about 21:00]:

Everything that happens up until the last minute of the show is a fantasy of the husband's, in which he murders his wife, gets away with it, and runs off with a docile and lovely young woman to spend the rest of his life with. At the very end it's revealed that everything we'd been listening to was in his imagination...there is no lovely young girl waiting for him, and the shrew who he had to contend with (in his fantasy) is his late wife's suspicious mother. At the end of the episode we hear him about to go through with the murder for real, and it's implied that he's really going to do it this time, but that he's also going to get caught (he says in his narration that he doesn't care if he hangs for it). I found it to be a mildly amusing episode, but it does suffer in comparison to Back for Christmas, which it definitely evokes.

An upcoming Suspense episode, Variations on a Theme with Parley Baer, is a wonderfully entertaining story despite the premise of the planned murder of a spouse. Any further details would only spoil the ending.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP550322

THE CAST

Eric Snowdon (Oscar), Jeanette Nolan (Millie), John Dehner (Mr. Gormley), Betty Harford (Aggie), Paula Winslowe (Mrs. Quil), Ramsay Hill (Mr. Forepaugh), Larry Thor (Narrator)

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Thursday, December 19, 2024

1955-03-15 The Game

This Antony Ellis script was first used on Escape on 1953-08-30, and is the kind of disturbing story that a sustaining series could present, but a sponsored series might not. Advertisers, like Auto-Lite, might have rejected it for its topic and intensity.

The production is not a typical fast-moving Suspense drama, but is more like a pot on a stove set for a slow boil. It is nerve-rattling to hear two teenagers drinking (underage) together, with much seemingly mindless chatter, that somehow evolves into a decision to play “Russian roulette.” The story is well-done with dialogue between Sam Edwards and Gil Stratton, Jr. alone, supplemented by calm matter-of-fact narration by John Dehner that makes it even more worrisome.

Edwards and Dehner were in these same roles in the Escape production. Eddie Firestone had Stratton’s role. The Escape production is mentioned here because it was a missing episode early in the classic radio hobby and only a low quality home wire recording became available. This Suspense recording is in excellent sound.

“Russian roulette” has some history in literature of the Nineteeth Century. It came to popular literary attention in a Collier’s short story with that very name, the first time it was used, and published in January 1937. The work by Georges Surdez about bored French Foreign Legion soldiers looking to demonstrate their mettle put the phrase into conversation. It survives in the language while the short story that created it is mostly forgotten.

The surviving recording is a network broadcast. An Armed Forces Radio Service recording is known to exist, but it is not available at this time. It is AFRS#524.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP550315

THE CAST

Sam Edwards (Red), Gil Stratton, Jr. (Pin), John Dehner (Narrator), Larry Thor (Suspense Narrator)

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Wednesday, December 18, 2024

1955-03-08 Nobody Ever Quits

This episode of the series has importance far beyond its story elements. A man who leaves the mob and moves to a remote place to start a new life for him and his family. Mob ties are hard to break, hence the title, and he is in great danger for his past associations.

Some Suspense observers claim that a later repeat broadcast of the script under the title Night on Red Mountain was the inspiration for the 1997 graphic novel by John Wagner, A History of Violence. The novel was also made into a 2005 film produced by David Cronenberg. The basic storyline of the radio drama might have been a springboard for a much more complicated story and movie. Whether or not Wagner was inspired by this script cannot be verified at this time. The plot of someone running away from a previous life to start a new one but is haunted by the prior life is not new.

That’s not what makes this script special, and an important part of Suspense history, however. This episode represents the return of William N. Robson to Suspense as a scriptwriter.

In 1952, Robson was exiled by the CBS Blacklist. It turns out that this story is not really about gangsters. It’s an allegory about his forced separation from CBS and his efforts to return to the network. There was one CBS executive who stood in his way for no apparent reason. The background details of the situation are fascinating and are a window into the Blacklist period and CBS management. A key to understanding the times and Robson’s plight is a letter he wrote to newscaster Edward R. Murrow asking for his help. That letter is in Murrow’s papers at Holyoke College. It is analyzed at a separate web page noted in the below commentary. Be sure to visit that page.

To get the most out of the recording, listen to the broadcast first. Then read about the backstory to catch some of the allegorical story events. Listen a second time to hear how it all fits together.

There are two recordings, a network recording and an Armed Forces Radio Services (AFRS#523). Both recordings are very good, but the network recording is preferred for its richer sound.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP550308

THE CAST

Tom McKee (Walt Parsons, aka Joey Parino), Peter Leeds (Bat), Joyce McCluskey (Sally Parsons), Jack Kruschen (Big Pete Parelli), Larry Thor (Sergeant Dewey / Narrator), Victor Rodman (Dad), Irene Barton (Las Vegas Operator), Jan Marlowe (Operator #2), Bill Anders (Radio Announcer)

* * *

Nobody Ever Quits and the Plight of William N. Robson

Bill Robson was at the beginnings of entertainment radio in the 1930s, and was immersed in the development and use of the techniques and technologies of the time. He was a successful writer, director, and producer for many different kinds of series. One of his notable achievements was the WW2 series Man Behind the Gun which gave a start to many radio careers and was recognized with a Peabody Award. The series supported causes of freedom with heroic stories from the European and Pacific fronts and was an important effort to sustain confidence in the war effort.

He enjoyed scriptwriting even though his directing and producing skills were in demand. His problems at CBS began with the 1950 publication of Red Channels: The Report of Communist Influence in Radio and Television by a newsletter titled Counterattack. Along with many entertainment and broadcast personalities, he was listed as having potential Communist leanings and activities.

He was confused by his inclusion in the book since he had a strong broadcast record of patriotic programming, that included Man Behind the Gun and also the light spy drama Man Called X and many other shows. Nonetheless, networks and advertisers were rattled by Red Channels and there was pressure to hire talent that was not listed and therefore assumed to not have any issues that would cause brands to be harmed in the minds of consumers. Auto-Lite was one of those worried advertisers. Robson’s career at CBS was suddenly in jeopardy.

A single CBS executive, Daniel O’Shea, and his staff, was responsible for enforcement of internal rules that ensured the loyalty of its talent. He was an entertainment lawyer, and joined CBS in late 1950 from RKO Pictures. He joined to become involved in television projects, but somehow his assignment shifted. He ended up being the executive who enforced loyalty agreements that determined which performers were permissible to hire. (O’Shea earned the cynical moniker “vice president of treason” among some of the CBS staff).

His office would get calls from producers and directors about casting, and they would do some light investigating and return with answers of “cleared” and “not cleared,” without any explanation. O’Shea seemed to take particular pleasure in the exclusion of Robson from CBS. It may have started as a simple personality clash that somehow ballooned into shunning. O’Shea was known for his belief that talent was mostly undifferentiated and easily replaceable, especially for radio. One Blacklisted talent could be replaced by an acceptable one, and no one would know the difference. O’Shea’s actions (really his inactions) became a nightmare for Robson.

Things seemed to be okay at the beginning. Small changes would allow Robson’s scripts to be used. His 1951 Suspense scripts were credited with pseudonyms. The names “William Norman” and “Christopher Anthony” were used to avoid complaints by the Auto-Lite advertising staffers. That wasn't good enough, in the end. He did not work for CBS for about four years. He did find other work, but it was not the work he wanted or the projects he desired.

It was a sad situation. It was especially insulting when one of his lesser known efforts, Operation: Underground, was suddenly cancelled. It told stories of freedom-seeking individuals in post-war Europe as they sought to thwart the efforts of Communists and totalitarian leaders. It was a patriotic effort for which Robson was especially proud. Virtually no recordings have survived beyond its audition recording, though the scripts have. It is one of classic radio’s missing series. The series was replaced, in a rush, by Gunsmoke. The adult western took over that timeslot, and developed into one of radio’s finest adult dramas of any genre. Operation: Underground was quickly forgotten.

The research behind Red Channels was sloppy. It was packed with good information, false information, out of context information, and there was no way of discerning what was reliable. It created more confusion than it did illumination. Because it was printed, the document conveyed an authority that it did not consistently have.

Its many mistakes and misinterpretations haunted performers and writers. Some were able to rise above the disruptions and financial losses of their careers. Others were not. Somehow, Robson was identified as Communist-leaning because of some official government activities of his father, a Pittsburgh official with the same name that were decades earlier. Robson also supported relief efforts events targeted to assist impoverished or threatened Russian citizens caught in the backlash of the war and Stalin’s oppression. That was the same Russia that fought Hitler’s Germany alongside the US, Britain, and other countries.

Because Red Channels had such an effect, and its sloppy research became more and more apparent, groups of entertainment and high-profile persons created mechanisms to “clear” themselves after conducting some basic independent investigations. Some of Hollywood’s union leaders were involved in the clearance process in support of their members but also as a show of their own patriotism. If slighted performers testified to their political activities and added context to them that Red Channels missed, they would be reinstated in some manner. It was a very complex time with many subtleties to the situation. Some of the listed persons sued, and it took years before any resolution in their favor occurred. Eventually, some of the supporters of Red Channels became disgraced, themselves, a decade too late for those whose careers were ruined by the haphazard reliability of its pages.

It’s a fascinating time in broadcast history that cannot be summarized here. Robson got caught up in the cross-currents, was cooperative, and was cleared by the industry’s reputable mechanisms. That is, except in the mind of CBS executive Daniel O’Shea. No reasons were ever offered.

CBS’ Blacklist was special, and was so prominent that other networks took a “free ride” on it. They did not have to spend serious money or time to have their own screening process, but used CBS decisions on a passive basis. If a performer or writer could show that they recently worked for CBS, they could find work on the other networks. It slowly started to crumble, as other networks became comfortable using CBS blacklisted talent where O’Shea seemed obsessed with it. The tide turned against CBS’ activities by its own news reporting when Ed Murrow’s reporting about the Army-McCarthy hearings took over the news cycle and turned the tide of the public, and internally. Once that happened, the internal tide turned against O’Shea. There became a general dissatisfaction and realization of the fruitlessness of the Blacklist efforts. (As an example, Howard Duff got caught up in Red Channels undertow, losing his role as Sam Spade, for example. By 1957, Duff and his wife Ida Lupino had a big contract with CBS for their TV comedy series Mr. Adams and Eve because of their broad popularity. It was like the Blacklist never happened).

O'Shea was eventually fired because CBS had enough of the process and of him. Changing circumstances and sentiments made it irrelevant and his departure was explained with the common “decided to pursue other opportunities” explanation. He returned to RKO). CBS tired of it all, and pushed him aside. O'Shea went back to the movie business, heading RKO. Some executives always seem to land on their feet in top paying jobs, no matter what damage they cause to others or their organizations. He seems to have been one of them. It is rarely mentioned that it was Murrow and CBS leader William Paley who helped create the loyalty process, but it is clear that they were the ones who stopped it, too.

In 1953, Robson had enough. He was frustrated with his efforts with O’Shea and his staff and sent a letter to Murrow that outlined the situation. He listed everything he was asked to do and their outcomes. Yet no decisions were made and no explanations were ever received. That letter is one of the most interesting reports of what the CBS Radio Blacklist was like. The reason he wrote to Murrow was because of his organizational position at CBS News as well as his larger presence in the network. They had an acquaintanceship and friendship that dated back to the earlier days at the network, and especially for Man Behind the Gun. The fascinating letter is in the Murrow archives at Holyoke College. Its text and context is available at https://sites.google.com/view/robsonmurrow/home It is worth reading after listening to the program.

It is not known how Murrow responded to Robson, but it was likely by phone and not letter. He probably told him there was nothing he could do at that time, but that things were slowly changing, and to stay in touch.

The CBS Blacklist eventually began to crumble, and it took a while for it to end. O'Shea finally left in mid-1955, but Robson was allowed to submit a Suspense script, Nobody Ever Quits, properly attributed to him, and produced under Antony Ellis. The fact that it was produced was a sign that O’Shea no longer mattered. He was still a CBS employee when the Robson script was broadcast. The title became more of a testament to Robson’s resolve to return to the network and the career he loved.

In the end, the extent of Communist activities within the entertainment and broadcast industries would not be understood until the glasnost of Mikhail Gorbachev’s leadership of the Soviet Union and the release of the VENONA papers in 1995 by US National Security Agency. Those documents of intercepted Soviet communications with US government employees and journalists shed new light on Cold War espionage and other activities. The documents are available online. There was truth to the concerns about Communist infiltration, and the VENONA papers document many of them, only years later. There were also paranoiac untruths that led to many broken lives and careers, and the delayed exoneration only made that more tragic. When people are in the real-time swirl of information and misinformation, they have to find ways to navigate through them, and often make mistakes based on what they believed to be true at the time, doing things they would not otherwise do. It is now decades later, almost 75 years, and there is still much to be understood. There are so many new resources about the period today than there were even a few years ago.

In October 1956, Robson became the producer of Suspense and presided over some of the series’ most interesting broadcasts. While other radio dramas were being cancelled from season to season, Suspense and Robson survived. When President Kennedy appointed Edward R. Murrow as Director of the US Information Agency, he recommended that Robson be hired by Voice of America. He became chief documentary writer, producer and director, and remained there until the end of his career. His projects won four more Peabody Awards.

Deciphering Nobody Ever Quits (and the subsequent broadcasts of Night on Red Mountain)

Finally, a Robson script is back on Suspense. It was regarded highly enough to be used on the series three more times. Those broadcasts had a different name, Night on Red Mountain, itself a subtle reference to the “Red Scare.” The 1957 and 1959 broadcasts starred Richard Crenna under Robson's personal direction. It was produced again under New York’s Paul Roberts in 1960 with Mandel Kramer and Lawson Zerbe. It's not known how many people inside CBS, the press, or the listening audience, picked up on the “biographical” aspects of the script, but it was obviously considered a good story and worth repeating on that basis alone.

Robson’s letter to Murrow helps in the deciphering of the script’s situations and dialogue. Listed below are a few aspects of the story that put the script and Robson’s Blacklist experiences in perspective. There are likely more that can be found with additional listening scrutiny, but there are also some inside-references that we may never know that Robson included for his own satisfaction.

  • Unusually cold weather in the California mountains with a looming intense snow storm

    • The Blacklist had a chilling effect on the natural give-and-take of talent, casting, direction, and production. It interrupted careers and daily life. Even without cold weather or snow, traversing mountains and mountain roads can be dangerous. Harsh weather can turn regular activities into dangerous ones.

  • You sure you were never back east?”

    • This is a likely reference to the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc and its activities to spread Communism to the West. Because Robson was mainly on the west coast at this time, this is likely a dual reference to CBS’ New York headquarters.

  • I don't want to be owing anybody anything... particularly rats”

    • This was uttered by the gangster who finds the lead character (Walt, formerly ‘Pete’ in his prior life) and is out to blackmail him because of his criminal past. “The rats” is likely reference to those who testified before the various government committees and hearings. Many entertainers felt too many of their peers cooperated with hearings and there should have been a greater stand for free speech. Others fought to clear themselves so they could keep working.

  • Won't be much more business in this storm”

    • The storm prevents customers from using the main character’s gas station. This also refers to the professional isolation of the Blacklist, which had cut incomes and had other financial costs to Robson and others who suffered the same plight.

  • They ask an awful lot of questions” and “That man had me scared, they way he asked questions”

    • The various loyalty investigations became aggressive and intrusive. There were Blacklisted persons who were in the Communist Party for more innocent reasons and later dropped it. Others were more deeply involved. In terms of Suspense, this may be a reference to Silvia Richards (who testified) and Robert Richards (who refused) and were divorced in 1944. Silvia had concerns about future child support from Robert’s earnings and her own writing career if she did not testify. Therefore, she cooperated. She ended up leaving her writing career behind, anyway.

  • I'm not a squealer” and “I just want to be left alone”

    • The general sentiment of those who found themselves on the Blacklist and were harassed as a result of it was that they meant no harm by it, and were essentially apolitical. Many were and got caught in the undertow.

  • Being trapped on the mountain by the weather, and the only pass down to the town is blocked

    • This is fairly straightforward. Robson can't get back to the career he worked so hard to achieve and excel. No matter how hard he tried, despite Robson’s independent clearance by key Blacklist players, he was still being blocked by CBS VP Daniel O’Shea, and perhaps others, without logical explanation.

  • Various missed phone connections and communications interruptions in the storm

    • Unable to resume his normal life, Robson was cut off from business relationships because of “the storm” of Blacklisting.

  • Gangsters who were hunting down Walt drive off the road and down a cliff to their death because of carelessness; the danger is over

    • This Could refer to “McCarthyism” falling under its own weight, with Murrow’s help. It could also refer to the tide turning against Blacklist practices inside CBS.

    • Driving off the cliff likely refers to O’Shea, though he was finishing out his CBS employment at the time. Even though O’Shea was still there, it seems safe and free to work again once more.

  • The title’s multiple meanings: “Nobody Ever Quits” is a crime family phrase; once you join, you can’t get out

    • 1) Relentless suspicions and inquiries no matter what the facts may be, similar to mobsters making sure that someone may never escape their influence without penalty.

    • 2) Exoneration cannot stop the negative effects of the Blacklist; allegations are remembered much more than exonerations were.

    • 3) Robson kept pressing on to re-gain his desired career, he had no desire to quit.

  • Title change to Night on Red Mountain in subsequent performances

    • 1) “Night” is the darkness of being trapped by Red Channels

    • 2) “Red” is obvious reference to Red Channels and Communism

    • 3) Possible reference to “making a mountain out of a molehill”; blacklist pain and agony yielded no positive results, diverted attention from real problems and solutions

    • 4) Robson changed the title when he produced the episode himself in 1957 and 1958 because it may have been too obvious a reference in the first broadcast under a different producer; he was treading carefully in 1955 since he just returned

    • 5) Snow on 66 uses “Red Mountain” as a location in its story. Another Robson script, 1962’s Date Night, has a lead role of a teenager’s father that is likely a caricature of Senator Joe McCarthy. The father’s mind, aided by alcohol, concocts all kinds of conspiracy and danger scenarios when his daughter is out for a date. It is likely a reference to McCarthy’s own alcoholism as his efforts fell apart.

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Monday, December 2, 2024

1955-03-01 The Screaming Woman

Thirteen-year-old Sherry Jackson stars in the second broadcast of this Ray Bradbury story. The script was originally presented in 1948 and the story was adapted for the series by Silvia Richards.

A murderous husband disposes of his wife’s body prematurely. A young neighborhood girl hears her screams under ground at a nearby dumping ground. No one else seems to hear her. She is dismissed and told it’s just her imagination. She persists to search for the woman to save her. Her simple investigation works… but now she’s in danger, herself.

Jackson was a very busy actor but might be best known among nostalgia fans for her role in the first season of Star Trek where she played an android named “Andrea” in the notable episode What Are Little Girls Made Of? Her very long career began in childhood, and she was especially known for her role as the older daughter in the Danny Thomas TV series, Make Room for Daddy. The are many more details about her life and career at her Wikipedia page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherry_Jackson

The original broadcast of 1948-11-25 starred twelve-year-old Margaret O’Brien. Details about the broadcast can be found at these resources:

The program was pre-recorded on Friday, February 25, 1955. Rehearsals began at Noon, and final recording was done from 4:30pm to 5:00pm. Final music, announcing, and narration were recorded on Tuesday, March 1, 1955 starting at 3:15pm and concluded in time for the 5:00pm PST broadcast.

Two recordings of this episode have survived, and both are in excellent sound. The network recording is the slightly better of the two. The Armed Forces Radio Service recording (AFRS#522) is new to circulation and there is some slight sibilance in the recording (also known as “essing”).

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3

https://archive.org/details/TSP550301

THE CAST

Sherry Jackson (Margaret Leary), Paula Winslowe (Mama), John Dehner (Dad), Richard Beals (Dippy Smith), Howard McNear (Kelly), Joe Cranston (Police Officer), Herb Butterfield (Charles Nesbitt), Eve McVeagh (Anna Kelly / Helen Nesbitt the screaming woman), Larry Thor (Narrator)

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Sunday, December 1, 2024

1955-02-22 Waiting

This production of an Antony Ellis stars three of 1950s radio’s best actresses: Vivi Janiss, Helen Kleeb, and Charlotte Lawrence. Fans of the Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar serials know their voices quite well from their frequent appearances there, as well as Gunsmoke.

A man, Norman Landon, is awaiting execution and perhaps a call from the governor to save him from his punishment. Three women are alone, waiting, for that word, or for the execution to be made. As a listener, we are a fly on the wall, as we listen to his wife, Aline (Charlotte Lawrence), her mother, Mrs. Martinson (Helen Kleeb) and his sister, Harriet (Vivi Janiss), review what led everyone to this situation. The emotional discussion between them reveals many aspects of their relationships to him and each other.

Norman was an adulterer, and he was convicted of killing his girlfriend. There were reports that someone was seen leaving that scene, and that person may have been the real murderer. They are hoping that the governor stops the execution, but they learn that Norman confesses to the crime (this is the cliffhanger before the mid-show break). Is he lying? There is still the sighting by a witness who saw a woman running from the apartment where the crime occurred.

If there is a problem with the story, it is with the production as it can be confusing who is actually speaking between Aline and Harriet. An occasional mention of the name would be helpful. (The Hummert soaps and evening shows did this to the point of being comical and stilted; that much is not needed here).

With the purpose of understanding what happens because of that issue, this is a spoiler alert:

Aline is the one who killed the girlfriend. Norman had great guilt about his adultery, and knows his wife did it. His decision to confess and plead guilty to the murder was out of deep remorse and to spare his wife of the penalty of what she did. Aline’s mother knew that she did it all along, and didn't want to talk about it to protect her daughter’s life. From a structural standpoint, the role of the sister, other than to share in the looming tragedy, is to have effective dialogue that brings important details out in the storyline.

The bottom line: the story is full of lies. There a many: Norman’s once secret affair, Aline’s cover-up of her heinous act, Norman’s false confession, the mother’s refusal to say what she believed happened, and likely more.

It’s a good script, with good dialogue, and just needs small changes to be sure we don’t miss out on who is speaking and how they fit. Perhaps the spoiler can help increase the listening fulfillment of this very sad story.

Researcher and international voice actor Keith Scott notes that this was the first Suspense program recorded on 15-inch reel of Ampex recording tape for its archival copy rather than a set of transcription discs. From this point on, the entire production used recording tape. Most of the shows were still broadcast live, however. When William N. Robson took over the series at the end of October 1956, he made a big deal about tape production. In reality, recording tape was used in show production from the early 1950s, but the archival copies would be on discs. Robson was just promoting Suspense as being more “modern.” The Suspense live orchestral music would continue through March 1957, and not use pre-recorded music in production until after that time.

There are three recordings related to this episode. The network recording is the best. There is a low quality aircheck from WMT of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The call letters came from a local newspaper, the Waterloo Morning Tribune. The station started in Cedar Rapids under different call letters, was moved to Waterloo where it received its still-used call letters, but retained them when it was sold and moved back to Cedar Rapids in the 1930s. Airchecks give us a sense of how stations sounded at the time, and make us appreciate the superior sound that are captured from studio transcription discs. There is also a part 2 recording of an Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS#521) disc. Part 1 has not been found at the time of this writing.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3

https://archive.org/details/TSP550222

THE CAST

Vivi Janiss (Harriet, Norman’s sister), Charlotte Lawrence (Aline, Norman’s wife), Helen Kleeb (Mrs. Martinson, Aline’s mother), Tom Hanley (Telegram boy), Larry Thor (Radio voice / Narrator)

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Wednesday, November 27, 2024

1955-02-17 The Man with the Steel Teeth

John Dehner wrote this script and starred in this production about an American reporter who escapes the incarceration and beatings of the Russian KGB who considered him a spy. He is picked up by the police after a cultural event, and charged with numerous crimes, including spying. They torture him but he never confesses. One morning he wakes up in his cell, but the door is open. He takes the opportunity to escape but always wonders if it was a set-up. He later learns that one of his captors wants to escape with him to the West.

The script was originally used in the 1953-03-15 broadcast of Escape. That broadcast starred Harry Bartell. This 1955 broadcast is one of the rare occasions on Suspense where the author and the star are the same person. Antony Ellis had written some scripts but never starred in any.

Dehner’s idea about using “steel teeth” in the storyline may have come from late 1940s news reports about Communist political figure Antonín Zápotocký and future leader of Czechoslovakia. He had such teeth. There were also occasional news reports in the early 1950s that mentioned steel teeth had become “popular” in Russia.

Lubyanka was a real place. The buildings were seized after the 1917 revolution and became the headquarters for the secret police, later known as the KGB. The prison was a two-story building next to the main one. In 1940, many of the prisoners were part of Stalin’s “Great Purge” before they were moved to Siberia and the Gulags. There are museums in the buildings now, but they are supposedly not open to the public but for private tours.

This broadcast is important for its technological history. Classic radio researcher and international entertainer Keith Scott notes that this was the last program recorded on transcription discs that would become part of the CBS archives. Future programs would be recorded on tape. Unfortunately many of those tapes would be erased and re-used. Some transcriptions were made, but by others like ad agencies and performers using an outside recording service. CBS would make tapes for the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS) which would be edited and distributed on 16” discs requiring two parts to its stations. They would later release them as microgroove 16” discs with a complete program on one side. AFRTS would later switch to 12” pressings.

If it was not for the AFRTS discs and home recordists there would be many gaps in the surviving Suspense series recordings. After November 1951, there are only two missing Suspense recordings. They are a repeat performance of A Case Of Nerves from 1956-04-24 and the only performance of Massacre at Little Big Horn from 1956-08-01. AFRTS recordings have proven to be the best sounding recordings for much of the 1957 and 1958 seasons, replacing many home recordings over the years.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3

https://archive.org/details/TSP550217

THE CAST

John Dehner (Arthur Lutrell), Maria Palmer (Maria), Edgar Barrier (MVD / Soldier), Jack Kruschen (Max Golovin), Robert Boon (Bronislaw), Larry Thor (Narrator)

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