Writer Hank Searls offers a fine example of a Suspense story
of people in danger not of their making and a race against time. The
story is of its broadcast era. It had to be unsettling to listeners
in 1955 when the premise was more prone to happen than it is today.
The story was frighteningly plausible then, thankfully almost
implausible 70 years later unless there is severe negligence.
Pharmacies are far more regimented today, with vigilant automatic
tracking of what is dispensed, and procedures to validate identities
and match them with prescriptions and insurance coverage before
handing them to the customer. Much of the drama’s duration is spent
trying to find someone. This, too, might be unlikely in today’s
world of smartphones, text messages, and GPS tracking. It is hard to
imagine what life was like without such technologies, and this story
gives a glimpse into those times, and the trouble it was to
communicate in stressful emergencies.
The story stars Harry Bartell and Charlotte Lawrence as husband and
wife who have a family-owned pharmacy, which is far less common
today, as well. At the end of a day when the have an urgency to
leave, a prescription is filled for a child. A mistake at the counter
resulted in the child’s mother picking up the prescription intended
for someone else, a heart medicine. It would be very dangerous if
given to the child. The plot involves the tremendous effort to gather
the resources of police and others to find the mother and child
before an accidental and fatal event.
The working title was “To None a Deadly Poison.” The title comes
from the Hippocratic Oath, and it can be translated into English as
“Neither will I administer a poison to anybody when asked to do so,
nor will I suggest such a course.” The change in wording of the
title made it better and more ominous. Of course no one would want to
administer a deadly poison unless they intended to commit an evil
act. But changing it into “drug” made it fit into the storyline,
a pharmacy, and that prescription drugs are intended to restore
health. So “deadly drug” can evoke some listener curiosity.
The program was pre-recorded on Tuesday, October 18, 1955. The
session begat at 11:30am and ended at 5:00pm. The recording commenced
at 5:00pm and concluded at 5:30pm.
There are two surviving recordings, and the network recording is
the much better of the two. The second recording is a very low
quality Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS) recording.
Classic
radio enthusiast, researcher, and modern day performer Patte Rosebank
noted at the Old Time Radio Researchers Facebook group page
that the story idea may have come from the Elixir Sulfanilamide
Disaster of 1937, which would still be in the public memory at the
time of broadcast. The Food and Drug Administration has a magazine
article from one of their 1981 publications that describes the
events. It can be downloaded at
https://www.fda.gov/files/about%20fda/published/The-Sulfanilamide-Disaster.pdf
The document details the efforts to track down the shipments of the
drug and includes an example of one incident that has some
resemblance to this storyline:
Many doctors and pharmacists did
everything in their power to recover the elixir. One physician
postponed his wedding to help an FDA chemist search for a 3-year-old
boy whose family had moved into mountain country after obtaining a
prescription.
The story idea may have been sparked by a more recent incident,
reported by United Press. This clip is from the 1954-12-24 Waco TX
Times-Herald:
LISTEN
TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or
mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP551025
THE CAST
Harry Bartell (Cal Foster), Charlotte Lawrence (Marion Foster), Eve
McVeagh (Mrs. Smith), Virginia Eiler (Operator / Waitress), Sammy Ogg
(Tippy Smith), Hy Averback (Al the Disc Jockey), Larry Thor
(Narrator), Jack Kruschen (Sheriff Gibbs), John Stephenson (First
radio announcer / Dr. Peters)
###