Wednesday, April 24, 2024

1950-10-12 Rave Notice

Comedian and “Mr. Television” or “Uncle Miltie” Milton Berle makes his sole Suspense appearance in a very strong script by Oscar-winner James Poe. Berle had radio experience before, but his slapstick and visual comedy did not play as well as it did in television. Berle’s success was growing rapidly, and the 1950-1951 television season had some of his best ratings. His performance in this episode is quite good. Baby boomers may no longer hold Berle in high regard, but at the period of this broadcast he was at the top of his game. Later generations may know him for his notoriously bad appearance on Saturday Night Live, a broadcast that was withheld from syndication from many years because of problems on the set and with Berle’s performance, embarrassing producer Lorne Michaels. But if you’re curious about what all the Berle fuss was about in the 1950s, this episode shows that he was a talented performer before his career and celebrity began to ebb.

This Poe script is superb and was repeated on Suspense twice more in later years. One starred Hans Conried with Vincent Price in the other. Each of them brought their own special flair to the script. This is such a good story and well-crafted script that all of the productions are good.

An actor becomes angry at a play’s director when he is replaced in the cast. He decides to murder him, then act insane to avoid conviction, incarceration, and execution. When interrogated by doctors and police, he’s given incorrect information to rattle his concocted story and his act. Who are the better actors, now?

The drama portion of the program was recorded on 1950-07-21. It was the first Elliott Lewis production of the series. They knew it would not air until almost three months later. It was likely held until after the Fall television season started to build publicity for the appearance.

Berle gets close to the line of overacting, but is in control enough to keep listeners engaged in the story without dismissing it as silly. Most of the publicity for the show had little to do with the story, but more about Berle’s appearance. While the CBS publicity did not haul out the “there’s a no ad lib clause in the contract” charade that they did automatically each time a comedian was about to step to the microphone, there was an undercurrent to the publicity that people would be surprised at how good Berle is. Remember, however, everyone at CBS had already heard the performance because it was recorded three months earlier. There was no risk to them in saying that they considered Berle’s performance to be good because they already knew it was.

Berle’s character says that his acting is based on the “Stanislavsky system.” That is a standard approach to teaching the craft of acting, and not a name that was made-up for the script. Variations of the system are still used in acting schools today.

The July recording date allowed for a photo shoot during the session. Pictures appeared in Quick magazine, sometime in September 1950. Because of that long lead time, publicity could be planned better. Previously, photos of rehearsals and broadcasts would not appear in magazines until months after they aired.

Two network recordings have survived. One is from the network feed and the other is an aircheck from KNX in Los Angeles. Both recordings are flawed with disc noise and light scratch in some places. They are roughly equivalent in overall sound quality, but the network recording is slightly better.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP501012

THE CAST

MILTON BERLE (Sam), Joe Kearns (Signature Voice / Norman / Judge), Peter Leeds (Guard), Howard McNear (Doctor / Man 2), Herb Butterfield (Second Doctor / Man [Actor]), Hal March (Shopkeeper / Driver), Hy Averback (Second Guard / Judge), Sidney Miller (Lawyer)

COMMERCIAL: Ken Christy, Harlow Wilcox (Announcer), Sylvia Simms (Operator)

###

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

1950-10-05 The Rose Garden

Miriam Hopkins stars in a Sumner Locke Elliott story adapted by Antony Ellis. It’s a fine and often underappreciated presentation. As a listener you’ll start to feel trapped and claustrophobic as Hopkins’ character does.

She plays “Effie,” a newly widowed woman who dies one of the strangest deaths presented on the series. The play begins with cousin Amy giving Effie’s diary to Richards, a policeman. He begins to read from the document and details about how the tragedy unfolded. Three presumably nice, quiet, old ladies live together in a neat, modest little house. Effie has come to live with her cousin, Amy. The third woman is “Miss Bone.” She has rented a room in Amy's house for many years and is always trying to impress people with stories of her travels and first hand knowledge of the world. Bone bitterly resents Effie’s intrusion into her life. Miss Bone frightens Effie with her huge, ill-tempered old cat, to which she is fanatically and strangely devoted.

She terrifies Effie further by announcing that she has a vial of deadly, Chinese poison in her room. Amy is called out of town for a few days. Effie is horrified at the thought of being left alone in the house Bone and her taunting. The stage is set for Effie’s murder by the constant fear of poisoning. Bone, an unrepentant bully to the end, contends was essentially just a joke and Effie took it all the wrong way. When Amy returns and finds Effie dead, and she knows it was murder, no matter what Bone says.

The original title of the play was “Miss Bone.” It was changed to The Rose Garden about 10 days before broadcast.

Story author Sumner Locke Elliott was an Australian novelist and playwright who moved to California to pursue a Hollywood career. He sometimes found himself adapting British plays for radio series like Theater Guild and others because he was more familiar with them and the nuances of their language than his American counterparts. He was very active in 1950s US television writing original plays and continued writing short stories and novels. His best known novel was the much biographical Careful, He Might Hear You, published in 1963 and adapted as a movie in 1983. The Australian film won many awards and was highly regarded by critics worldwide. It is available on many film streaming services. It is currently available on the free Tubi service.

His biographer, Sharon Clarke, in her 1995 doctoral dissertation for the University of Wollongong in Australia, noted that one of his favorite actresses was Miriam Hopkins. Having her appearing in one of his works was a highlight of his Hollywood life: “...the prospect of her performing in his arrangements with a play, Miss Bone, ...assured him that he had once more stepped back through the looking glass, into the world of improbable happenings.”

Byron Kane doubles as Richards and as the mean cat, “Chang”!

The closing credits include a recorded message from Milton Berle teasing the next broadcast, Rave Notice. That clip was recorded when the dramatic portions of that program were performed in July.

Miriam Hopkins appeared on Suspense this one time, and was not on radio often beyond appearing as a guest on variety shows and movie-based shows such as Lux Radio Theatre. Her career began in theatrical productions in the 1920s and in 1930 in Hollywood films. On Broadway, she had the lead in the hit play Jezebel, but when it was adapted as a film of the same name, Bette Davis was selected for the role. This began a feud between them, which the film studios publicized and intensified, often to achieve a higher profile in the gossip columns. She was one of the more prominent television actresses in the 1950s. Some TV sci-fi fans may know her for appearing in the Outer Limits episode Don't Open Till Doomsday. Her long and distinguished career and interesting life is summarized at Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miriam_Hopkins

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP501005

THE CAST

MIRIAM HOPKINS (Effie Trimbal), Jeanette Nolan (Miss Bone), Joe Kearns (Signature Voice / Doctor), Byron Kane (Richards / Chang the Cat), Irene Tedrow (Cousin Amy Hanson), Jeffrey Silver (Boy)

COMMERCIAL: Bert Holland (Hap), Harlow Wilcox (Announcer), Sylvia Simms (Operator), Johnny McGovern? (Johnny Plugcheck)

###

Monday, April 22, 2024

1950-09-28 Fly by Night

Joseph Cotten returns to Suspense in a George and Gertrude Fass story adapted by Morton Fine and David Friedkin. The story has problems, but Cotten’s performance rises above them.

He plays a businessman being framed for a murder. He’s been been kept awake by a police interrogator for seventy-two hours (that’s three days in case you didn’t know) to break his resistance to signing a confession. In his fuzzy state he admits to murdering his business partner just to get some sleep. When he awakens, he tries vainly to repudiate and the confession and makes a sudden and successful, break for freedom. There’s a general alarm out for his arrest, his only hope lies in finding the witness who had given false testimony against him, and then find out who paid that witness to lie. He learns where that witness’ office is. But when he gets there, he finds him dead, with bullet hole to his forehead. He realizes that the gun used to kill the witness is his very own, making his framing for murder all the more believable to others and the police.

Even though police had wider latitude to interrogate witnesses at the time of this story, whether ethical or not, it seems like the strangest of interrogations. Not that such things did not happen, but it’s closer to the kind one might imagine being used on war prisoners to find out when and how the enemy will attack next. It seems gangster-like, with thugs trying to crush a cross-town rival by learning their whereabouts and habits. You also know something is up because the interrogation is not conducted in a police station but in a home. It turns out to be fake, a charade, that credibility of the story right from the beginning, just like other Fass scripts. They did so in Mortmain and X-Ray Camera, especially, and also Quiet Desperation. The only redeeming feature is that we get to hear Joseph Cotten as the framed man, anxious to clear himself, but so disappointed to discover that the conspiracy against him includes his wife. [Sometimes spoiler alerts prep you for disappointment; as Tony Shaloub’s character in the Monk television series says after doing something annoying to others, “you’ll thank me later”]. The conclusion of the story includes too many tangled “just so happens” elements. One has to wonder how much Fine and Friedkin had to fix original story to get as presentable as it is. Enjoy Cotten, push the flaws to the background.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP500928

THE CAST

JOSEPH COTTEN (Mickey Manning), Joe Kearns (Signature Voice / Druggist / Julius Benning), Herb Vigran (Sergeant Kogan / Man), Larry Dobkin (Charlie Borden), Ed Max (Lt. Driscoll), Mary Shipp (Mary Manning), Cathy Lewis (Irene Conway), Peggy Webber (Woman in theater), Billy Halop (Usher), George Baxter (Shreyer / Cop)

COMMERCIAL: Bert Holland (Hap), Harlow Wilcox (Announcer), Sylvia Simms (Operator)

###

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

1950-09-21 The Crowd

Dana Andrews stars as a police lieutenant in a compelling episode about a person who appears in the crowd that surrounds accidents and misfortunes of others. He taunts the police into finding him. It is an exceptional Suspense production with fine performances by Andrews and Joe Kearns as the killer.

This murderer enjoys his taunting telephone conversations with the lieutenant. They eventually figure out exactly where he is but it’s always on a busy street. All he has to do is wander a few steps away from a phone booth to become an anonymous part of the crowd. The police suspect that he likes to hang around as to watch each morbidly curious group of spectators gather to stare at the body of his victim, and he hides among them, in plain sight of everyone.

Morton Fine and David Friedkin adapted the original Ray Bradbury story that appeared in the May 1943 edition of Weird Tales. They made major changes to it. It is believed that Bradbury was not pleased with adaptation. He may not have known how much they changed it until he heard the broadcast. To oversimplify it, Suspense changed the intent of the story as commentary about the interest in that pain and suffering of others that draw crowds around scenes of tragedy and transformed it into a story about a serial killer. Bradbury did his own adaptation for cable television in the 1980s Ray Bradbury Theater using his original premise. The idea for the story came from an experience Bradbury had as a boy. He saw the aftermath of a car accident and the crowd of people assembling to surround it. In terms of the entertainment business and control of his work, Bradbury had not yet achieved the stature to demand approval of adaptations of his work. That would obviously change as his career moved on.

Because of the difference in the original story and the adaptation, there is justification to consider them as distinct works. Classic radio enthusiast Elizabeth Tankersley noted at the Old Time Radio Researchers Facebook group page that the adaptation sounded "astonishingly like an episode of Broadway Is My Beat with its cynical, moody New York police lieutenant, the detective work, the pacing, and some of the narration and transitions." This is not really surprising, though it was likely unintended. Lewis was producer and director of that series starting in Fall 1949 and Fine and Friedkin were its main writers.

The drama was recorded on Friday, September 8, 1950. It appears to be an early morning rehearsal starting at 8:00am to 12:30pm, with recording from 12:30pm to 1:00pm.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP50921

THE CAST

DANA ANDREWS (Lt. Johnny Stillano), Howard McNear (Doc Gilbert), Joe Kearns (Signature Voice / Charles Turner), Jerry Hausner (Marty / Smart aleck in subway), Jack Kruschen (Sgt. Riorden), Lou Merrill (Elliott Becker / Voice 1), Bob Bruce (Jones / Burke), Truda Marson (Angry Woman / Voice 2), Lou Krugman (Voice 4 [Man yelling in subway] / Man who confesses), Irene Tedrow (Mrs. Shirley), Byron Kane (Voice 3 / Joe the diner proprietor)

COMMERCIAL: Bert Holland (Hap), Harlow Wilcox (Announcer), Sylvia Simms (Operator)

###

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

1950-09-14 Over the Bounding Main

Dan Dailey returns to the show as a man with employment problems and an unhappy wife who wants some of the better things in life. The household tension leads him to agree to some relaxation time for a weekend to get away from their problems for a brief time. He thinks he’s on a fishing trip with friends, but the friends aren’t there. He realizes his wife and the captain are having an affair, intent on collecting his life insurance by staging an “accident” while at sea. His only hope is the first mate, but the captain has drugged him so he won’t resist his plan. Dailey’s character realizes he is alone. Since the staged “accident” did not work, things are about to take a more deadly turn. It’s a good story and Dailey delivers another fine performance.

The title comes from a late 1800s song that would later be characterized as a children’s song. It is best known for its chorus “Sailing, sailing, over the bounding main; For many a stormy wind shall blow, ere Jack comes home again!” “Bounding main” likely refers to heavy seas.

The story is by Gloria Elmore and Jimmy Barnett. Both were at the relative beginnings of their successful writing careers. Barnett wrote for radio and would later work for Warner Brothers developing some 1950s and 1960s programs as well as freelance writing some teleplays. Elmore’s television work in the 1950s and 1960s includes popular programs such as 77 Sunset Strip and Hawaiian Eye.

The script was adapted by Antony Ellis, his first credited appearance in any position on Suspense. Under Lewis, Ellis served in a position similar to what Robert Richards had under William Spier. Ellis was in his early 30s, and another multi-talented radio performer, with skills in writing and acting. He would become the producer of Suspense after Lewis left in 1954 and followed briefly by Norman Macdonnell. Ellis would produce one radio’s finest efforts in the late 1950s, Frontier Gentleman.

This episode was pre-recorded but the script does not indicate on which date. It started rehearsal at 6:30pm on whatever day that was and the drama was recorded from 10:30 to 11:00pm. The tease for the next broadcast, The Crowd, is played at the end of the broadcast. That episode was recorded on 1950-09-08, which may imply that this recording of Bounding Main was recorded before that date. That cannot be certain, however.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP500914

THE CAST

DAN DAILEY (Marty Evans), William Conrad (Captain Moran), Tony Barrett (Ignacio), Georgia Ellis (Claire Evans), Joe Kearns (Signature Voice)

COMMERCIAL: Bert Holland (Hap), Harlow Wilcox (Announcer), Sylvia Simms (Operator)

###

Monday, April 15, 2024

1950-08-31 True Report

[There are important background notes after the episode’s cast listing. They review how Suspense would evolve under the leadership of Elliott Lewis].

The Elliott Lewis era of Suspense begins with with Pat O’Brien in a play about a police detective who learns his son was involved in a hit-and-run killing. The script is by future Hitchcock screenwriter John Michael Hayes and radio writing legend E. Jack Neuman. It’s another “safe driving” production to support the Auto-Lite corporate image and link attentive car maintenance with road safety. Once you get past the preachy and obligatory aspects of the dialogue that weaves in historic statistics about car accidents and deaths, it’s a very good story.

O'Brien portrays a veteran policeman who is about to start a new position to be the head of the police force. His final assignment before that rise in the ranks occurs, is to track down a hit-and-run driver who killed a man. When he finally succeeds in tracing the death car, he discovers to his horror that it belongs to his own son! By the end of the story, you start to feel bad for O’Brien’s character, who realizes he did not trust that his son would do the “right thing” in the end. He has to submit his resignation from the force and cannot experience the professional recognition of a promotion. (Spoiler alert, whoops, forgot again). This is one of the subtle lessons of the highway safety plotline, that car accidents have far-reaching and unforeseeable consequences beyond those of the immediate victims.

The program’s dramatic elements and O’Brien’s closing comments were pre-recorded seven days before (1950-08-24). The orchestra and commercials were broadcast live. Some of the press coverage in Minneapolis noted that O’Brien would be appearing on Suspense at the very same time he was appearing in a night club act there at the Niccolett Hotel (a prime entertainment venue at that time). O’Brien was starting his tour of clubs with an act comprised of storytelling, Hollywood insights, singing, and dancing.

Near the end of the broadcast (about 26:30), O’Brien presents the National Safety Award to Royce Martin, President of Electric Auto-Lite. It was the company’s second award. The first was for No Escape with James Cagney and this second one was for Nightmare with Gregory Peck. The company pushed Suspense producers to find or develop scripts that would enhance the company’s corporate image position, especially before the high volume driving holiday that Labor Day weekend had become. Martin’s message was scripted and pre-recorded in New York. It was sent to the studio prior to the drama recording session. This means that neither O’Brien nor Martin were in studio.

Pre-recording Martin’s acceptance of the award is not a surprise. Suspense and other programs often had bad luck with live announcements from non-actors. One time, Suspense had a problem with a CBS executive who had difficulties reading his announcement. It was on the east broadcast of 1947-05-08 Dead Ernest and actor John McIntire had to portray him in the west broadcast. The advent of tape recording technology made such appearances less of a problem. Martin was more likely to be in New York on business (for the company or meetings with the ad agency or CBS or all of them, for that matter) at some point. It was easier to schedule his segment there.

After the award presentation, Harlow Wilcox’ closing announcements take on a faster than usual pace. This is likely to compensate for the delay in starting the tape of O’Brien’s introduction of Martin. That likely had Wilcox trying to pick up some of the lost seconds of that delay, which he did. The closing announcements resumed their natural pace shortly thereafter.

Technically, this was not Lewis’ first Suspense production. The first was Rave Notice, recorded in July to accommodate Milton Berle’s schedule. That episode would not be aired until 1950-10-12, about six weeks after this broadcast of True Report. Berle even recorded teasers for Rave Notice in the July session to be used at the end of 1950-10-05 Suspense broadcast of Rose Garden. The strategy of pre-recorded teases with the guest star of the following week’s program would be used on a few shows by Lewis.

LISTEN TO THE PROGRAM or download in FLAC or mp3
https://archive.org/details/TSP500831

THE CAST

PAT O’BRIEN (Inspector Kennedy), Joe Kearns (Signature Voice / Josti), Peggy Webber (Mrs. Thurston), Edgar Barrier (Voice 2 / Morgue), Leonard Smith (Radio A / Rix), Sam Edwards (Voice / Charles), Hal March (Geiger / Loper), Ed Max (Sergeant / Lab), Irene Tedrow (Alice)

COMMERCIAL: Bert Holland (Hap), Harlow Wilcox (Announcer), Sylvia Simms (Operator)

* * *

Elliott Lewis was rewarded for his radio talents and commitment by becoming the new producer of Suspense. It was also a private expression of gratitude for his loyalty by William Spier, who recommended him for the position. Spier did not invent Suspense, but he turned the show into a star.

When Spier and CBS parted ways over the backroom double-dealing related to the hour-long version of the series, Spier was quickly hired by ABC to save The Clock. Long a New York production, ABC moved it to Hollywood for what they hoped would transform into a sponsored and profitable series. Nearly every week, if not every week, Cathy and Elliott Lewis were in the cast. The 13-week excursion with The Clock ended, unsuccessful in its attempt to find a sponsor. The Lewises would also often appear on Philip Morris Playhouse for the 1948-1949 season that Spier produced that series. Spier knew Elliott was multitalented from his work on Suspense in the Roma era. He acted, announced, wrote, and contributed in other ways to the series. He also saw his work on Sam Spade, another Spier production, and numerous comedies and dramas through the 1940s. Everyone knew Lewis could act and write. Spier and CBS staffers may have been particularly impressed by Lewis’ productions of Broadway’s My Beat and Pursuit. Those were running concurrent with the Spier-Macdonnell season of Suspense. Spier had no problem recommending Lewis for the Suspense position. The Spiers were ready to move on from radio to different opportunities. They headed off to pursue movie projects first and then television projects later. Lewis, however, was ready for much deeper involvement in radio production and management.

The Lewis Suspense years were at a time of entertainment industry restructuring. Television was being adopted in major cities, but the radio audience was still very large and important. Only 10% of households had TVs at this time. Being in the top metro areas often meant a high technology adoption rate in those areas among concentration of higher-earning households, and that television’s importance in marketing communications was growing in those areas.

Auto-Lite was sponsoring the Suspense TV series, with little involvement of Lewis beyond occasional advice. While the radio audience was large, the 1940s habits of radio listening were starting to change as the post-WW2 population began to spread, suburbs began to grow, and out-of-home listening grew. Lewis had to be a bit more creative to capture and retain a loyal audience. The Fall 1950 season was a traditional one, with script selection and casting were very similar to what preceded it. As the season went on, it was clear he was working to broaden the variety of programs and approaches. He was an experimenter. Some of the efforts fell flat. He was willing to take those risks.

In his second season, the concept of tying scripts to current news or historical events was expressed. This was an effort to make the radio Suspense as distinct from the television version to keep audiences tuned in to both franchises. Some of the show openings would explicitly state the strategy in its opening signature that indicated the story had a historical basis. This was somewhat amusing. Scriptwriters were always getting ideas from the inside pages of newspapers as they reported crimes and curious events. To keep their writing creativity and their incomes going, they were always looking for ideas, especially if they had some “writer’s block.” So many radio scripters would say that if they needed an idea, they’d pick up a newspaper. Some would even keep a clippings files or notebooks of ideas they would find in everyday reading and conversation. The concept was not new. The marketing of it was.

The desire for more aggressive implementation of the concept originated with Auto-Lite marketing executives and its ad agency. They believed it would make Suspense more relevant and not just a collection of pure fiction short stories adapted for audio performance that leveraged Hollywood glamour and notoriety. In that way, Suspense started to differentiate itself from radio's typical offerings and give TV watchers a reason to keep the radio on. Lewis was always open to plainly good original stories. Not every one had what is commonly referred to as a “ripped from the headlines” plot. The true story could be from 100 years ago. The good story could be Othello, which Lewis turned into a two-part production. The goal of Lewis was to attract and retain the audience with a potpourri of surprise.

Hollywood was becoming less dependent on radio for its publicity. You can sense it from the changes in Lux Radio Theatre, not just Suspense. This meant star power of Suspense was no longer a magnet for the stars, agents, and studios. There were still stars on the program, but the publicity hubbub around an appearance was considerably reduced. Just looking at newspapers of the time makes it clear that the amount of editorial space that newspapers were devoting to radio coverage was dwindling. There were fewer columns of publicity teases. Only the schedule of programs presented as a timetable was dependable. By the end of Lewis’ tenure, even the timetables were shrinking in size.

Appearing on Suspense was a strategy for a performer’s career advancement and to demonstrate one’s range of acting abilities. These skills were sometimes pushed to the background by a star’s better-known comedic or musical prowess. A guest slot on Suspense could help land a better role in some future movie or television broadcast.

Spier and Macdonnell realized that pre-recording shows on tape was a means of getting better cooperation of stars and studios to appear on the series. Now, they could schedule weekend or daytime recording sessions to accommodate guest schedules. Pre-recording also meant a much less frantic planning pace, with less disaster preparation with scripts and substitute guests waiting to hear if they might be needed to keep the weekly broadcast commitment intact. Lewis’ first Suspense production was not True Report, the first broadcast of the Fall 1950 season on 1950-08-31. It was Rave Notice with Milton Berle, in July 1950, six weeks before the Fall 1950 season would even begin, and almost three months before that episode would even air.

While the Lewis productions sometimes feel uneven, they are usually technically superb with the growing familiarity and use of the latest tape recording and editing tools. Suspense under Lewis sometimes ventures into experimental productions in the tradition of Columbia Workshop. Some fall flat. The Suspense musicals was one of those experiments that did not do well, except for The Wreck of the Old 97, which was a superb and an exceptional production.

Lewis was always under pressure to keep Suspense thriving and a notch above other programs. There was also an internal competition for ad budget dollars with the television version. At the close of his first season, Fall 1950 to Spring 1951, Auto-Lite attempted to drop their sponsorship of the radio series and fund only the television productions. They knew how television was growing in influence and effectiveness in the big markets where it was introduced. After some hard negotiating, and CBS’ refusal to break apart the sponsorship, the company agreed to continue. Auto-Lite was sponsoring the Suspense franchise, not just a TV show, not just a radio show. It’s likely they won budget concessions from CBS in the process. Lewis likely had to trim production costs. Auto-Lite would bankroll Suspense until Spring 1954, when they would cut sponsorship of both versions in reaction to the recessionary economic environment and changes in their product distribution strategy. CBS and others were surprised when it happened. Lewis believed the there was no future for sustained, unsponsored programs. He left Suspense a few weeks after the final Auto-Lite broadcast. He moved his efforts into television. When he started Suspense, television was in 10% of households. By the time he left, it was in half of them. He kept Suspense vibrant while other radio programs were dropping from the schedules.

Over his years of leadership, there were some very notable productions. He had to navigate a dynamic audience with changing listening habits, new production technologies, competition from new media, the profitable economics of the radio business being sapped to fund television, swirling social changes, and the political undertow of Red Channels and CBS loyalty tests. He referred to CBS executive Daniel O’Shea as “the vice president of treason” because his office that had to approve every casting choice for first-time appearances. Years later, Lewis would dismiss any suggestions that Red Channels and all its emanations affected his ability to cast programs in the way he wanted. We know that’s not true. There were instances where he could not get the casting he wanted. Those are documented in upcoming posts. His dismissal of the Red Channels effects was more likely his lack of desire to talk about the subject and to push conversation to a different topic. Lewis had a personality that considered the past to be past, with little value other than as a springboard to the next program.

All the time of his Suspense tenure, Lewis was the driving force of The Line-Up, Crime Classics, Broadway’s My Beat, On Stage. He delighted in playing the Remley character on the Phil Harris and Alice Faye Show. It was a happy pause from his responsibilities for the other programs. He never made Remley seem like work, it seemed like just plain fun. Somehow, Lewis navigated all that he took on, producing or participating in some of the highest quality offerings of the radio drama era.

* * *

Collector, performer, and researcher Keith Scott adds this comment:

I recently went through my Sam Spade logs and noticed an interesting fact. When William Spier went to NYC in mid-1947 to do the three Suspense and four Spade from Manhattan, he missed one Suspense in Hollywood: 1947-06-19 Dead of Night. As I noted in the log Elliott Lewis directed a Spade episode for 1947-06-15 and Charles Vanda did the 1947-06-19 Suspense. It only now struck me that as early as two years before he became a full-time producer-director for CBS, Lewis was highly enough regarded by Spier to fill in on that Spade show. I also had forgotten that Lewis also filled in for Spier on three 1950 dates for Spade: 1950-06-18, 1950-06-25 and a few weeks later on 1950-08-27, just days before the broadcast of True Report, Lewis’s first aired Suspense episode! And Lewis did a final Spade sub for Spier on 1950-12-29, at NBC!! They were obviously pretty close pals even if they totally different personalities.

###

Thursday, April 11, 2024

Project Audion announces new recreation of a missing Suspense: The Life of Nellie James

Project Audion (https://projectaudion.com/about/) has announced it will re-create a missing Suspense episode in May 2024. It is near-tradition to produce a Suspense episode every May.

This episode is The Life of Nellie James and is based on the Lizzie Borden murders in Fall River, Massachusetts in the late 1890s. It was a popular topic for storytellers, and it was presented three different times on Suspense, each time with original scripts and in a different manner of presentation.

This is a newspaper clipping from the 1942-06-24 Harrisburg (PA) Evening News

The information about the first season of Suspense, Summer 1942, is not complete. The original episode date for this episode was planned to be 1942-06-24, but it was most likely broadcast a week later, 1942-07-01. It was the first Suspense script that was not an adaptation of an existing work. There is no information about the cast beyond its star, Jeanne Cagney.

The Project Audion YouTube channel is at https://www.youtube.com/c/projectaudion 

A list of Suspense "truly missing" episodes and the currently available recreations from all sources is at https://sites.google.com/view/suspenserecreations/home 

The recreation of Life of Nellie James means that all of the "truly missing" episodes of the Summer 1942 season will be completed. There are 12 "truly missing" Suspense episode for which broadcast recordings have not been found. These shows were performed only once on the series and the scripts were never used in a repeat performance.

Suspense fans appreciate the dedication and care that Larry Groebe, founder of Project Audion, and all of its actors demonstrate in preserving this famous and ground-breaking radio series.

###