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Night Transmissions - NightTransmissions Repeat of show 13

NightTransmissions Repeat of show 13

02/25/12 • -1 min

Night Transmissions

Creeps by Night:
The Final Reckoning (5/2/44)
Suspense:
Menace In Wax (11/11/42)
X Minus One:
And the Moon Be Still as Bright (4/22/55)
The Mysterious Traveler:
Murder Goes Free (7/14/46)


http://www.archive.org/download/NightTransmissionsLowFi64kbs/NightTransmissions1364Kbs.mp3 Play Show (Right click to download).

The Final Reckoning” – May the 2nd of 1944

Creeps by Night Was A 1944 horror series with two hosts, one for each coast. in New York it was hosted by the anonymous, “Dr. X” who, as near as I can find, is anonymous to this day. From Hollywood it was hosted by Boris Karloff.

Although, did often feature the conventions typical of horror, werewolves and the like. It often provided a twist ending that brought an unexpected buoyancy to otherwise common place yarns. Karloff himself once said that, “There is no greater mystery than the mystery of the mind.” And many of the episodes dealt in psychological, rather than literal, horror.
Then as now, excellence is not a guarantee of long life.

Creeps by Night did not, “Live long and prosper”. It was a short lived series and only a few episodes seem to have survived. Too common a story in the annals of old time radio.

“The Final Reckoning” an episode starring Boris Karloff which aired first on May the 2nd of 1944. This is the story of George Miller, who was played for a Patsy by an associate. For twenty long years Miller had only one dream... a dream of murder, only one aspiration, his revenge. Then one day Miller, through careful planning and unbelievable patients, finds his chance when he manages to take the place of a barber giving the villain a shave.This turn of events creates the chance to play out a fine scene with Miller carefully, almost lovingly, tracing the contours of his victims throat with the edge of a straight razor. It’s heady stuff.


Suspense – “Menace In Wax” from Nov. 11th of 1942.

Suspense is one of the classics of old time radio. Some fans have special favorites in the thriller/chiller/macabre genre, but most agree that Suspense is right at the top.

The guiding light of this show was William Spier, whose formula of human drama set in interesting situations attracted the best of Hollywood and radio actors. Orson Welles was in many episodes. Cary Grant said, “If I ever do any more radio work, I want to do it on Suspense, where I get a good chance to act.”

Spier’s method with actors was to keep them under-rehearsed, and there-by a bit uneasy. He got great performances, and the show gained great popularity.

All the production values were first class. With Bernard Hermann, who had worked with Orson Welles on the Mercury Theater and would work with Alfred Hitchcock, doing the musical scores.

“Menace In Wax”. This is a world war II drama set in the city of London involving... I’ll bet you already know... Nazis! Better yet despicable Nazi spies! Do I need to say anything else? Nazi spies! What more could you want?


X Minus One , “And the Moon Be Still as Bright” April the 22nd of 1955.

X Minus One is considered the finest science fiction drama ever produced for radio. It was not the first. That honor belongs to 2000+. It wasn’t the second, That would be Dimension X. In fact the first 15 episodes of it’s 1955 to 1958 run on NBC were new versions of Dimension X episodes. The remainder were all most entirely adaptations of recently published science fiction stories (Mostly from Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine) usually written by the leading writers of the time, including Philip K. Dick, Fritz Leiber, J.T. McIntosh, Robert A. Heinlein, Frederik Pohl and Theodore Sturgeon.
For all of us who were weaned on The Outer Limits and The Twilight Zone and for the Trekkies (er,Trekkers) among us, you should know that X Minus One is the forefather of the science fiction you grew up on. You will find that it still is some of the best Science Fiction ever aired.

X Minus One and Ray Bradbury with one of hi...

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Creeps by Night:
The Final Reckoning (5/2/44)
Suspense:
Menace In Wax (11/11/42)
X Minus One:
And the Moon Be Still as Bright (4/22/55)
The Mysterious Traveler:
Murder Goes Free (7/14/46)


http://www.archive.org/download/NightTransmissionsLowFi64kbs/NightTransmissions1364Kbs.mp3 Play Show (Right click to download).

The Final Reckoning” – May the 2nd of 1944

Creeps by Night Was A 1944 horror series with two hosts, one for each coast. in New York it was hosted by the anonymous, “Dr. X” who, as near as I can find, is anonymous to this day. From Hollywood it was hosted by Boris Karloff.

Although, did often feature the conventions typical of horror, werewolves and the like. It often provided a twist ending that brought an unexpected buoyancy to otherwise common place yarns. Karloff himself once said that, “There is no greater mystery than the mystery of the mind.” And many of the episodes dealt in psychological, rather than literal, horror.
Then as now, excellence is not a guarantee of long life.

Creeps by Night did not, “Live long and prosper”. It was a short lived series and only a few episodes seem to have survived. Too common a story in the annals of old time radio.

“The Final Reckoning” an episode starring Boris Karloff which aired first on May the 2nd of 1944. This is the story of George Miller, who was played for a Patsy by an associate. For twenty long years Miller had only one dream... a dream of murder, only one aspiration, his revenge. Then one day Miller, through careful planning and unbelievable patients, finds his chance when he manages to take the place of a barber giving the villain a shave.This turn of events creates the chance to play out a fine scene with Miller carefully, almost lovingly, tracing the contours of his victims throat with the edge of a straight razor. It’s heady stuff.


Suspense – “Menace In Wax” from Nov. 11th of 1942.

Suspense is one of the classics of old time radio. Some fans have special favorites in the thriller/chiller/macabre genre, but most agree that Suspense is right at the top.

The guiding light of this show was William Spier, whose formula of human drama set in interesting situations attracted the best of Hollywood and radio actors. Orson Welles was in many episodes. Cary Grant said, “If I ever do any more radio work, I want to do it on Suspense, where I get a good chance to act.”

Spier’s method with actors was to keep them under-rehearsed, and there-by a bit uneasy. He got great performances, and the show gained great popularity.

All the production values were first class. With Bernard Hermann, who had worked with Orson Welles on the Mercury Theater and would work with Alfred Hitchcock, doing the musical scores.

“Menace In Wax”. This is a world war II drama set in the city of London involving... I’ll bet you already know... Nazis! Better yet despicable Nazi spies! Do I need to say anything else? Nazi spies! What more could you want?


X Minus One , “And the Moon Be Still as Bright” April the 22nd of 1955.

X Minus One is considered the finest science fiction drama ever produced for radio. It was not the first. That honor belongs to 2000+. It wasn’t the second, That would be Dimension X. In fact the first 15 episodes of it’s 1955 to 1958 run on NBC were new versions of Dimension X episodes. The remainder were all most entirely adaptations of recently published science fiction stories (Mostly from Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine) usually written by the leading writers of the time, including Philip K. Dick, Fritz Leiber, J.T. McIntosh, Robert A. Heinlein, Frederik Pohl and Theodore Sturgeon.
For all of us who were weaned on The Outer Limits and The Twilight Zone and for the Trekkies (er,Trekkers) among us, you should know that X Minus One is the forefather of the science fiction you grew up on. You will find that it still is some of the best Science Fiction ever aired.

X Minus One and Ray Bradbury with one of hi...

Previous Episode

undefined - NightTransmissions show 122

NightTransmissions show 122

The Avengers – South Africa:
The Fantasy Game (1972) The Back Dog by Stephen Crane: The Witch’s Tale: The Truth of Death (3/11/37).


http://www.archive.org/download/Nighttransmisions121-125/NightTransmissions122.mp3 Right Click here to download

The Avengers South Africa – The Fantasy Game part 1.

The Avengers Radio Program was produced and transmitted in South Africa between 6th December 1971 and 28th December 1973 It featured adoptions of scripts first aired on the very successful British T.V. show The Avengers. The show starred Donald Monat as John Steed, and Diane Appleby as Emma Peel. Two top agents of the British secret service. The radio show was served up pretty much following the style and tempo established by the BBC Television series during it’s run from 1961 to 1969. Just like the television series the South African radio presentation features outlandish, quirky villains, mad scientists and secret organizations . A little James Bond, a touch of SMERSH and SPECTRE, some Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuryakin a hint of U.N.C. L.E. and THURSH. Oh, and just a little Max and 99. It’s all quite, quite fantastic as Steed and Emma romp through other people’s fantasies to thwart a plot to assassinate the cricket-playing prince of an obscure, oil-laden country. While Steed gets chummy with the prince, Emma is “sold” into his harem to flush out the assassins, who are using the QQF, a “fantasy fulfillment” service, to devise the assassination plot for them.

The Avengers South Africa – The Fantasy Game part 2.


The Avengers South Africa – The Fantasy Game part 3 and the short story The Back Dog by Stephen Crane.


The Witch’s Tale – The Truth of Death (37-03-11). The Witch’s Tale is credited with being the first horror themed radio show in history. This happened in 1931 when writer- director Alonzo Deen Cole somehow convinced WOR (in New York) to try a series devoted entirely to the supernatural. Not really predictably The series became the premier radio program of its day running until 1938 and is fondly remembered by it’s fans to this day. Only about three dozen episodes survive. According to Dave Siegel’s book The Witch’s Tale, Cole destroyed his recordings when he moved from New York to California. The three dozen or so surviving recordings exist due to the efforts of others. It was just that by 1961 Cole had come to believe that there was no commercial value to the actual radio transcriptions. He did keep bound copies of his 332 scripts which he protected by copy write. Syndicated by Mutual. The program was hosted by Old Nancy, the Witch of Salem, who introduced a new story each week.

Not Old Nancy!

Next Episode

undefined - NightTransmissions Show 123

NightTransmissions Show 123

Murder By Experts: “Summer Heat” (6/13/49)CBS Radio workshop: “Season of Disbelief and Hail and Farewell”Weird Circle:“The Passion In The Desert” (2/25 /32 )The origins of superstition: “Rabbit’s Foot” ( 1935)Richard Wilson:“Back To Julie” (Galaxy Science Fiction May 1954)


http://www.archive.org/download/Nighttransmisions121-125/Nighttransmissions123.mp3 Right Click here to download

Murder By Experts – Summer Heat

Murder By Experts was an anthology that ran in the United States between 1949 and 1951 on the Mutual Network. The program was at first hosted by mystery writer John Dickson Carr. Who would leave the show in 1950 to be replaced by Brett Halliday.

With a catalog of 130 episodes (unfortunately only a handful are known to have survived) the show revolved around the premise that each week a guest mystery writer would select a story from another writer (as in not themselves) to be presented as that week’s show. Sometimes at the end of the show (I guess as time permitted) there would be a critical postmortem of the episode, sometimes featuring well-known personalities.

Murder by Experts was created by David Kogan. A man who is well remembered in old-time radio circles as the writer/creator of The Mysterious Traveler, The Strange Doctor Weird and, if not countless then at least numerous, other radio programs dotting the landscape the radio’s “Golden Age“.

A newly graduated lawyer awakes with a dead body sharing his bedroom. He quickly finds that an old truism applies. “A friend will help you move. A really good friend will help you move a body. He could have used a friend like that as he has a very difficult time getting rid of that body!


Weird Circle – “The Passion In The Desert” (2/25 /32 )

The Weird Circle was a syndicated series produced in New York and licensed by Mutual, and later, NBC’s Red network (Digital Deli Too). For two seasons, it cranked out 39 shows (78 total) consisting mostly of radio adaptations of classic horror stories.

Contradiction Alert: Some sources date The Weird Circle as being produced from 1943 – 1945 (Digital Deli). Others state it was produced from 1946 – 1947.

This adaptation strays considerably from Honore de Balzac’s 1830 short story. It’s a tale about a man who encounters a leopard in the desert with which he develops an uneasy relationship.

Serious consequences entail.

I thought inasmuch as this story differs rather considerably from the original story. And since the original story is now safely in the public domain, I thought I would provide links to either read online, or download the story from the Internet.

I have had, in the past, some difficulty providing ancillary material in a manner that remains axillary. That is to say, I do not want the RSS feed to scrape this particular material and send it along. After a little bit of thought it seemed to me the best thing to do would be to create another blog at WordPress which I have called, “The NightTransmissions Annex”.

Here is the first entry...


CBS Radio Workshop – “Season of Disbelief and Hail and Farewell” from February 17th of 1956.

The CBS Radio Workshop was an experimental dramatic radio anthology series that aired on CBS from January 27, 1956, until September 22, 1957. Subtitled “radio’s distinguished series to man’s imagination,” i...

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