
NightTransmissions Repeat of Show 19
05/26/12 • -1 min
Diary Of Fate“Peter Drake”(2/2/48).***Lights Out:“Chicken Heart”(2/23/38).***Dimension X:Nightfall(9/9/51).***LibriVox: H. P. Lovecraft’s “The Street” (Dec. 1920).***
http://archive.org/download/Nighttransmisions131-135/NighttransmissionsShow132.mp3%20href=http://archive.org/download/Nighttransmisions131-135/NighttransmissionsShow132.mp3http://www.archive.org/download/NightTransmissionsLowFi64kbs/NightTransmissions1964Kbs.mp3
Heed well you who listen, and remember, there is a page for you in, "The Diary of Fate."
"The Diary of Fate" was a horror program where “Fate”, personified in the person of actor Herbert Lytton, narrates a morality tale, and woe be to the person on the wrong end. This program plays the usual stories of murder, hitchhikers, blackmail, love gone wrong, and the guilty getting their just desserts. The character of Fate plays a bit more of a role than mere observer; he creates situations to force the protagonist into a choice. For the sake of the show, they always choose badly, and the audience gets to listen to their demise unfold.
The show aired from 1947 to 1948, only 24 episodes are known to survive. The show wasn’t as successful as similar shows, like Inner Sanctum, but it did have solid stars, including Lurene Tuttle, Larry Dobkin, Hal Sawyer, Gloria Blondell, Frank Albertson, Jerry Hausner, Howard McNear, Peter Leeds, Ken Peters, Daws Butler and William Johnstone.
February the 23rd of 1948 entry in the “The Diary Of Fate” . A peak into the life of “Peter Drake”. A man comfortable in his life and work. Peter loves his wife Marsha, a proud, greedy woman. And because of that love he finds himself with his pistol pressed against his temple by his own hand.
Light’s Out, one of the most famous radio shows of all time. Pretty much everyone has heard of it. Although , I admit sometimes this awareness is limited to Bill Cosby’s Chicken Heart routine.
Created by Willis Cooper in 1934, and passed on to Arch Oboler in 1936. Lights Out as a radio series would finally succumb to its own mortality in 1947. The franchise did not end with the demise of the radio show. Lights Out would turn up as a TV series from 1949 to 1952. There have been occasional attempts to revive the series that never had any notable success.
It’s only 11 minutes long it’s from February 23rd of 1938. Far more people have heard of it than have ever heard it. Now, is your chance . From Light’s Out and the pen and tongue in cheek of Arch Olber, it’s the “Chicken Heart”.
Dimension X (April 8 of 1950 – September of 1951) was not the first Science Fiction anthology series on radio, (that distinction belongs to the short-lived and not particularly lamented 2000 plus ) It, however, was the first to utilize published stories from established Science fiction authors, mostly drawing from short stories appearing in Smith and Street’s, Astounding Science Fiction. The show made a practice of adapting the work’s of authors such as Murray Leinster, Ray Bradbury, William Tenn, Robert Heinlein and many others.
A footnote to history is that dimension X was one of the first shows to be recorded on tape. This was so new that one show, “Mars is Heaven”, had to be re-recorded 3 times because the engineer kept erasing the tape while editing it.
This time it’s Dimension X’s adaptation of one of the most famous stories by one of the most Famous Scien...
Diary Of Fate“Peter Drake”(2/2/48).***Lights Out:“Chicken Heart”(2/23/38).***Dimension X:Nightfall(9/9/51).***LibriVox: H. P. Lovecraft’s “The Street” (Dec. 1920).***
http://archive.org/download/Nighttransmisions131-135/NighttransmissionsShow132.mp3%20href=http://archive.org/download/Nighttransmisions131-135/NighttransmissionsShow132.mp3http://www.archive.org/download/NightTransmissionsLowFi64kbs/NightTransmissions1964Kbs.mp3
Heed well you who listen, and remember, there is a page for you in, "The Diary of Fate."
"The Diary of Fate" was a horror program where “Fate”, personified in the person of actor Herbert Lytton, narrates a morality tale, and woe be to the person on the wrong end. This program plays the usual stories of murder, hitchhikers, blackmail, love gone wrong, and the guilty getting their just desserts. The character of Fate plays a bit more of a role than mere observer; he creates situations to force the protagonist into a choice. For the sake of the show, they always choose badly, and the audience gets to listen to their demise unfold.
The show aired from 1947 to 1948, only 24 episodes are known to survive. The show wasn’t as successful as similar shows, like Inner Sanctum, but it did have solid stars, including Lurene Tuttle, Larry Dobkin, Hal Sawyer, Gloria Blondell, Frank Albertson, Jerry Hausner, Howard McNear, Peter Leeds, Ken Peters, Daws Butler and William Johnstone.
February the 23rd of 1948 entry in the “The Diary Of Fate” . A peak into the life of “Peter Drake”. A man comfortable in his life and work. Peter loves his wife Marsha, a proud, greedy woman. And because of that love he finds himself with his pistol pressed against his temple by his own hand.
Light’s Out, one of the most famous radio shows of all time. Pretty much everyone has heard of it. Although , I admit sometimes this awareness is limited to Bill Cosby’s Chicken Heart routine.
Created by Willis Cooper in 1934, and passed on to Arch Oboler in 1936. Lights Out as a radio series would finally succumb to its own mortality in 1947. The franchise did not end with the demise of the radio show. Lights Out would turn up as a TV series from 1949 to 1952. There have been occasional attempts to revive the series that never had any notable success.
It’s only 11 minutes long it’s from February 23rd of 1938. Far more people have heard of it than have ever heard it. Now, is your chance . From Light’s Out and the pen and tongue in cheek of Arch Olber, it’s the “Chicken Heart”.
Dimension X (April 8 of 1950 – September of 1951) was not the first Science Fiction anthology series on radio, (that distinction belongs to the short-lived and not particularly lamented 2000 plus ) It, however, was the first to utilize published stories from established Science fiction authors, mostly drawing from short stories appearing in Smith and Street’s, Astounding Science Fiction. The show made a practice of adapting the work’s of authors such as Murray Leinster, Ray Bradbury, William Tenn, Robert Heinlein and many others.
A footnote to history is that dimension X was one of the first shows to be recorded on tape. This was so new that one show, “Mars is Heaven”, had to be re-recorded 3 times because the engineer kept erasing the tape while editing it.
This time it’s Dimension X’s adaptation of one of the most famous stories by one of the most Famous Scien...
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NightTransmissions Repeat of show 14
Dark Fantasy: “The Man Who Came Back (8/21/48). *** Nightfall: “Love and the Lonely One”.(7/4/80) .*** LibriVox: Evelyn E. Smith’s: “The Blue Tower”(1958). *** Mystery in the Air: “The Marvelous Barastro” (8/7/47). *** Strange Doctor Weird: “The Man Who Lived Twice” (1/30/45). *** Right Click here to download Originating from WKY in Oklahoma City Dark […]
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NightTransmissions Repeat Of Show 20
CBC Nightfall:
“The Monkeys Paw”
(7-11-80).
***
Suspense:
”The Body Snatchers”
(11/24/42).
***
The Columbia Workshop:
“The Fall of the City”
(1937).
***
The Mysterious Traveler:
“The Accusing Corpse””
().
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In segment one is the often produced short story “The Monkey’s Paw”. This time it is from the Canadian Broadcasting Company Via the Program Nightfall . it aired on July the 11th of 1980.
Nightfall, was a radio drama series produced by CBC Radio from July 1980 to June 1983. While primarily a supernatural/horror series, Nightfall featured some episodes in other genres, such as science fiction, mystery, fantasy, and human drama. The series became one of the most popular shows in CBC Radio history, running 100 episodes that featured a mix of original tales and adaptations of both classic and obscure short stories.
You know this one. “The Monkey’s Paw” is a horror short story by author W. W. Jacobs. It was published in England in 1902.
The story is based on the famous “setup” in which three wishes are granted. In the story, the paw of a dead monkey is a talisman that grants its possessor three wishes, but the wishes come with an enormous price for interfering with fate.
For segment 2 Suspense gives us Robert Louis Stevenson’s, “The Body Snatchers” from October the 24th of 1942.
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.
A medical student studying anatomy gets entangled with murderers and psychos in order to attain the cadavers he needs to complete his studies. Yep, it’s the Robert Louis Stevenson classic given the once over by John Dickson Carr. Hey...They could have done worse by old Bobby Louie.
The Fall of the City, a 1937 CBS radio drama by Archibald MacLeishn.
The Columbia Workshop is high art radio at its finest with expert writing and direction by a slew of talented, but relatively unknown people of the moment. The goal of Columbia Workshop old time radio shows included separating itself from popular radio’s overuse of film celebrities and general triviality of commercial orientated old time radio shows. This lead to several revolutions in the method in which a show is made including the development of a soundboard with complicated noises now consider...
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