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Casey, Crime Photographer, known by a variety of titles on radio (aka Crime Photographer, Flashgun Casey, Casey, Press Photographer) was a media franchise from the 1930s to the 1960s. The character was the creation of novelist George Harmon Coxe .
In December 2012, Old Time Radio distributor Radio Archives published Nightbeat: Night Stories, an ebook anthology of six new Nightbeat stories. [5] Authors included were Howard Hopkins, Paul Bishop, Will Murray, Tommy Hancock (who also served as editor), Mark Squirek, and Bobby Nash. Each story used the traditional radio opening and closing ...
The Beatrice Kay Show; Behind the Mike; The Bell Telephone Hour; Betty and Bob; Beulah [1]: 26–27 Beyond Midnight; The Bickersons; Big Guy; The Big Show; Big Sister; The Big Story; Big Town; The Bill Goodwin Show; The Billie Burke Show; The Bing Crosby and Rosemary Clooney Show; Bing Crosby Entertains; The Bird's Eye Open House; The Bishop ...
Mr. Chameleon is a detective fiction radio drama created by Frank Hummert and produced by Frank and Anne Hummert. [1] It ran on CBS Radio from July 14, 1948, [2] to 1951 [3] or 1953. [1] The series starred Karl Swenson as a New York police detective who is a master of disguise, and who assumes a new identity in each episode in order to catch a ...
The Adventures of Sam Spade, Detective was a radio series based loosely on the private detective character Sam Spade, created by writer Dashiell Hammett for The Maltese Falcon. The show ran for 13 episodes on ABC in 1946, for 157 episodes on CBS in 1946–1949, and finally for 75 episodes on NBC in 1949–1951.
Gunsmoke is an American western radio series, which was developed for radio by John Meston and Norman Macdonnell. The series ran for nine seasons and was broadcast by CBS. [1] The first episode of the series originally aired in the United States on April 26, 1952, [2] and the final first-run episode aired on June 11, 1961. [3]
Let George Do It is an American radio drama series produced from 1946 to 1954 by Owen and Pauline Vinson.Bob Bailey starred as private investigator George Valentine; Olan Soule voiced the role in 1954. [1]
The Lum & Abner radio show of March 29, 1940, "The Store Closes to Shoot a Movie," announced a break in the radio series in order to make the first film of the series, Dreaming Out Loud, which was released the same year. At a rate of roughly one per year, another five films would be produced in the series.