Showing posts with label Rod Serling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rod Serling. Show all posts

12.20.2021

Old Time Radio


How did I make it almost to the end of this blog without ever doing a post on Old Time Radio?

I’ve been listening to OTR in some fashion or another since I heard that "Your Playhouse Favorites" episode of Guy de Maupassant's "The Necklace" when I was seven or eight (as recounted here. I didn’t start tracking stuff down, though, until about fifteen years ago. 

My place in Chicago used to be in the over the air range of Audio Noir, and I basically just left my kitchen radio tuned to that for years. Sooner or later I started looking things up online and eventually made my way to OTRCat. Now there are many places you can safely and legally download OTR, but I gladly pay OTRCat for the privilege because they've already done all the legwork: pictures, text, info, etc. and organized it all into nice downloadable packages (or CDs or MP3-discs if you prefer) of varying prices to fit your needs. 

Before I found them I belonged to a few different Old Time Radio Clubs, and they ran the gamut from mostly okay to downright terrible. I wish someone at the beginning had told me "Hey, just go to OTRCat." Heed me, people of Earth: this is the way.

I linked to their site for most of the entries below - better than wikipedia and with sample audio in most cases. Here's fifteen(ish) OTR or OTR-adjacent things I've gotten a lot out of over the years, in alphabetical order. 

~


ADVENTURES IN RESEARCH


"Learn! Investigate! Instruct!"

No, it's not V-Ger's great-great-grandfather, it's a series from Dr. Philip Thomas, a physicist who worked for Westinghouse, who wanted to educate the public in entertaining radio dramas about, well, see title.

Its episode titles ("The Magic Cupboard," "The Cow That Stopped Plague," "The Place Where Time Begins") make it sound more like science fiction that science. Fun stuff. 


ANTHOLOGY



Hosted by Harry Fleetwood and presented by the Poetry Center of the 92nd Street YMHA, "Anthology" featured both the work and voices of many of the twentieth century’s most well-known poets as well as classic verse. And some forgotten ones, like "The White Cliffs" by Alice Duer Miller, read by Susan Dunne, whose daughter Irene Dunne played the lead in the movie based on the poem. You’ll hear Laurence Olivier, Dylan Thomas, Alec Guinness, Deems Taylor, and many more - twenty-six hours worth of more. 

I’m surprised no one’s ever sampled the “This is Fleetwood” tagline from each episode or the "Good night and good reading." He was also a part of a different OTR legacy. The Civil Defense Authorities requested WNBC to play a radio tone through the night so that any necessary public announcements could be readily broadcast. The station complied but instead of just a tone choose to broadcast classical music, with Fleetwood hosting. The show continues today, though Harry of course does not. Corporeally anyway.

The theme was Richard Rodgers "Hard Work and Horseplay" from Victory at Sea. Which I am the proud owner of, now, on vinyl, in case anyone wants to celebrate that. (clink) Skaal!



CAVALCADE OF KINGS



A Cavalcade of Kings features the dramatization of the fascinating history of the British Monarchy, including the battles, marriages, and other royal escapades starting in the tenth century through the reign of Queen Victoria.”
 

So says the official description. ‘Nuff said. At fifteen-to-twenty minutes an episode you’re getting a lot of postcard-sized glimpses of things, but that has its appeal, as well. I’m a bit of an Anglophile. And a Francophile and pretty-much-everyone-phile. It was fun to listen to this series while playing Age of Empires II on my computer - I recommend this method, if you're able. 


GUNSMOKE



The quintessential radio western, 1952 – 1961. It's easy to see how it continues to inspire fans in each new generation. One of the few OTR that does, I'd wager. (That and Fibber and Molly McGee. Seriously - two out of every three posts in my OTR group are about that show, it's really something.)

The television show was always playing somewhere when I was growing up. It's synonymous with a certain type of 60s-backdrop-visual that I don't care for very much (at least in color). I love the radio show, though. I'm a few seasons deep - it's going to last me for awhile. 

The cast is great, and the audio production is great. It really gets into your brain, actually, and it's amazing how real Dodge City and environs become from steady listening. Excellent production quality. Kitty's saloon scenes, for example, featured a real honky-tonk piano being played live in a crowd of extras, all mixed with flair by sound engineers Ray Kemper and Tom Hanley.) Hats off to producer/director Norman McDonnell. 

You know what you’re getting into with the stories (Dodge City, mid-1880's or so, Matt Dillon, US Marshall “the first man they look for, the last they want to meet,” loyal sidekick Chester, likes-his-drink Doc, and saloonkeeper-plus Kitty, played by William Conrad, Parley Baer, Howard McNearr, and Georgia Ellis respectively) but radio did allow for some frankess regarding murder and prostitution and what not than television did in the following decade. 


JOHNNY CARSON



I'll listen to as much Johnny as anyone wants to make available. There's not a whole heck of a lot at this OTRCat bundle, but what's there is great, particularly the two-part History of Comedy Johnny did for NBC Radio. I always thought it was funny that Johnny Carson's thesis in college was literally "How to Write Comedic Jokes." (Even funnier that his minor was in physics! I don't know why, it's just a detail that always makes me laugh.)


While we're here... oh yeah!



THE LIVES OF GREAT MEN




Some cool background on both the show and Edward Howard Griggs
at the link. This series is one of my favorites. 


“Whether the listener agrees with Dr. Briggs' conclusions or not is less important than acknowledging the true entertainment value of the material presented, which is, in fact, there in abundance. The Lives of Great Men does require the listener to be open to learning something rather than simply receiving entertainment, but learning is often its own reward.”


So say we all. More verbiage to speak to the V-ger in my heart. 


LUX RADIO THEATER



The full collection - a staggering seven hundred and forty six hours - will set you back $160 over at OTRCat, and I've never taken that plunge, but I've dove in here and there. I encourage you to read the whole story over at the link - this is an important bridge between the Golden Age of Hollywood and the WW2-and-beyond era. Sort of an intermediate period between dynasties, as bridged by Cecil B. DeMille. 


"The Lux Radio Theatre was a one-of-a-kind OTR show. Imagine the greatest Hollywood stars doing one-hour versions of their biggest motion pictures, complete with full orchestra, live on stage with a studio audience. Every genre is included, from darkest noir crime dramas to historical epics to bubbly musicals and broad comedies.

The stars of the movie are usually in the productions, although sometimes contracts or schedules meant that another star took the part. In some another star would be featured in one of the major roles. Some stars were paid upward of $5000 for their appearance on Lux Radio Theater.  The productions were live, with full orchestra, and many Hollywood legends were unused to performing in public without the benefit of retakes. Needless to say, the performances in every show are singular."


NEWS RECORDINGS OF...



What you see is what you get here. News broadcasts from the fifties on up. Fantastic. I throw a bunch of these on a flashdrive and listen to during dinner and then blurt out stuff about Kissinger and John Foster Dulles and what not. "Just listening to the news! Is this Biafra thing going to work out?"

All kidding aside, these are both fascinating glimpses of the news cycles of yesteryear - which really do drive home the cyclical nature of these things; take any year represented here and almost all of them could sub in for even 2020, the most strikingly different of recent memory - and some great primary sources. In particular, the University of Kansas audio biography of Eisenhower, hagiographic as it is, all the NBC Monitor shows, all the Years in Review from the legendary WKNR as well as the eternal BBC and even odder fare like the History of Radio Jingles or sports news (and argument) - all of it has a certain hypnotic quality that serves well for either background or close listening. 

(Note: certain parties around my household seem to disagree on this last sentence. So it goes!)



STAR WARS RADIO DRAMA  



You ever hear this one? Or the two sequels? Probably you have. I was late to the party on this one, but it's fantastic. I really love all the contemporaneous tie-in stuff for Star Wars of the original trilogy era. I'm slowly making my way through all the Russ Manning and Archie Goodwin newspaper comics as well. (Emphasis on slowly.)

Perry King as Han Solo, Brock Peters as Darth Vader, all the bells and whistles and plenty of the original cast. Solid gold, all of it. 


THAT WAS THE YEAR



Here's a fascinating radio show that dramatizes the major historical events between the years 1896-1934. Not in order, either - I thought that was just the way it was bundled up, but it was intentionally presented out of order. You'll occasionally hear people say certain events in American history were intentionally obscured, and I agree, of course - it's true. Some of the ones folks often mention are all over this series, though, which leads me to believe a lot of complaints about the past are rooted in different things than familiarity with how it actually was.

I mean, not that this is a documentary or what not, but the past is often surprising is all I'm getting at. That ethereal chorus of ooos and oohhhs is so damn eerie, it's like literally listening to ghosts. (They used to read advertising over this part, hence the long portion of wordless content.) One of the more memorable drives of my life was from Chicago to St. Louis, February 2018, in the aftermath of an ice storm; I left my house before the sun came up, and when it did I was about halfway down-state. IL is basically a prairie state once you get out of Chicago, so long stretches of farm, flat as the eye can see, punctuated by clusters of trees and the occasional farmhouse. All of that was iced over and silhouetted in the winter sunrise, with this - and all the ooo-ing and ooooh-ing - playing all nine hours. (The drive only took four, but I had a lot of St. Louis driving to keep doing.)

Why I consider "where I was when I heard it" to be pertinent info, I don't know, but man, I barely want to tell you about the show itself and mostly about that drive. Weird. Things I hear while driving often impact me powerfully - or differently, at least.


THE NIGHT AIR 




Not an OTR by any stretch, but a fantastic program, now defunct alas but that link still houses plenty of archived stuff - I don't know if the iTunes podcast is still available. Years back, I would download the episodes and then burn them to disc. (It gets worse: the vehicle I drove then only had a cassette deck, so then I'd tape those discs to cassettes.) Anyway, this serves me well these days as I have a folderful of forty episodes or so, and they all hold up well.

Well, if you like this sort of thing (audio collages that sort of circle a given topic rather than linearly explore it). I slipped the "Once Upon a Time" episode onto an old mix for my then-wife back in the just dating phase and she thought there was something wrong with her CD player. Whoops! Not her thing, hey that's okay.


ARMED FORCES VIETNAM RADIO (AFVN)



Also not her thing! Or most people's. Even my Dad's - I dropped all of this on a flash drive for him and thought he might get a kick out of it, but I think he was mostly baffled. I remember asking him when Good Morning, Vietnam was big if he remembered much Vietnam radio and he said hardly any. Ah well.

As for me the fun here is in all the great ads and promos, the Chris Noel and DamBusters stuff, Pat Sajak on the DamBusters (he doesn't do much, it's just a fun historical footnote), the AFVN 1968 special "A Year in the Life of Man", and the strange numbers-station-esque air traffic offerings.


WLT: A RADIO ROMANCE



Also not OTR but a great book set in that world. Some disagree - the Goodreads reviews are all kind of harsh - but I kind of love it. I'm used to parting ways with wisdom both conventional and esoteric when it comes to Garrison Keillor.

WLT is disparaged in a lot of those Goodreads reviews as Prairie Home Companion just in OTR. And overly juvenile. I honestly did not find it to be either of those things - juvenile, sure, but not overly so. When I first started listening, it was doing stuff like this sketch - performance and production steeped in OTR technique. I stopped listening to NPR and PHC by extension four or five years before GK stepped down and they renamed it. I'll always champion select works of Keillor's; this is one of them.


WORLD WAR TWO




Like Lux Radio Theater, there's enough here to keep you busy - not just the news (but there's hundreds of hours of that), but Tommy Dorsey, GI Jive, Artie Shaw, You Can't Do Business with Hitler - for longer than the actual war. 

Not to mention stuff like Hop Harrigan, America's Ace of the Airwaves. Those came out just around the end of 1943, so the tide had just begun to turn. And boy does Hop let his Nazi enemies know it. The episodes are fantastically titled "On the Trail of the Death's Head Squadron," "Hey Joe, You Dumb Jerk!" "Back to Nazi Island" etc. 




YOURS TRULY JOHNNY DOLLAR



The Man with the Million Dollar Expense Account. Not as impressive as it used to be, I guess. Johnny works for the Universal Adjustment Bureau, which sends him all over the country and into all sorts of situations. It’s a great set-up for a show. They should reboot it – the concept lends itself to any era and can be taken in all sorts of directions.

Many actors played the role of Johnny over the fourteen years of the show’s existence: Dick Powell, Charles Russell, Edmond O’Brien, John Lund, Gerald Mohr, Bob Readick, and Mandel Cramer, but the most closely tied to the role (arguably) is Bob Bailey.


“(Each show) always began, "expense account, item one," with him telling about cab fare, then went on through the air fare, his trip across the country, and so on through the adventure. At the end of the show, he would finish his expense report and sign it, "Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar." Nothing was too small for the account, including a nickel for aspirin or the two cents that Johnny felt like if he followed a wrong lead. (…) Yours Truly Johnny Dollar aired for the last time on September 30, 1962, just before the final episode of Suspense. This was the last broadcast of the Golden Age Of Radio.”


ZERO HOUR WITH ROD SERLING



I've barely scratched the surface with this one, but I've liked what I've heard. This is on tap for 2022 - and probably beyond.

Shatner did a stretch of episodes in May 1974. I was born in '74 and there are some years where I just collect everything in them. So, I'd have gotten to this one anyway, but throw in a Shatner/Serling connection and holy moley. Insert meme of just-taking-of-the-money.


~

Thanks for reading, folks.

6.25.2019

The Twilight Zone: The Hunt


It's been awhile since I did one of these TZTs. I hope to get a few more of them up over the course of 2019. 

A couple of folks have asked when I'm going to do something with the new Twilight Zone currently airing on CBS Access. I definitely look forward to seeing it, and when I do I'll be happy to set a place for it with the others. Whenever they announce a release date for Star Trek: Picard I'll take the All Access plunge. (Last time I did so - for the NFL playoffs - I thought great I'll finally watch Discovery - and ended up watching like 25 episodes of The Price Is Right instead. Go figure.)

For tonight, thought, let's have a look at an episode I've loved for many years:


Aired January 26th, 1962

"An old man and a hound dog named Rip off for an evening's pleasure in quest of raccoon. Usually, these evenings end with one tired old man, one battle-scarred hound dog and one or more extremely dead raccoons, but as you may suspect, that will not be the case tonight. These hunters won't be coming home from the hill. They're headed for the backwoods... of the Twilight Zone."

Hyder and Rachel Simpson are living out their twilight years in an unnamed mountain community where they've lived their whole lives. Over supper, Rachel asks Hyder not to go hunting that night as she has been seeing signs of ill portent all week: blood on the moon, weird birds, etc. He tells her not to worry; he'll be fine.


Whoops.
A raccoon that might've given Old Dan and Little Ann a run for their money leads Hyder and Rip out onto a log over a river with a fast undercurrent. First Rip then Hyder fall into the water and don't resurface.

Hyder and Rip wake up on the side of the river. Worried about what Rachel's going to say about all this, Hyder walks home. As he nears his house, he sees his neighbors digging a hole. They resolutely ignore him when he asks what they think they're doing digging a hole on his property, so he responds in the traditional manner:

He softens, though, once he learns they're digging a grave, and one of them is a little careless with the smaller of the two coffins.

"Have a little care!"
"It's just a dog."
"Not to some folks."

Hyder starts to realize he and Rip didn't survive the hunt once he gets inside and sees his wife in her funeral outfit and when the pastor and pallbearers don't answer his questions.

He follows the throng outside but is puzzled by a fence he does not remember running alongside the road. ("I don't memorize ever seeing this fence" he tells Rip. Rip inwardly rolls his eyes.) They walk along until they come to a gate. A man steps out from behind it and asks Hyder a bunch of questions, before confirming Hyder's suspicions that he has indeed reached the clearing at the end of the path.


"Then I take you would aim at being St. Peter?"
"I keep the gate; that's a fact."



Hyder's about to enter the gates of heaven when he's told he can't bring Rip. No Rip? What kind of heaven is this? This is folks heaven, the man replies; dog heaven's up the road a ways. Without hesitation, Hyder says no thank you. ("Any place that's too highfalutin for Rip is too fancy for me.") The man tries to persuade him otherwise, to no avail. Failing to entice him inside, he gives what sounds like good advice: don't be rash, neighbor, the stakes are eternity; why don't you just sit down and think it over for awhile?


Which he does.

As he waits, another man appears, and this one knows his and Rip's names before Hyder has to tell him. When he tells them he's there to bring them to heaven, Hyder repeats what he told that fella up the road: he has no intention of going anywhere that Rip's not welcome to walk in beside him. The man grows quite concerned - you didn't get messed up with nobody in there, did you? When Hyder says it would be one hell of a place to settle down for eternity with no dogs and no raccoon hunting, the man tells him he isn't far wrong; that place was hell.  

Good thing Rip was there or Hyder might have been tricked. "A man?


Well, he'll walk right into Hell with both eyes open... but even the devil can't fool a dog."

"Travelers to unknown regions would be well advised to take along the family dog. He could just save you from entering the wrong gate. At least, it happened that way once in a mountainous area... of the Twilight Zone."

And off they go to heaven. The End.

The Twilight Zone Vortex speaks for both sides of the fanbase on this one in its review: "Good intentions but the finished product is an incredibly flawed episode. The pacing is slow, the direction tiresome, and the premise derivative. (However) many fans have warm memories of this episode. One such admirer was fellow Twilight Zone writer George Clayton Johnson who regards it as one of his favorite episodes. "With this story, Earl brings a southern country sensibility to The Twilight Zone that is American to the core," Johnson said in an interview, "which assures us that being simple is not being stupid…the story has such a classic feeling that one is tempted to believe that Hamner may not have made the story up but instead borrowed it from some ancient book of folk tales…It has stuck in my mind like fishhooks."

Mine, too. I first saw this when I was 15 or so, with my own dog (good ol' Bandit, R.I.{P. buddy) by my side. Did we used to watch The Twilight Zone together? It'd make a good story, but I don't think we ever had a serious ritual of it. He used to just come in and lay down near me when I was watching anything. Anyway: the regional or afterlife musings of this story aside, it's mainly a story about loving dogs.

"And another thing- don't talk about him like that when he can hear you. Rip's got feelings. I don't want them hurt."


Rachel's response amuses me:
"I'll feed him, but I'll be switched if I'm going to start sweet-talking him."

So yeah just as something to express a simple truth (dogs are awesome and we probably never live up to their intense loyalty and affection for us) in an uncomplicated manner, I like it. Everything else is secondary to that.

Other things I like: Rachel and Hyder, the tenderness shown to one another, primarily through Hyder's dialogue with others (particularly at the end when he makes sure Rachel won't have any trouble with that fella up the road before he follows the angel into heaven) or just through some of the acting.  


Like the looks on his face, not when he discovers the truth of his condition, but when he sees firsthand how it's impacting Rachel and that he can't do anything to comfort her.

Hamner says that "Hyder and Rachel were actually early versions of Grandma and Grandpa Walton. Around the time that he wrote the episode he was also writing a series of short stories called “The Old Man and the Old Woman” and he decided to use the two main characters, who were fully-developed already, as the main characters of "The Hunt." He continued to write stories featuring the elderly couple and they eventually ended up in The Waltons." There's plenty more on Hamner's career at the link up there - have at it, it's all interesting. I've got some Waltons on tap for one of these days/years.  

Also, I like that the devil is all just-the-facts (name, number, how's-you-die) and this subtly creepy shot of the road into Hell beyond the gate. ("That pasture up there they call the Elysian field. Cross that and you reach the golden street that takes you directly to the Old Master's headquarters.") 

And now, some leftover screencaps.

 ~

Considering the nature of the episode, maybe naming the dog "RIP" was too much? Or is it just the right touch? I've been asking myself that for 30 years ago, someone out there (probably not reading this blog here but hey) even longer.