Friday, March 7, 2025
William Spier
Friday, February 28, 2025
The Adventures of Sam Spade
Sam Spade shot him to national fame. The character, as Spier saw it, would Have many easily identifiable traits. The first thing Spade usually wanted to know was, "How much money you got on you?" "Two hundred? Okay, I'll take that and you can pay me the rest later." But Spade wasn't a spendthrift -- he never threw silver-dollar tips a la Johnny Dollar, even if he could have put it on his expense account. Spade favorite way to travel was by streetcar; it took him almost anywhere for a dime. He disliked cabs and liked cheap booze. You didn't need more than an occasional, subtle reminder: those glasses clinking every week as Sam opened his desk drawer and began dictation were enough. We knew Sam and Effie weren't toasting each other with Sal Hepatica. Sam was a man who worked out of his desk, and the thing closest at hand in that top drawer just might be a half-empty bottle of Old Granddad.
His clients got bumped off with startling regularity. Then Sam sent his report (and presumably his bill) to the widows. He dictated his cases to his faithful secretary, Effie Perrine, a babbling, man-hungry female who might have been the adult Corliss Archer. Each case came out as a report, dated, signed, and delivered. Spade license number - 137596 - was always included in the report. The cases unfolded in chronological order, the scenes shifting between Sam and Effie and the dramatization of Sam's dictation. Effie, who always seemed on the verge of tears whenever Sam became involved (as he did weekly) with a curvy client, was beautifully played by Lurene Tuttle, Jerry Hausner played Sam's lawyer, Sid Weiss. Lud Gluskin directed the music and Dick Joy announced. Soon after the series began, Ann Lorraine dropped her writing duties, and Gil Doud became Bob Tallman's writing partner.
The show ran in its original format through the episode of September 17, 1950. Then Howard Duff quit for a fling at movies, and Sam Spade languished for two months. On November 17, 1950, it returned on NBC. Duff's absence was handled in usual network form: by importing a new voice. NBC ran the show as though nothing had happened, using Steve Dunne as a boyish-sounding Spade. Spier and Miss Tuttle followed the series over, and for a time so did Wildroot. Wildroot and the listeners all got wise around the same time. Dunne was a good radio man, but he sounded like Sam in knee pants.
Duff once said that Hammett had done such a great job in The Maltese Falcon that any actor could have played Sam and become a radio hero. He saw that theory proved wrong.
Dashiell Hammett's name was removed from the series in the late 1940s because he was being investigated for involvement with the Communist Party. Later, when Howard Duff's name appeared in the Red Channels book, he was not invited to play the role when the series made the switch to NBC in 1950.
Friday, February 21, 2025
Ben Alexander
Friday, February 14, 2025
CLASSIC OLD TIME RADIO is back!
Friday, February 7, 2025
Mason Adams
Adams was born in Brooklyn, New York, and was of Jewish descent. He earned a master's degree in Performing and Speech Arts from the University of Michigan. He also studied Drama at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He made his debut in 1940 in a summer play at the Hilltop Theater in Baltimore.
Adams worked on many radio programs during the Golden Age of Radio. A notable recurring role was that of Pepper Young on Pepper Young's Family, which ran from 1947 to 1959. He also portrayed the deadly Nazi Atomic Man in a classic 1945 serial on the radio version of The Adventures of Superman.
Adams is perhaps most famous for his role as editor-in-chief Charlie Hume in the television series Lou Grant, which ran from 1977 to 1982. During his work on Lou Grant, Adams performed perhaps his most important role, as the President of the United States in the film Omen III: The Final Conflict (1981), with Sam Neill.
During the 1960s he was ubiquitous in television commercials for food and other household products, most notably for Chiffon margarine and Crest toothpaste (“Helps stop cavities before they start”). He also did the voice part for television commercials for Smucker's canned goods (“With a name like Smucker's, it's got to be good!”). He resumed this work in his later years.
Beginning in the 1980s, Adams did the voiceover for the commercial for Cadbury Creme eggs, which were advertised on television with Adams' catchy catchphrase: “Nobody knows Easter better than him.” He was the announcer for Lysol disinfectant (in 1986). Adams also did radio commercials for the Salvation Army. In addition, Adams was the narrator for Kix commercials in the 1990s, as well as in some Dentyne and Swanson's commercials. He was also the television promotional news announcer for WCBS (in 1992).
In one of the first episodes of Sesame Street, he played the narrator and voiced a cartoon with a jazzy triangle, and a slightly “square” square (with jazz music in the background). This caricature would be repeated on the show for many years well into the 1980s.
In the HBO miniseries From the Earth to the Moon he portrayed Senator Clinton P. Anderson. During the 1970s he co-starred in the NBC soap opera Another World.
He was married to Margot Feinberg (1957-2005). They had a daughter, Betsy, and a son, Bill. Adams died on April 26, 2005 in Manhattan, of natural causes.
Friday, January 31, 2025
Franklin Pierce Adams
Friday, January 24, 2025
Jane Ace
William Spier
William Spier was editor, producer, director. A lifelong radio man, he had broken in during the primitive days of 1929 and earned his strip...

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