Friday, December 12, 2025
Red Ryder
Friday, December 5, 2025
Peggy Allenby
Peggy Allenby was born on February 1, 1896 and died on March 23, 1966. She was an American stage, film, television, and radio actress. Born Eleanor Byrne Fox in New York City, she married actors Robert Armstrong (married from 1920 to 1925) and John McGovern (married in 1932).
Allenby may be best known for her role as "Mattie Lane Grimsley" on the CBS-TV soap opera Edge of Night. Peggy Allenby was in the show's cast from 1956-66. She also appeared on Cosmopolitan Theater (1951), The Philco Television Playhouse (1951), First Love (1954), Studio One (1954) and The United States Steel Hour.
Between 1930 and 1950, her voice was featured in numerous broadcasts, including the radio dramas Second Husband, Young Doctor Malone, David Harum, and Road of Life. She had the lead role in Phyl Coe Radio Mysteries.
She performed on Broadway, most notably as Willy Loman's wife, Linda, in the 1949 production of Death of a Salesman, where she replaced Mildred Dunnock. She also appeared in Thornton Wilder's play The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden.
Allenby was married to actors John McGovern and Robert Armstrong. Her marriage with John McGovern produced two children, John Jr. and Eleanor. She died in 1966 in Park West Hospital after a short illness, aged 70.
Friday, November 28, 2025
Macabre
Macabre was a horror radio series that aired in 1961 and 1962, produced by the Far East Network (FEN) of the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS). Created primarily by William Verdier, who wrote, directed, and performed in most of the episodes, the series delivered chilling tales of the supernatural and macabre. Macabre emerged from a contest victory by the FEN over Armed Forces Network-Germany, leading to its worldwide broadcast. Despite its short run of only eight or nine episodes, it’s remembered for its effective horror storytelling and the dedicated efforts of its creators and performers, many of whom were military personnel.
Macabre was basically written and directed as a labor of love by radio employees who were not professional writers or actors, and yet, it aired worldwide during the period of OTR. (It slipped in just under the wire in 1962). The driving force behind the program was William Verdier, an Assistant Production Director for the FEN (Far East Network). He was a former NBC and CBS radio employee who ended up working in Japan for the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS). Drawing on his previous involvement with other radio dramas while working for NBC (Inner Sanctum, Suspense, and Ellery Queen), Verdier wrote seven out of the nine dramas for the new horror series, most of which he also directed. Other staff and local talent joined in the fun. The series actually began as the result of a contest between the FEN and the AFRTS in Germany. Both networks sent tapes to the AFRTS headquarters in Los Angeles, and FEN Toyko won (Digital Deli Too).
The results of the series overall are mixed. The acting is decent, but at times, lackluster. Verdier plays the lead in numerous shows, probably because they had a tough time finding good actors without an accent who would work within the budget--assuming they had one. (The limited resources become especially obvious when they read the credits and most everyone is military personal, including the host, Staff Sergeant Al Lapage.) Some of the pre-recorded sound effects don't sound natural, and other pre-recorded music isn't always a good match for the action. But these are little things common in other programs as well, and they are easy to ignore when you're caught up in the story. Some of the plot devices seem a little strained, but then surprise you with a final twist. There are many scenes that are chilling, and Verdier goes out of his way to deliver the goods for horror fans. Like Vardier told the Pacific Stars and Stripes newspaper writer, "There will be no holds barred, and when people get killed, you will hear it happen." (Nov 13, 1961)
There are indications that a second season was released beginning December 10, 1962 and running for eighteen weeks through April 8, 1963. Pacific Stars and Stripes announced the debut episode as “The Strange Diary of Basil Rene”. Another entry from February 25, 1963 listed an episode title of “The Cleverness of Remarkable Me”, and the March 17, 1963 edition listed “The Crystalline Man”, presumably a repeat episode or a reuse of the script from January 1, 1962. No additional information is currently available about this second season.
Friday, November 21, 2025
Alonzo Deen Cole
Friday, November 14, 2025
The Haunting Hour
With a known run of at least 52 unique scripts and more doubtful further 39 to 52 scripts, it would appear that the series was in demand for at least four years--in and out of syndication. Given the high quality of NBC Network voice talent in the circulating episodes, one can well imagine that the remainder of the yet alleged, undiscovered, or uncirculated episodes have at least as much to recommend them.
Thankfully, as with many other examples of Golden Age Radio productions, many of the existing episodes in circulation can be directly attributed to the efforts of the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service.
True to its genre, the circulating episodes provide some highly compelling supernatural dramas--as well as a subset of fascinating mysteries and detective dramas. There's no reason to expect any less of any new episodes that surface in the coming years. Indeed, we've identified at least eleven previously uncirculated AFRTS-transcribed episodes among our own yet-to-be digitally transferred holdings of over 37,000 electrical transcriptions and reels. Certainly as we continue to wade through them and complete their transfer, we'll continue to update the log below, and the contents of these holdings.
Friday, November 7, 2025
The Witch's Tale
Cole's spooky show was hosted by Old Nancy, the Witch of Salem, who introduced a different terror tale each week. The role of Old Nancy was created by stage actress Adelaide Fitz-Allen, who died in 1935 at the age of 79. Cole replaced her with 13-year-old Miriam Wolfe, and Martha Wentworth was also heard as Old Nancy on occasion. Cole himself provided the sounds of Old Nancy's cat, Satan. Cole's wife, Marie O'Flynn, portrayed the lead female characters on the program, and the supporting cast included Mark Smith and Alan Devitte.
For syndication, the shows were recorded live during broadcast and distributed to other stations. These recordings were destroyed by Cole in 1961, so few episodes survive. Cole was also the writer, producer, and director of the radio mystery-crime drama, Casey, Crime Photographer.
In November 1936, Alonzo Deen Cole edited The Witch's Tales magazine with the lead story by Cole. It ran for only two issues.
The show's narrator, Old Nancy, inspired other radio narrators of the time, such as Raymond of Inner Sanctum. She is also credited with inspiring the creation of the Old Witch by EC Comics, a publisher famous for its horror comics, such as Tales From the Crypt.
Because the original recordings were destroyed by Cole in 1961, only a small number of episodes have survived. However, some episodes can be found available on platforms like Audible and on vintage radio collections like Relic Radio and Spotify.
Friday, October 31, 2025
The Hermit's Cave
In 1942, WJR's broadcasts of the show were recorded and broadcast a week later on WBBM in Chicago, Illinois. By 1943, transcriptions of the WJR version of the program were also being broadcast in eight additional cities. KMPC AM in Los Angeles, California, broadcast it from 1940 to 1944, with William Conrad as producer. Over 800 episodes were produced[citation needed] but fewer than 40 are currently available. Show sponsors included the Carter Coal Company which advertised its home-heating coal product, Olga Coal, and the Simoniz Company which promoted its various automotive care products like Simoniz Cleaner.
The Hermit's Cave was narrated by the character, the Hermit, with a majority of episodes beginning with the following dialogue: "Ghost stories! Weird stories. And murders, too! The Hermit knows of them all! Turn out your lights. Turn them out, and listen while the Hermit tells you ..."
Throughout the years, the voice of the Hermit was provided by various actors beginning with John Kent and later by Charles Penman, Toby Grimmer, Klock Ryder, Mel Johnson, and John Dehner. In January 1950, The Hermit's Cave returned to WJR.
The Hermit's Cave is a notable example of the "best heard in the dark" radio horror shows, with many episodes now available for listening on platforms like Audible and Spotify.
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