Philip Marlowe The Rustin Hickory 9/10/49 Gerald Mohr Oldtime Radio Noir Crime Drama  @Goldenageofcinema
Philip Marlowe The Rustin Hickory 9/10/49 Gerald Mohr Oldtime Radio Noir Crime Drama  @Goldenageofcinema
The Theatre of the Mind | Philip Marlowe "The Rustin Hickory" 9/10/49 Gerald Mohr Oldtime Radio Noir Crime Drama @Goldenageofcinema | Uploaded May 2015 | Updated October 2024, 3 hours ago.
The Adventures of Philip Marlowe "The Rustin Hickory" Saturday, Sept. 10, 1949 Oldtime Radio Noir Crime Drama

Re-mixed for Stereo

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Author Raymond Chandler introduced mystery fans to hard-boiled gumshoe Philip Marlowe in his first novel, "The Big Sleep," in 1939. Chandler's "white knight in a trench coat" would go on to become one of the most popular sleuths in the history of the crime fiction genre, and the success of subsequent novels soon spread into other mass media as well - most notably the classic 1944 film noir, "Murder, My Sweet" (adapted from Chandler's "Farewell, My Lovely"), which starred former movie chorus boy Dick Powell as the detective. Powell was also instrumental in bringing the Marlowe character to radio, reprising his screen role (along with co-star Claire Trevor) in a "Lux Radio Theater" production of the film over CBS Radio on June 11, 1945.

Philip Marlowe's first regular weekly series, "The Adventures of Philip Marlowe", premiered over NBC Radio June 17, 1947 as a summer replacement for "The Bob Hope Show," and starred actor Van Heflin as Chandler's famous creation. The author wasn't particularly thrilled with either Heflin or the series, remarking to his contemporary, Erle Stanley Gardner (creator of Perry Mason), "It was thoroughly flat." The Marlowe character would then return to the airwaves on September 26, 1948 in a series for CBS with radio veteran Gerald Mohr as the titular sleuth. (Chandler grudgingly admitted satisfaction with this incarnation, remarking to one of the show's writers that Mohr's voice at least "packed personality.

"The Adventures of Philip Marlowe" was mostly sustained throughout its two-year run (except for a brief sponsorship by Ford Motors in 1950), and while it had difficulty landing an "angel" to pay its bills, it did have a devoted fan in CBS patriarch William Paley. (Paley pressed upon both Macdonnell and CBS' director of programming Harry Ackerman to create a "Philip Marlowe in the old west," a request that was nurtured for several years before finally giving birth to "Gunsmoke" in 1952.) After returning to CBS for a brief summer run in 1951, Philip Marlowe folded up his radio tent. listening pleasure.

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Philip Marlowe "The Rustin Hickory" 9/10/49 Gerald Mohr Oldtime Radio Noir Crime Drama @Goldenageofcinema

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