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Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar - 007 | Old Time Radio Classic Detective Drama
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar was a popular CBS radio detective drama (1949–1962) featuring a freelance insurance investigator who traveled across the U.S. solving cases, often involving murder, fraud, or theft. Johnny Dollar, known as "the man with the action-packed expense account," concluded every case by itemizing his expenses in a report to his employers.
Appearing on CBS Radio, Johnny Dollar was heard each week flying off to a different town filled with danger and possibly murder as he tried to get to the bottom of insurance fraud. There were rarely any recurring characters except Dollar; despite sometime romance and friends, the character was generally a loner. These early episodes, however, tended to be flat and the character of Dollar too dry. Compared to the likes of Howard Duff's Sam Spade, Johnny Dollar was too much the wisecracker, always ready with a flip phrase. During that year, Paul Dudley and Gil Doud wrote the show. So at the start of the 1950 season, Charles Russell was out and veteran film actor Edmund O'Brien stepped in as the second Johnny Dollar. The series during the O'Brien years improved with scripts by expert crime writers such as E. Jack Neumann, John Michael Hayes, Sidney Marshall and Blake Edwards. The character took on the stereotype of the American detective developed by Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. Dollar was more hardboiled; short on emotion, his softer side rarely appeared. O'Brien left in 1952 and John Lund became Dollar number three. With Lund in the role, the character as developed by O'Brien remained.
In 1955, radio actor Bob Bailey, fresh from his long run as George Valentine in Let George Do It, stepped into the role as the fourth Johnny Dollar (there was an audition show with Dick Powell in 1948 that is not counted). It was with Bailey that the series really blossomed. Changing to a 15-minute format five times a week, and under the sharp eye of the new producer/director, Jack Johnstone, the scripts went much deeper into characterization and plot. And Bailey's depiction of Dollar had shades of the gritty street fighter, yet bright and sensitive. With a strong cast (many of the same veteran radio actors appearing in different roles) and excellent directing, the portrayals were much more real. And exciting; listen to such serials as "The Open Town Matter" or "The MacCormack Matter." Even while radio drama was already declining, this was radio acting at its best. One had the impression that these were real people carrying on conversations, not actors reading scripts. The sound effects, some of which were canned, fit into the scripts so well as to produce some very exciting adventure/mystery.
But doing a daily show even if transcribed weekly was taxing, so by the end of 1956, the series reverted to thirty minute, once-a-week episodes. But the power of the show continued, due a lot to the continued presence of both Bailey and Johnstone. Gradually, however, toward the end of the 1950's, the show began to sound tired - some of the scripts were weak and even Bailey did not always seem excited.
Bailey left the show when it moved to New York production studios and initially Bob Readick filled Johnny Dollar's shows. However, that was only a transition that lasted six months. In June, 1961, Mandel Kramer came to the role. He was perhaps the second best of the Dollar portrayals. Kramer's Dollar displayed more cynical humor than Bailey's. Johnny Dollar remained sensitive yet tough and with Jack Johnstone continuing as producer, the series remained poignant right up to its demise.
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar - 007
00:00:00 The Department Store Swindle Matter
00:30:00 Death Takes A Working Day
01:00:00 The S.S. Malay Trader Ship
01:30:04 The Gravedigger's Spades
Видео Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar - 007 | Old Time Radio Classic Detective Drama канала Rod's Radio Reruns
Appearing on CBS Radio, Johnny Dollar was heard each week flying off to a different town filled with danger and possibly murder as he tried to get to the bottom of insurance fraud. There were rarely any recurring characters except Dollar; despite sometime romance and friends, the character was generally a loner. These early episodes, however, tended to be flat and the character of Dollar too dry. Compared to the likes of Howard Duff's Sam Spade, Johnny Dollar was too much the wisecracker, always ready with a flip phrase. During that year, Paul Dudley and Gil Doud wrote the show. So at the start of the 1950 season, Charles Russell was out and veteran film actor Edmund O'Brien stepped in as the second Johnny Dollar. The series during the O'Brien years improved with scripts by expert crime writers such as E. Jack Neumann, John Michael Hayes, Sidney Marshall and Blake Edwards. The character took on the stereotype of the American detective developed by Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. Dollar was more hardboiled; short on emotion, his softer side rarely appeared. O'Brien left in 1952 and John Lund became Dollar number three. With Lund in the role, the character as developed by O'Brien remained.
In 1955, radio actor Bob Bailey, fresh from his long run as George Valentine in Let George Do It, stepped into the role as the fourth Johnny Dollar (there was an audition show with Dick Powell in 1948 that is not counted). It was with Bailey that the series really blossomed. Changing to a 15-minute format five times a week, and under the sharp eye of the new producer/director, Jack Johnstone, the scripts went much deeper into characterization and plot. And Bailey's depiction of Dollar had shades of the gritty street fighter, yet bright and sensitive. With a strong cast (many of the same veteran radio actors appearing in different roles) and excellent directing, the portrayals were much more real. And exciting; listen to such serials as "The Open Town Matter" or "The MacCormack Matter." Even while radio drama was already declining, this was radio acting at its best. One had the impression that these were real people carrying on conversations, not actors reading scripts. The sound effects, some of which were canned, fit into the scripts so well as to produce some very exciting adventure/mystery.
But doing a daily show even if transcribed weekly was taxing, so by the end of 1956, the series reverted to thirty minute, once-a-week episodes. But the power of the show continued, due a lot to the continued presence of both Bailey and Johnstone. Gradually, however, toward the end of the 1950's, the show began to sound tired - some of the scripts were weak and even Bailey did not always seem excited.
Bailey left the show when it moved to New York production studios and initially Bob Readick filled Johnny Dollar's shows. However, that was only a transition that lasted six months. In June, 1961, Mandel Kramer came to the role. He was perhaps the second best of the Dollar portrayals. Kramer's Dollar displayed more cynical humor than Bailey's. Johnny Dollar remained sensitive yet tough and with Jack Johnstone continuing as producer, the series remained poignant right up to its demise.
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar - 007
00:00:00 The Department Store Swindle Matter
00:30:00 Death Takes A Working Day
01:00:00 The S.S. Malay Trader Ship
01:30:04 The Gravedigger's Spades
Видео Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar - 007 | Old Time Radio Classic Detective Drama канала Rod's Radio Reruns
Adventure Audio Drama Bailey Bob Bob Bailey Bob Readick Charles Charles Russell Classic Crime Crime Series Detective Story Dragnet Drama Edmond Edmond O'Brien Edmund Edmund O'Brien Insurance Investigator John John Lund Johnny Dollar Kramer Lund Mandel Mandel Kramer Mystery O'Brien OTR Pulp Noir Radio Mystery Radio Play Readick Robert Robert Readick Russell Vintage action detective gumshoe radio show
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