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THE SHADOW

Orson Wells, The Shadow

In my January 7 posting, I mentioned the classic radio drama, The Shadow. I’m guessing most radio people today never actually have heard it, so here’s an episode. Yes, it’s a bit preachy. But dramatic nonetheless.

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  • Cygnus January 17, 2009, 8:42 am

    In broadcasting school, we had to do a version of a Shadow episode. I’m glad we did. I also got to hear some Shadow shows on XM’s Old Time Radio channel.

    Lamont Cranston lives!

  • Jim Raposa January 17, 2009, 9:36 am

    The period when Orson Welles starred is about the slickest of that series, don’t you think?

  • Dan O’Day January 17, 2009, 9:38 am

    @ Jim: Believe it or not, I’m too young to know.

  • Jim January 17, 2009, 1:26 pm

    For those that don’t know there is quite a cottage industry selling Old Time Radio shows. Just Google it and you can get a wealth of old radio from the 20’s right up to relatively modern day from various sources. The programs range from shows like “The Shadow” to music/variety programming ala Fred Allen and Jack Benny. Although I am addicted to detective series the most interesting program I found was “Jubilee” a program made especially for Black service members that featured big named acts of the day.

  • John Taylor January 17, 2009, 2:49 pm

    Love the Harry Lime shows too……also on the Archive dot org is Richard Diamond Private Investigator….Dick Powell played him….he sings in every episode…most of which were written and directed by Blake Edwards! Also Vincent Price as “The Saint” and “Suspense” are way cool too. But Richard Diamond had the swagger and swing, very cool character.

  • Marsha Mason January 17, 2009, 2:51 pm

    Ah, who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men. I was listening to this stuff when I was fourteen. 🙂

  • Jim Raposa January 17, 2009, 2:54 pm

    D’oh!

  • Russell Wells January 17, 2009, 2:55 pm

    Speaking of which, the house is getting cold again … dang it, I seem to have lost the phone number to my Blue Coal dealer.

  • Jim Raposa January 17, 2009, 2:57 pm

    LOL…Russell, on target. The original sponsor of the show. Of course, Dan wouldn’t know that either…being as young as he is.

  • Russell Wells January 17, 2009, 2:59 pm

    Jim, I’m a young sprite of 44 (give or take). OTR is timeless and knows no age group. Thank the good Lord for all the transcription disc recordings that allow us to enjoy these old shows today ….. for Sirius channel 118 …. and for my wife. I knew I’d found my true north when I didn’t have to explain Jack Benny to her. (no sooner than I went into the basic framework of JB’s chararcter, she cut me off with an imitation of Rochester!)

  • Patrick Howard Fraley January 17, 2009, 3:00 pm

    Dan: Familiar with the “The Lives Harry Lime” radio show with Orson Welles? Wonderful.

  • John Taylor January 17, 2009, 3:01 pm

    Love the Harry Lime shows too……also on the Archive dot org is Richard Diamond Private Investigator….Dick Powell played him….he sings in every episode…most of which were written and directed by Blake Edwards! Also Vincent Price as “The Saint” and “Suspense” are way cool too. But Richard Diamond had the swagger and swing, very cool character.

  • Bill January 17, 2009, 3:30 pm

    Dan,

    I'm 35 years-old, and I've heard the shadow! I actually ordered a few tapes of the show when I was a teen through the mail! I also have copies of "1985," & "Buck Rogers,"kicking around here somewhere. They made a terrible movie from the Shadow a few years back with Alec Baldwin, effectively killing the franchise.

  • Scott Snailham January 17, 2009, 7:07 pm

    Fortunately there are societies that transfer this stuff are out to preserve it.

    I have a small collection of 16 inch discs and the turntable with a 16 inch tonearm to play them with. unfortunately, some of the free downloads have been dubbed from discs then go through a few generations on tape, so when they’re encoded to mp3, it’s so so. the discs can give very good fidelity if recorded well.

    Being in canada, there’s nothing anywhere near the syndication juggernaut that the US put out from NBC, CBS, World, and Lang Worth to name a few. It was mostly locally produced shows and few of them actually were cut to a disc, or it was done nationally by the CBC, and those vaults are locked tight.

    I do have a series with stars from hollywood talking to canada about buying war bonds…hosted by yet to be hollywood star Lorne Greene. I send a cassette to leonard maltin of ET fame years ago, and got a very appreciative letter on ET stationary back.

  • Mark Gunn January 17, 2009, 9:05 pm

    I collect old radio programs and The Shadow was one of the first ones I got !! It sounds corny by today’s standards, but there’s a magic to radio back then that’s very rarely duplicated anymore.

  • Frank Baum January 17, 2009, 9:10 pm

    I had a boxed album set as a kid and in modern times got the series on tape. Incredible. Forerunner of X-men, Batman and a host of others.

  • andrew richardson November 22, 2010, 4:09 pm

    i first start listen to the shadow in 1954. never did i believe it was still around great.