NBC's Mystery Theatre
began airing with much fanfare on September 7, 1943. The series
promised stories from the greatest classical and contemporary
mystery authors--and production values to match. And it kept its
promise. It was aided from the outset by the addition of an
'annotator'--as it was described in the 1940s--named Geoffrey
Barnes. The annotator served in the role of expositor, filling
in on the plot development as necessary and providing a
back-story when needed. The apparent distinction made between a
narrator and an annotator, was a matter of degree. Mr. Barnes, a
distinguished and celebrated amateur criminologist in his own
right, was apparently on hand to help the listener analyze and
understand the various mysteries and their underlying crimes
within each script.
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The program appears to have aired sustained for its first three
months, with three to five sponsors beginning to make an
appearance with Program #17, The Mystery of The Seven Keys of
December 28, 1943. There is a circulating program titled
Homicide for Hannah, that should have been the first Mollé
Mystery Theatre, but there is no provenance anywhere that the
initial program ever actually aired (see the Provenances entry
below on this subject). This is the first circulating program in
which we hear the program refer to itself as Mollé Mystery
Theatre. But throughout its NBC run, we hear sponsorship by
Ironized Yeast, Energene, Bayer Aspirin, Sterling Drug, and
Mollé.
To its everlasting credit, NBC clearly went to great lengths to
promote the script titles, performers and authors of each
program to the nation's newpapers. From 1943 through 1948,
Mystery Theatre was one of the most well documented and promoted
radio programs of its time. Indeed, so many details were
available for its entire NBC run that this was one of the
easiest logs we've developed in some time. We have solid, highly
detailed newspaper listing provenances for almost ninety percent
of the first 237 programs.
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Sadly, the transition from NBC to CBS didn't fare as well for
Mystery Theatre. NBC and CBS were waging a major war at the
time, each network nakedly poaching the other's greatest Radio
talent and programs, wholesale. But judging from the way NBC and
CBS--and Frank and Anne Hummert--promoted and supported their
respective line-ups, it's clear that CBS was dropping the ball
for the greater part of 1949. Frank and Anne Hummert were
legendary talents in the area of producing and promoting
melodrama. Indeed, an extraordinary number of the serial
melodramas of the era were produced and developed by The
Hummerts. But Mystery Theatre wasn't a melodrama genre--or
format. That didn't stop the Hummerts from turning it into a
melodrama under their watch. The franchise declined in popular
and critical favor from that point forward.
In all, Mystery Theatre in its various incarnations ran almost
continuously from the Fall line-up of 1943 well into 1952--an
impressive nine year run in its various guises. It ran four
years over NBC, three years over CBS and two years over ABC. For
NBC the program aired as either Mystery Theatre or Mollé Mystery
Theatre. Over CBS, the program aired as [Frank and Anne
Hummert's] Mystery Theatre and Hearthstone of The Death Squad.
And finally, over ABC, the program aired as Inspector Mark Saber
of The Homicide Squad or Mark Saber Mysteries.
CBS and the Hummerts began rolling out spot ads and teaser
articles about the Inspector Hearthstone programs in the Fall of
1949 but by the end of the 1951 run of Mystery Theatre the spot
ads dwindled. Despite the more lackluster, melodramatic scripts,
the Hummerts, relying on Alfred Shirley's celebrity and
reputation, actively promoted the Inspector Hearthstone
programming with their usual relentless and efficient
skill--when it suited them. Apparently the reviewers of the era
weren't very impressed by The Hummerts' scripts or cast (see
Radio Review at left sidebar).
Inspector Hearthstone of The Death Squad held some promise to
breathe new life into the franchise with distinguished actor
Alfred Shirley (of Sherlock Holmes fame) in the role of
Inspector Hearthstone. Inspector Hearthstone was first
introduced in February and March episodes of CBS's 1949 Mystery
Theatre run. From 1949 to the Fall of 1951, Inspector
Hearthstone of The Death Squad appeared in all but a few of the
remaining Mystery Theatre programs, until CBS simply changed the
production name to Inspector Hearthstone of The Death Squad on
August 30, 1951.
One can only surmise CBS' rationale for preserving the name
Mystery Theatre while producing only Inspector Hearthstone
programs for almost two years. It would seem as if Frank Hummert
was more comfortable working with a single protagonist for his
programs, hence his almost universal focus on Inspector
Hearthstone of The Death Squad as the central figure in almost
all of the CBS Mystery Theatre programs from 1948-1951. One of
CBS Mystery Theatre's most redeeming elements--annotator
Geoffrey Barnes--was eliminated with the solo Hearthstone of The
Death Squad that followed. The Hummerts chose, instead, to go
with a melodramatic intro to each program more reminiscent of
Challenge of The Yukon or The Lone Ranger, than the CBS Mystery
Theatre format of the previous two years. Indeed, by 1952,
Hearthstone of the Death Squad was being heard virtually every
day of the week--somewhere, usually in repeats. CBS had
apparently abandoned any further promotion of the series.
Throughout most of 1952, Hearthstone of the Death Squad was in
total disarray. As it was, Inspector Hearthstone of The Death
Squad finally left the airwaves December 31, 1952--for the most
part in repeats in various small outlets and at varying days and
times.
By the beginning of Hearthstone of The Death Squad in 1951,
Television had already taken root. To further complicate the
Radio and Television choices, a competing Mystery Theater from
ABC aired on October 3, 1951 running in parallel with both CBS
Mystery Theatre's Hearthstone of The Death Squad and ABC's
Mystery Theater featuring Inspector Mark Saber of the Homicide
Squad. If the intent was to confuse, both programs succeeded,
and both came in for tepid reviews--at best. In addition there
were parallel Television programs titled both Mystery Theater
and Homicide Squad. It's apparent that Radio and Television
programmers had finally taken off the gloves in earnest. In the
final analysis, the Inspector Hearthstone of The Death Squad run
from 1951-1952 appears to have been nothing more than thriteen
or so original Hearthstone programs intermixed with a year's
worth of repeats of CBS Mystery Theatre programs.
There is no direct connection whatsoever between the lineage of
the various NBC and CBS Mystery Theatre incarnations of Mystery
Theatre and ABC's completely different and separate Mystery
Theater; the network, sponsor, cast, technicians and recurring
characters were all completely different. However, it may be
useful to describe the essential details of ABC's Mystery
Theater to dispel any lingering ambiguities as to it's lineage.
ABC Mystery Theater [not Theatre] ran from October 3, 1951 to
July 1, 1953. It's initial run of 37 episodes starred Robert
Carroll as Inspector Mark Saber. It broke for the Summer of 1953
on June 11, then resumed on October 8, 1952 with a different
cast. Veteran Radio actor Les Damon became Inspector Mark Saber
and Walter Burke became Saber's right hand, Sergeant Tim
Maloney. Clearly positioning itself in direct competition with
CBS' Inspector Hearthstone of The Death Squad, ABC's rendition
of the genre was more grounded in American big city homicide.
It's production values were somewhat better than the
deteriorating scripts and engineering of Hearthstone of The
Death Squad, but both series were somewhat lackluster compared
to their Television competition. And neither series ever
captured the superb writing, voice talent, engineering and
production values of NBC's Mystery Theatre series.
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EPISODES LIST
Molle 1943-12-28 Homicide for Hannah
Molle 1944-04-11 Criminal At Large (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1944-06-20 Death Talks Out of Turn
Molle 1944-07-25 Fifty Candles (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1944-10-24 Comic Strip Murder
Molle 1944-11-21 Dilemma (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1944-11-28 Nightmare (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1944-12-05 A Crime to Fit the Punishment (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1944-12-12 The Bottle Imp (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1944-12-19 The Man in the Velvet Hat (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1944-12-26 The Letter (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1945-01-30 Deadline at Dawn (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1945-02-27 Yours Truly Jack the Ripper (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1945-03-06 The Man Who Murdered in Public (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1945-04-03 The Eleventh Juror
Molle 1945-04-24 Cask Of Amontillado (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1945-05-15 Lady in the Morgue (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1945-05-22 Level Crossing (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1945-06-05 Beckoning Fair One
Molle 1945-06-12 Breakdown (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1945-06-19 The Gioconda Smile
Molle 1945-06-26 Marijuana (AFRS Myst Phs)
Molle 1945-10-05 Angel Face (AFRS Mystery Playhouse #129)
Molle 1945-10-12 A Death is Caused (AFRS Mystery Playhouse #134)
Molle 1945-10-19 Leg Man (AFRS Mystery Playhouse #135)
Molle 1945-10-26 Ghost with the Gun (AFRS Mystery Playhouse #138)
Molle 1945-11-02 Who Took The Corpse (AFRS Mystery Playhouse #141)
Molle 1945-11-09 Not Quite Perfect (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1946-01-18 Ladies in Retirement (AFRS Mystery Playhouse #163)
Molle 1946-01-25 Burn, Witch, Burn (AFRS Mystery Playhouse #166)
Molle 1946-02-01 Mathematics for Murder (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1946-02-15 Beautiful Science (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1946-02-22 Last Night
Molle 1946-03-08 Red Wine
Molle 1946-03-22 Alibi for Murder
Molle 1946-03-29 The Creeper
Molle 1946-04-05 Murder in the City Hall
Molle 1946-04-12 Night Must Fall
Molle 1946-04-19 Follow That Cab
Molle 1946-04-26 Doctor and the Lunatic
Molle 1946-05-03 Murder Without Crime
Molle 1946-05-10 Further Adventures of Kenny Andrews
Molle 1946-05-17 Killer Come Back To Me
Molle 1946-05-31 Witness for the Prosecution (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1946-06-07 Female of the Species (AFRS Mystery Playhouse #210)
Molle 1946-06-14 The Adventure of the Fallen Angels (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1946-06-21 Hands of Mr Ottermole
Molle 1946-08-23 St Louis Lady
Molle 1946-09-27 Two Men in a Furnished Room (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1946-11-01 The Rival Dummy
Molle 1946-11-29 Radio Patrol
Molle 1946-12-20 Angel Face
Molle 1947-01-17 Corpus Delicti (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1947-02-07 Bride Wore Black
Molle 1947-03-28 Triangle of Death
Molle 1947-04-18 Kenny Angles and the Queen of Diamonds
Molle 1947-05-30 Double Cross
Molle 1947-06-27 Talk Them to Death
Molle 1947-07-04 Challenge to the Listener (AFRS Mystery Playhouse)
Molle 1947-08-08 Goodbye,Darling
Molle 1947-09-05 Death Wears a Mask
Molle 1947-09-12 Death Goes Shopping
Molle 1947-09-19 Zelma's Boy
Molle 1947-10-31 Now You See Her, Now You Don't (2nd half)
Molle 1947-11-14 The Four Fatal Jugglers
Molle 1947-11-28 Two Men in a Furnished Room
Molle 1948-04-02 The Betrayer
molle 1948-04-30 Make No Mistake
molle 1948-05-14 Close Shave
molle 1948-05-21 Solo Performance
Molle 1948-06-25 Doctor Discord (2nd half)
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