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Alias Jimmy Valentine (radio program)
1938-1939 old-time radio crime drama From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Alias Jimmy Valentine is an old-time radio crime drama in the United States. It was broadcast on NBC-Blue January 18, 1938 - February 27, 1939.[1]
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Format
The concept for Alias Jimmy Valentine came from writer O. Henry in his short story "A Retrieved Reformation".[1] That story was adapted into the 1909 play Alias Jimmy Valentine by Paul Armstrong.[2][3]
The program's stories focused on Lee Randall, described by Jim Cox in his book, Radio Crime Fighters: More Than 300 Programs from the Golden Age as "an ex-con and reformed safecracker [who] applied his talents and enormous underworld contacts to abet the forces of law and order".[1] While doing so, he became an honest bank clerk and fell in love with the daughter of the banker.[4]
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Producers
The series was produced by Frank and Anne Hummert, who were described by Jim Cox in his book, Frank and Anne Hummert's Radio Factory: The Programs and Personalities of Broadcasting's Most Prolific Producers as "the most prolific creatives in eight decades of broadcast history".[5] They originated more than 100 radio series, about half of which were soap operas.[5]
Cox wrote that Alias Jimmy Valentine episodes raised "the never-to-be-resolved query: 'Can a protagonist go straight and overcome his impasse?'"[1] That query, Cox wrote, "was true formulaic Hummert".[1]
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Personnel
Bert Lytell and James Meighan each played the lead at different times.[6] William Bennett Kilpack[7] and Earle Latimore also appeared on the program.[8]
Dick Joy was the announcer. Doris Halman was the writer.[1] Ford Bond narrated.[9]
See also
- Alias Jimmy Valentine (1915 film)
- Alias Jimmy Valentine (1920 film)
- Alias Jimmy Valentine (1928 film)
References
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