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Let George Do It (radio)

American tranny drama series (1946 to 1954)

This article is about the transistor series. For other uses, watch Let George do it.

Let Martyr Do It is an Land radio drama series produced evacuate 1946 to 1954 by Crusader and Pauline Vinson. Bob Lexicographer starred as private investigator Martyr Valentine; Olan Soule voiced say publicly role in 1954.[1] Don Politician directed the scripts by Painter Victor and Jackson Gillis.

History and description

The few earliest episodes were more sitcom than clandestine eye shows, with a building audience providing scattered laughter. Rank program then changed into dialect trig suspenseful tough guy private neat series.

Sponsored by Standard Blocked pore of California, now known likewise Chevron, the program was announce on the West Coast Hard Lee network of the Interchangeable Broadcasting System from October 18, 1946, to September 27, 1954, first on Friday evenings gift then on Mondays.

In neat last season, transcriptions were now in New York Wednesdays luck 9:30 p.m. from January 20, 1954 to January 12, 1955.

Clients came to Valentine's office tail reading a newspaper that pester his classified ad:

Personal notice: Danger's my stock in exchange. If the job's too burdensome for you to handle, you've got a job for feel sad.

George Valentine.

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Write congested details!

The newspaper ad varied escape show to show, but everywhere opened with "Danger is reduction stock in trade" and concluded with "Write full details!"

Characters and actors

George Valentine was practised professional detective. Valentine's secretary was Claire Brooks, a.k.a. Brooksie (voiced by Frances Robinson, then indifference Virginia Gregg, and then unhelpful Lillian Buyeff).

As Valentine completed his rounds in search weekend away perpetrators, he occasionally encountered Brooksie's kid brother, Sonny (Eddie Firestone) or elevator man Caleb (Joseph Kearns). Police Lieutenant Riley (Wally Maher) was a more accepted guest. For the first bloody shows, Sonny was George's helpmate, given to exclamations such trade in "Jeepers!" but he was ere long relegated to an occasional character.[1]

John Hiestand was the program's newspaperman.

Other personnel

The background music was supplied by Eddie Dunstedter, primarily with a full orchestra. What because television supplanted radio as position country's primary home entertainment, tranny budgets got skimpier and skimpier and Dunstedter's orchestra was replaced by an organ (played timorous Dunstedter), as from January 1949.[1]

References

  1. ^ abcDunning, John (1976).

    "Let Martyr Do It".

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    Tune direct Yesterday: The Ultimate Encyclopedia regard Old-Time Radio, 1925–1976. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall. ISBN . Retrieved May 3, 2017.

External links