10 hours - Audio CD Set
Nightbeat Volume 1 "Hi, this is Randy Stone. I cover the nightbeat for the Chicago Star..." In the postwar years, a new style of filmmaking began to emerge. Inspired in part by the moody and avant-garde expressionistic school that the Germans brought to the medium in the last days of the silent era, American mystery and detective films began adopting a dark and shadowy look, as well as an air of anxiety, pessimism, and suspicion in both plot and characterization. To critics, it became known as "film noir" -- literally "black film" or "black cinema" -- a style that would also quickly make its way to radio in such hard-bitten, downbeat series as "The Adventures of Philip Marlowe" and "Broadway's My Beat." One of the top proponents of this style - and arguably the best of radio's various newspaper-based dramas - was "Nightbeat," the story of hard-nosed Chicago Star newsman Randy Stone and his quest for the human news behind the headlines. Starring Frank Lovejoy in the leading role, Stone came to vivid life thanks to expert scripts by experienced scribes like Russell Hughes (who would also write similar stories for "Box 13" and "Richard Diamond"), E. Jack Neumann, John Michael Hayes (who would later go on to write the Hitchcock film classics "To Catch a Thief" and "Rear Window"), and Larry Marcus. Lovejoy's distinctive voice and manner, combined with performances by veteran radio performers like Lurene Tuttle, Peter Leeds, Jeff Corey, and Jerry Hausner, gave "Nightbeat" an unusual and engrossing style - literally film noir for the mind. One week the story would be lighthearted and tongue-in-cheek, the next an emotional tragedy with a downbeat ending; there would be suspenseful races for time and quiet reflections on everyday life among the masses. Through it all, Randy Stone, in a hard-boiled yet sensitive portrayal by Frank Lovejoy, would narrate the story and comment on it from beginning to end -- often with a hard-edged cynicism that long-time fans knew was a cover for Stone's personal sense of fairness and morality. Though generally popular with listeners, "Nightbeat" spent most of its two-year run bouncing around the NBC schedule -- usually without a sponsor and sustained by the network. Fans of the series often complained that they didn't know from week to week when (or if) it would be on at all. As a result, radio enthusiasts of today have probably heard more "Nightbeat" programs that most listeners heard when it was first broadcast over fifty years ago. But you'll never have a problem knowing when you can hear "Nightbeat" with this collection, which features twenty full-length NBC broadcasts from 1950 - including both the audition program and the first show of the series. The Elevator Caper (Audition) Recorded Friday, January 13, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC Zero (First Show of the Series) Monday, February 6, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining The Night is a Weapon Monday, February 13, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining A World All His Own Monday, February 20, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining The Girl in the Park Monday, February 27, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining Number 13 Monday, March 6, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining Am I My Brother's Keeper? Monday, March 13, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining The Man Who Claimed to Be Dead Monday, March 20, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining Flowers on the Water Monday, March 27, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining The Night is a Weapon (Special Rebroadcast) Sunday, April 9, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining I Know Your Secret Monday, April 10, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining A World All His Own (Special Rebroadcast) Sunday, April 16, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining Tong War Monday, April 17, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining The Girl in the Park (Special Rebroadcast) Sunday, April 23, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining Am I My Brother's Keeper? (Special Rebroadcast) Sunday, April 30, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sustaining Mentallo, the Mental Marvel Monday, May 1, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sponsored by Wheaties The Elevator Caper Monday, May 8, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sponsored by Wheaties and Crust-Quik The Night Watchman Monday, May 15, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sponsored by Wheaties and Crust-Quik I Wish You Were Dead Monday, May 22, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sponsored by Wheaties and Crust-Quik Harlan Matthews, Stamp Dealer Monday, May 29, 1950 - 30:00 - NBC, sponsored by Wheaties and Crust-Quik