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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American radio drama series, 1939-1944

^ Harmon, Jim (2011). "I Love a Mystery". Radio Mystery and Adventure and Its Appearances in Film, Television and Other Media . McFarland & Co. pp. 50–58. ISBN 9780786485086 . Retrieved 8 April 2020 .

^ Clark, Ethel (April 5, 1942). "Ethel Clark's Radio Flashes" . The Ogden Standard-Examiner. p. 35 . Retrieved May 1, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .

^ Harmon, Jim (1967). The Great Radio Heroes . Doubleday & Company. pp. 19–37 . Retrieved 9 April 2020 .

^ "Lost Episodes" . www.old-time.com .

^ Jump up to: a b "I Love A Mystery" – via Internet Archive.

^ Cox, Stephen; Marhanka, Kevin (2008). The Incredible Mr. Don Knotts . Cumberland House. p. 123. ISBN 9781581826586 .

^ "Don Sherwood" . lambiek.net .


I Love a Mystery is an American radio drama series that aired 1939–44, about three friends who ran a detective agency and traveled the world in search of adventure. Written by Carlton E. Morse , the program was the polar opposite of Morse's other success, the long-running One Man's Family . [1]

The central characters, Jack Packard, Doc Long, and Reggie York, met as mercenary soldiers fighting the Japanese in China. Later, they met again in San Francisco, where they decided to form the A-1 Detective Agency. Their motto was "No job too tough, no adventure too baffling." The agency served as a plot device to involve the trio in a wide variety of stories. These straddled the genres of mystery , adventure , and supernatural horror , and the plot lines often took them to exotic locales. Over the years, Jack was played by Michael Raffetto , Russell Thorson , Jay Novello , Jim Bannon , and John McIntire . Doc was played by Barton Yarborough and Jim Boles . Reggie was portrayed by Walter Patterson and Tony Randall . The agency's secretary, Jerry Booker, was played by Gloria Blondell . [2] After Paterson committed suicide in 1942, his friend Morse could not bear to recast the role and Reggie was written out of the series. In later shows, Jerry's role was increased, and she replaced Reggie.

Sponsored by Fleischmann's Yeast , I Love a Mystery first aired on the NBC West Coast network from January 16 to September 29, 1939, weekdays at 3:15 p.m. Pacific time, and then moved to the full NBC network from October 2, 1939, to March 29, 1940, airing weeknights at 7:15 p.m. [3]

In 1940, it expanded to 30-minute episodes from April 4 to June 27 on NBC Thursdays at 8:30 p.m. Continuing on the Blue Network from September 30, 1940 to June 29, 1942, it was heard Mondays and Wednesdays at 8 p.m.

Procter & Gamble (for Oxydol and Ivory Soap ) replaced Fleishmann's Yeast as the sponsor in the series broadcast by CBS from March 22, 1943, to December 29, 1944, with 15-minute episodes heard weeknights at 7 p.m.

After a four-year lapse, Jack, Reggie, and Doc returned in 1948 with a title change to I Love Adventure , broadcast on ABC from April 25 to July 18, 1948. It followed the post-war adventures of the trio who worked for the Twenty-One Old Men of 10 Gramercy Park in London, an extra-governmental organization of some power. I Love Adventure ran for 13 episodes.

A year later, I Love a Mystery was revived on the Mutual Broadcasting System , and the production relocated from Hollywood to New York. This series, which was sustaining , began October 3, 1949, and continued until December 26, 1952, with 15-minute episodes heard weeknights at 7 p.m. during 1949-1950 and then 10:15 p.m. from 1950 to 1952. The Mutual series recreated the original scripts written by Morse for the earlier NBC series.

In 1989, Episodes 8-15 of "The Temple of Vampires" were recreated for Bud Carey's Old Radio Theater on KALW with Frank Knight, Pat Franklin, Nicky Emmanuel and Rosemary Leever. [4]

"The Fear That Creeps Like A Cat", the serial preceding "The Thing That Cries in the Night", was completely recreated in 1996 by Jim Harmon Productions starring Les Tremayne as Jack Packard, Tony Clay as Doc Long, Frank Bresee as Reggie York, and Fred Foy as the announcer.

Tough, charismatic group leader Jack is usually the first to figure solutions to the mysteries. Jack has more of an edge than the typical radio hero of the period. He distrusts the attractive women who always seem to show up, and he professes to dislike women in general. The series' writer claimed that Jack's problems with women had to do with his youth. He had gotten a girl pregnant and had to leave his home town in shame. This was only a back story detail and was never made explicit on the show. Doc and Reggie are slightly less edgy characters. The Texas-born Doc is a hard-fighting, boastful, high-spirited character who provides comic relief. Reggie, an Englishman noted for his great strength, however, usually shied away from the fairer sex.

Morse, regarded as one of the best writers in radio, took delight in creating vividly imagined settings for the show and elaborate, often bizarre and at times over-the-top plots. In a medium whose heroes tended to be serious and strait-laced, he created three who were wonderfully reckless and exuberant. Jack, Doc, and Reggie were more interested in the thrill of adventure than in righting wrongs. When they collected a fee, their only goal was to spend it as quickly as possible.

Valse Triste by Jean Sibelius was the program's theme music . During the show's Mutual run, its opening was a train approaching a grade crossing sounding its horn full-tilt.

It was announced that in 2009 Audio Cinema Entertainment, Inc. had gotten the blessings of the Morse Estate to do recreations of the full series based on the Hollywood run.

Despite the popularity of the program, few series have survived in a listenable state.

(Several or all episodes of the following series are missing, but recreations have been made.)

(Several episodes of the following series are missing, hence explaining plot holes in surviving copies)

A 1945 mystery film called I Love A Mystery starred Jim Bannon as Jack, Barton Yarborough as Doc, George Macready, and Nina Foch. Reggie did not appear in the movies as he had been written out of the radio series. The movie was about a man who seeks protection after he predicts his own death in three days. Two more movies in the series starring Bannon and Yarborough followed in 1946: The Devil's Mask and The Unknown .

Also, Jim Bannon starred in a fourth ILAM theatrical movie—sort of—when "The Fear That Creeps Like A Cat" was adapted as "The Missing Juror". The names Jack Packard, etc. were dropped and Bannon played a Packard-like character named Joe Keats.

A TV movie which was also a TV pilot was produced for Universal Studios in 1967, and starred Les Crane as Jack, David Hartman as Doc, and Hagan Beggs as Reggie. The movie was based on the radio episode "The Thing That Cries in the Night". After being shelved for six years, NBC aired the movie in 1973. [6]

I Love a Mystery was an influence in the development of the long-running Hanna-Barbera franchise Scooby-Doo in its early stages of development as a live-action series under the working titles Mysteries Five and Who's Scared?

The radio show was also adapted in a comic book version by Don Sherwood . [7]







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The young mother lives in an area with one of the worst rates of under-age pregnancy in the country.
But even so, the neighbours are shocked.
Not content with getting pregnant at 11 and giving birth at 12, she is now expecting her second child at the age of 14.
Her unborn baby's father is 17 and out of work, so the financial burden of supporting her growing family will continue to be borne by taxpayers.
One neighbour on a council estate in Rotherham said: 'She is giving out the message that it's OK to keep getting pregnant and the state will just keep paying for it.'
The schoolgirl's family background makes depressing reading.
Her own mother was just 14 when she had her, and went on to become Britain's youngest grandmother at 26. The girl's first baby was fathered by a man of 23 who was also her mother's lover.
He had fathered a child with her mother, too, which was born ten days before hers.
He was convicted of having unlawful sexual intercourse and jailed for seven years at Sheffield Crown Court, but the sentence was halved on appeal.
The girl did not realise she was pregnant until she started giving birth on the lavatory of her family home.
The family had to be rehoused because of the ensuing publicity and she later claimed she had been raped by the man.
However, the background to her second pregnancy, now in its seventh month, appears to be the more familiar one of 'illicit' teenage romance.
Her boyfriend is a daily visitor to her mother's semi-detached council house on the outskirts of town.
According to neighbours he often stays late, and is sometimes there overnight. He claims he will stand by her and help bring up both babies.
But for the time being at least, the family will have to rely on welfare payments.
The young father-to-be is believed to have been questioned by social workers and police, but not to have been arrested.
He said of the pregnancy: 'I'm not bothered about it, it happened. But her mum is worried about her kids being taken into care.' One of his friends said: 'They are a very quiet couple. They don't go out to pubs or clubs or anything like that.
'They seem very close. It's a longstanding relationship, he has been going out with her for at least a year.
'He is a bit of a rogue - just one of the lads.
'The girl never wears make-up or flashy clothes. She might act a bit older than she is, but with already having one kid to bring up that's because she has no choice.'
Yesterday the girl's mother would not discuss the situation.
Asked about her daughter's predicament she replied: 'So, what am I supposed to do about it?'
She added: 'A lot of nasty rubbish is being talked about my daughter and I don't want to say anything more.' Then she slammed the door.
Neighbours said the teenager had tried to hide her pregnancy for as long as possible, and now spent most of her time at home awaiting the birth
One said many local people blame the girl's mother for what has happened.
'Nobody really blames the girl or social workers - they are at the house almost every week and they seem to be doing the best they can for her,' she said.
'It's her mother that everyone resents, and people are shunning her on the streets.
'The mother has encouraged the relationship with the boy and there is a lot of ill-feeling.
'It looks as though she will have to move to another area because of the animosity towards her.
'Most people around here are decent and hard- working and wouldn't let their kid get into this sort of mess.'
Local Labour MP Denis MacShane called for better sex education in schools to prevent more such cases arising.
He warned: 'Children are under immense pressure to behave as adults when they should be allowed to live as children.
'Britain has unacceptably high rates of school-age pregnancy compared to the rest of Europe.
'We need more support for families and need to reintroduce the idea of personal responsibility at all ages.'
Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

The circumstances of the Virgin Mary's infancy and early life are not directly recorded in the Bible, but other documents and traditions describing the circumstances of her birth are cited by some of the earliest Christian writers from the first centuries of the Church.
These accounts, although not considered authoritative in the same manner as the Bible, outline some of the Church's traditional beliefs about the birth of Mary.
The “Protoevangelium of James,” which was probably put into its final written form in the early second century, describes Mary's father Joachim as a wealthy member of one of the Twelve Tribes of Israel. Joachim was deeply grieved, along with his wife Anne, by their childlessness. “He called to mind Abraham,” the early Christian writing says, “that in the last day God gave him a son Isaac.”
Joachim and Anne began to devote themselves extensively and rigorously to prayer and fasting, initially wondering whether their inability to conceive a child might signify God's displeasure with them.
As it turned out, however, the couple were to be blessed even more abundantly than Abraham and Sarah, as an angel revealed to Anne when he appeared to her and prophesied that all generations would honor their future child: “The Lord has heard your prayer, and you shall conceive, and shall bring forth, and your seed shall be spoken of in all the world.”
After Mary's birth, according to the Protoevangelium of James, Anne “made a sanctuary” in the infant girl's room, and “allowed nothing common or unclean” on account of the special holiness of the child. The same writing records that when she was one year old, her father “made a great feast, and invited the priests, and the scribes, and the elders, and all the people of Israel.”
“And Joachim brought the child to the priests,” the account continues, “and they blessed her, saying: 'O God of our fathers, bless this child, and give her an everlasting name to be named in all generations' . . . And he brought her to the chief priests, and they blessed her, saying: 'O God most high, look upon this child, and bless her with the utmost blessing, which shall be for ever.'”
The protoevangelium goes on to describe how Mary's parents, along with the temple priests, subsequently decided that she would be offered to God as a consecrated Virgin for the rest of her life, and enter a chaste marriage with the carpenter Joseph.
Saint Augustine described the birth of the Blessed Virgin Mary as an event of cosmic and historic significance, and an appropriate prelude to the birth of Jesus Christ. “She is the flower of the field from whom bloomed the precious lily of the valley,” he said.
The fourth-century bishop, whose theology profoundly shaped the Western Church's understanding of sin and human nature, affirmed that “through her birth, the nature inherited from our first parents is changed."
CNA is a service of EWTN News, Inc.



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