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ESCAPE AND SUSPENSE!


VINTAGE RADIO BROADCASTS OF DANGEROUS ADVENTURE, URBAN LEGENDS, AND TALES OF
FEAR AND TREMBLING


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COPYRIGHT NOTICE. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 2007-2024

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WELCOME TO ESCAPE AND SUSPENSE! VINTAGE RADIO

Escape and Suspense! Vintage Radio, is a website specializing in the study of
individual episodes from two popular anthology series that aired on CBS Radio
during the mid-twentieth century. For more information, click on the link titled
"An Introduction to this Website..." at the right side of this page.

Information about individual episodes is presented--but not summarized
completely. To review or summarize an episode in its entirety presents the risk
of ruining the experience for the listener or giving away the trick endings for
which Suspense is famous. On this website, episodes are given a quick summary at
the top and an introduction to the story...the rest of the experience is left to
the listener.

Escape and Suspense! is not updated as often as it used to be, but the episodes
and their summaries are timeless! So, don't worry about that.

Feel free to comment or drop us a line about your experience.

Thanks for stopping by!

------------------------------

Update 2024: We used to have a sister site called: Suspense Television: Murder,
Mystery and Spark Plugs, but I took that site down a while back. I am currently
integrating the material back into Escape and Suspense! so that everything is in
one place.

Posted on January 20, 2014 at 07:14 PM | Permalink | Comments (11)


NOVEMBER 08, 2024


THE SPIDER - SUSPENSE TELEVISION EPISODE - S.4 EP. 18

[This post originally appeared on our sister blog site, Suspense Television:
Murder, Mystery and Spark Plugs on August 27, 2009. It is being reposted here
now because all of the material from that site is being integrated back into our
main site in 2024.]

In "The Spider," a woman is captured by a strange old man who wants to use her
head for his craft project.

As the episode opens, Bob and Murial Torre are honeymooning in Driftwood
Springs, Florida. Both are dedicated scientists. So dedicated, that Bob leaves
his new bride to catch the tide and do some marine biology stuff that morning.
He puts some jnars in his backpack and prepares to leave. Muriel isn't upset
about being alone that day, she has plans to visit the Chipola Swamp to look for
the white-billed woodpecker. She is determined to photograph it, but when she
reaches for her Icamera....Ahhhhhh! A spider! Muriel is terrified, so Bob goes
into the other room and smacks the life out of it. When he returns, Muriel says
she is fine. She just has a severe phobia of spiders because of an incident that
happened in grade school. She tells him to leave.

Well, their landlady arrives with a machete because she heard that screaming.
Muriel explains that a spider brushed her hand and it frightened her. That's
all. Now she is off to the Chipola Swamp to hunt that white-billed....uh-oh, now
her landlady looks worried. She tells Muriel about the father and son who went
up there and disappeared! They were looking for the white-billed woodpecker,
too. Muriel doesn't believe there is any reason to be afraid. She knows what she
is doing, and she can handle herself.

When we next see Muriel she hopelessly lost in the middle of a swamp. She has
been walking in circles for miles and now it is dark. Suddenly, she sees a
light. A cabin!

She knocks on the door, and a strange old man admits her into his well appointed
cabin. His name is Roger Entwhistle, Ph.d. and he welcomes her with a drink. She
is happy to find such a civilized place in the middle of nowhere--until she
finds out he doesn't have a phone. How will her husband know where she is? The
doctor assures her that in the morning his servant will come and then take her
back to town. For the time being, she has no choice but to stay. He asks to feel
her face, because he lost his sight many years ago. He finds her face very
interesting.

The doctor is a gracious host, but Muriel is still worried. He offers her a wee
dram of his "jungle special" to help with her nerves. He then tries to take her
mind of her husband by showing Muriel his two most priceless possessions. They
are examples of the sort of ceremonial headshrinking done by the Jivaro Indians
in South America. Muriel is interested until the doctor tells her that they
weren't created by the Jivaro--he created them using their methods! The father
and son that were lost in the swamp last year--those were the heads he used.
Muriel is horrified, but she suddenly finds she is having trouble moving,
expressing, talking...darn that "jungle special!" Now she can't move. Her eyes
are open but she is paralyzed. Then, she sees a spider on the ceiling coming
down towards her....

Will she be able to escape?

"The Spider" does not contain any of the original credits or Autolite
commercials, so the names of the writers aren't given. The ending seems like it
may have been clipped, but it also may have been written that way. Olive Deering
starred as Muriel, and Arnold Moss as the doctor. Robert Stevens produced.This
episode aired on January 15, 1952. This episode is available on disc two
of Suspense: The Lost Episodes Collection Three.

Posted on November 08, 2024 at 08:27 PM in Suspense Television | Permalink |
Comments (0)


HELP WANTED - SUSPENSE TELEVISION EPISODE - S.1 EP. 14

[This post originally appeared on our sister blog site, Suspense Television:
Murder, Mystery and Spark Plugs on February 7, 2009. It is being reposted here
now because all of the material from that site is being integrated back into our
main site in 2024.]

"Help Wanted" is an episode that has to be appreciated on its own terms. Is it
bad? No. Is it badly done? Yes but that adds to its charm.

Mr. Chester Crabtree is an unemployed accountant who is in trouble. He lives on
practically nothing and can't pay his rent. What little money he has goes to the
sanitarium that cares for his daughter. His landlady is tired of not getting her
money, and she tells him that he has two weeks to pay his rent or leave.

She then reminds him that he wouldn't have to go if he would just send his
daughter to a state-run mental facility. If he did, he wouldn't have to pay so
much for her care. Mr. Crabtree tells her that he can't do that! He will find a
way.

Fortunately, an answer to his problems arrives that same morning. A woman comes
to his apartment with a job offer. She won't give him her name or tell him who
his employer is, but she offers him $100 a week and an office of his own. It is
too good to be true! Mr. Crabtree accepts.

When we next see Mr. Crabtree, he is at his new office for the first time. It is
a small office on the very top floor of an office building. There is a huge
window overlooking the street, furniture that is bolted down, and a cat in the
closet with a note stuck into his collar. 

The note tells him that the cat's name is "Discretion." He is there to keep Mr.
Crabtree company, so he won't get lonely and use the phone to make personal
calls.

Mr. Crabtree is happy in his new job, and he follows all of his employer's
strange rules for six months. When we see him again, he is having a laugh with
Discretion about the letter they got in the mail from a charity trying to revive
Prohibition. Mr. Crabtree admires their optimism, but he throws the letter in
the trash.

Then, he finally meets his employer! Mr. X arrives unexpectedly and
dramatically. Now, Mr. Crabtree learns why the furniture is nailed down and the
window is so big. Mr. X has set up everything on purpose! He wants Mr. Crabtree
to commit a murder for him, and if Mr. Crabtree doesn't, he will take away his
job.

Will Mr. Crabtree go through with it? Or will Discretion come to his aid?

"Help Wanted" was based on an original story by Stanley Ellin, and was adapted
for television by Mary Orr and Reginald Denham. Robert Stevens
produced/directed. Otto Kruger starred as Mr. Crabtree. Also appearing were
Douglas Clarke-Smith, Peggy French, George Mathews, and Ruth McDevitt. The name
of the cat who portrayed Discretion is not given. This episode aired on June 14,
1949.

"Help Wanted" reappeared during Season 1 of Alfred Hitchcock Presents in 1956.
Of course, their version makes much more sense, but it lacks the zaniness of
Suspense's version. Alfred Hitchcock Present's teleplay was based on
the teleplay written for Suspense by Mary Orr and Reginald Denham. Hitchock
calls this episode "a brilliant play, sneaky but brilliant."

John Qualen and Lorne Green star. (Radio actor Parley Baer makes a brief
appearance as the detective.)

Posted on November 08, 2024 at 08:10 PM in Suspense Television | Permalink |
Comments (0)


NIGHT DRIVE - SUSPENSE TELEVISION EPISODE - S. 4 EP. 24

[This post originally appeared on our sister blog site, Suspense Television:
Murder, Mystery and Spark Plugs on May 8, 2009. It is being reposted here now
because all of the material from that site is being integrated back into our
main site in 2024.]

"Night Drive" has two plot elements that make it a typical Suspense episode.
First, it involves driving on a lonely road at night while a killer is on the
loose. Second, the passenger going along for the ride may or may not be the
killer. In those respects, it has some things in common with the famous Suspense
radio episode "On a Country Road." "Night Drive" isn't as scary as "On a Country
Road," but it does accidentally create a couple of scary moments.

Neva Patterson plays the central character, Mrs. Haley, and it is her
performance that prevents this episode from being a waste. We don't want Mrs.
Haley to get hurt, and as long as she is in danger, we are compelled to keep
watching, no matter how silly things get.

This episode opens with our substitute host, Terry O'Sullivan. Where is Rex
Marshall? They don't tell us. Well, just bear with Terry while he reads his
lines off  the cue cards and looks terrified. It will  be difficult to focus
on his words because you will be so transfixed by his eyes, as he reads his
lines. 

Then, "Night Drive" begins with a slow pan across the shirtless body of Bob
the blacksmith. The credits role across his shoulders and are then displayed on
his glistening back. He is shoeing a horse for Mrs. Haley because she has to
take her carriage on a long drive that night. She has to pick up her husband in
the neighboring town of Calumet... ten miles away...at night. She has to drive
her carriage through the dark woods alone.  So, she will need lots of kerosene
in the carriage lamps...because she will be traveling alone at night. Did
everyone catch that?

Bob, the shirtless blacksmith, is her friend. He shoes the horse for free and
assures her that everything will be fine. He is a kind-hearted brute of a man
who likes to drink out of a bucket. 

When we next see Mrs. Haley, she is at home with her two young boys. They are
having fun making faces in the mirror while their mom is trying to get ready
to leave. One of them mentions that she got a phone call while she was out. It
was from "the man with the wife that was killed." Well, that was what that their
granny told them.

"Oh, that must be Dr. Taber..." says their mother. Someone killed Mrs.
Taber when she was driving alone to Calumet.  Apparently, Dr. Taber wants a ride
to Calumet, but Mrs. Haley doesn't want to spend two hours driving with someone
she doesn't know well.

Then, the phone rings. She leaves the room while the boys play with mommy's
hats. The call is from Dr. Taber, but he isn't the one who needs a ride, it is
his sister. Mrs. Haley agrees to pick her in fifteen minutes.

Mrs. Haley then picks up Dr. Taber's sister, Miss Taber. Wow! She looks a lot
like her brother! The similarity is really, really...strong. The two of
them start driving and the camera pans across a dark desolate landscape.

Soon, they reach the cut-off. Mrs. Haley hesitates to go into the woods. Dr.
Taber's wife was killed in those woods. Mrs. Haley thinks that is creepy, but
she should really take a good look at her passenger.

Finally, Mrs. Haley gets around to asking her passenger some questions. Miss
Taber says that she never used to come to town, but now that her brother is so
"baffled and broody" she has to come more often. "Baffled and broody" about the
death of his wife? Yes, he hasn't been the same since.

When they stop to turn up the lamps, Mrs. Haley starts talking about the other
woman who was murdered in the woods. That stranger who was just passing
through town but ended up being murdered in just the same way as Mrs. Taber.
Obviously, it was the same person who killed both!

Well, you have to watch the rest for yourself. Is Miss Taber the killer, or is
the killer in the woods waiting for them? Will Mrs. Haley ever get to Calumet to
pick up her husband? You'll find out in the second half of the episode. In
between, there is an epic commercial for the DeSoto Fire-Dome Eight.

"Night Drive" was based on a story by W.F. Jenkins and written for television
Halsted Welles. Neva Patterson, Robert H. Harris, and Brian Keith
starred. Robert Stevens produced and directed. This episode aired on February
26, 1952. It is available on disc 2 of Suspense: The Lost Episodes Collection
Three.

Posted on November 08, 2024 at 08:02 PM in Suspense Television | Permalink |
Comments (0)


FEBRUARY 05, 2018


NOIR CITY 16

 

Noir City 16 at the Castro Theater. 

This year's theme was classy A movies paired with trashy B movies.  It was a
good one!

 



Posted on February 05, 2018 at 09:12 AM in Film Noir | Permalink | Comments (4)


FEBRUARY 05, 2014


NOTES FROM NOIR CITY 12

As readers of the website know, every year I attend Noir City, the San Francisco
Film Noir Festival, in search of those rare films that help me with my research
here at Escape and Suspense! Often, it is the only way to view rare films that
contain performances by mid-twentieth century radio actors. Or, to view films
that were written by radio scriptwriters. Sometimes, it is a particular
adapation of a story that is of interest because it is one that had also been
adapted for radio.

This year's festival was a different experience because the focus was on noir
films from around the world. So, there weren't many films in this year's lineup
that fit into those stated goals. But since I don't know much about foreign film
noir, I was eager to learn more.

How many films did I get to see? I made it to fourteen out of twenty-seven. In
past years, I have been able to see a higher number of films, but this year, the
festival got the better of me. Everything about it seemed a little more
demanding this time. Instead of the typical noir B movies, this year's line-up
was made up of one excellent, visually stunning film after another. Everything
shown required full attention and serious emotion.  I did the best I could, but
perhaps this gives me an excuse to travel to some of the Noir City satellite
festivals to catch ones that I missed.

Here is the list of what I saw at Noir City 12: Journey Into Fear, The Third
Man, Border Incident, In the Palm of Your Hand, Too Late for Tears, The
Hitch-Hiker, The Murderers Are Among Us, Berlin Express, It Always Rains on
Sunday, Brighton Rock, Never Open That Door, The Black Vampire, Two Men in
Manhattan, and Rififi.

One thing that the noir genres of radio, film and literature all have in common
is Cornell Woolrich. We all have an intimate understanding of how the world of
Woolrich works. If you are a fan of Suspense, then the film that will probably
be of the greatest interest to you is No abras nunca esa puerta, (Never Open
That Door) (1952). This Argentinian film was originally intended to contain
adaptations of three Woorlich stories, but the anthology was cut down to two:
Somebody on the Phone and Hummingbird Comes Home. The third story, If I Die
Before I Wake, was released separately. The screening of No abras nunca esa
puerta at Noir City 12 was the first time this film had been shown in the United
States! For me, it was one of the high points of the festival, and I hope that
this film reaches a wider audience. 


The two Orson Welles/Joseph Cotten films that were shown are of interest to old
time radio fans for a number of reasons. The first, Journey into Fear (1943) was
adapted from Eric Ambler's novel of the same name and has a cast list that
includes familiar names from the Mercury Theater. (It is worth noting the Edgar
Barrier is the only actor who appeared in both this film and Escape's 1950 radio
adaptation of the novel). There is backstory to this Orson Welles film, the last
one he did for RKO, but I won't go into that here. The original was over 100
minutes long but it was cut into a 68 minute B-film. For that reason, it is
considered mangled, but the performances make it worthwhile. Hans Conried has a
particularly memorable performance as a magician.

The second Orson Welles/Joseph Cotten film was The Third Man, which is available
on dvd, but more fun to see in the theater. The Third Man was performed on radio
for the Lux Radio Theater on April 9, 1951 and there was also a BBC Radio
prequel series that aired in America (1951-1952) as The Lives of Harry Lime.




Also of interest is the new restoration of Ida Lupino's 1953 film, The
Hitch-hiker. This is definitely the film that captures Frank Lovejoy at his best
as "the everyman".

Among the other films, the most unforgettable were The Murderers Among Us
(1946), from Germany and El Vampiro Negro, (The Black Vampire), a South American
remake of Fritz Lang's 1931 film M.

The Noir City satellite festivals will traveling throughout the country this
year. The first stop is Seattle, February 13-17th, at Seattle's SIFF Uptown
Cinema. Then, it will travel to Austin, Los Angeles, Chicago, Portland (OR), and
Washington D.C. 

Posted on February 05, 2014 at 03:31 PM in News from Escape and Suspense! Page 2
| Permalink | Comments (1)


PICTURES FROM NOIR CITY 12

The Castro Theater is great for viewing films but not so easy for snapping
photographs of the interior. 

Check out this picture the snack bar. There...behind the popcorn popper. Can you
spot it?



Now that you understand the limited power of the flash on my camera...



Let's just go on a quick tour of the mezzanine upstairs. 



Noir City merchandise galore! There were also a number of opportunities for
author signings.

Film noir ashtrays!

Green Apple Books provided a selection of titles of interest to fans of film
noir.



 There were also movie stills and posters for sale.



Plus, raffle drawings for prizes every night!

Part of the allure of Noir City is the free booze, but, you have to be willing
to wait in line. 

On the first night of Noir City, mixologist Mathias Simonis poured drinks
sponsored by Akvinta Vodka.

On British Noir Night, they gave us gin and tonics sponsored by No. 209 gin. 



On Friday Night, Four Roses Bourbon was the sponsor, and I had a bourbon
cocktail that was minty and quite good.

In the background, you can see Miss Noir City 12, burlesque performer Evie
Lovelle, posing for photographs with festival patrons.



 



That's the best I could manage. I will leave the rest to the professional
photographers! There were lots of them milling about with blinding flash cameras
far more powerful than mine.

But, what about the films? 

I'll cover the ones that I saw in my next post!

Posted on February 05, 2014 at 03:25 PM in News from Escape and Suspense! Page 2
| Permalink | Comments (0)

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