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The
feel of Michael Shayne over the years most noticeably
evolved over Radio. Wally Maher's portrayal of Michael
Shayne was not only the first over Radio, and the
longest-running over Radio, but it was also the most
fully developed over Radio. Aided by Cathy Lewis in her
role of feisty bright Phyllis Knight, as well as by Joe
Forte as Lieutenant Farraday, the family nature of the
growing radio ensemble over the years put far more flesh
on the bones of Brett Halliday's character than any
other characterization that succeeded it. Maher's
characterization of Shayne was so successful that for
the remainder of Maher's career he actively kneaded
Shayne's basic attributes into virtually every other
detective or crime drama genre character Maher appeared
in until his untimely death in 1951.
From the November 7, 1946 edition of The Cedar Rapids
Tribune:
Wally Maher
Alias Michael Shayne
The fellow who plays Michael Shayne every Tuesday night
is no stranger to the role of crime fiction. Wally Maher
figures he's been killed more times than any other actor
working in radio. He's been chewed by alligators,
attacked by vampires, gassed, shot and various other
methods of elimination. Wally never played a tough guy
until he came to California, his forte is light comedy.
In only half a dozen out of 127 pictures has he played
light comedy, the rest were heavies.
After starting a radio career in his home town of
Cincinnati, he went to New York where he won a host of
theatrical roles. Then came Hollywood in 1935 where he
continued his radio work and started on pictures. Wally
likes comedy, so he likes Michael Shayne. He doesn't
like to play tough guys so "Shayne" is as easygoing as a
sleuth can be and still keep his self-respect.
He
likes to read detective stories, but his favorite
reading is American and Irish history, with, the accent
on the latter. His grandparents on both sides came from
Tipperary. He has three children, two girls and a boy.
Two of the children look like their mother, who is of
Italian decent, but Wally says all of them are Irish at
heart.
Wally can speak Italian, and when he was working as
baggage clerk on the Southern Pacific, he used to go out
and greet the prisoner trains loaded with Italian PWs on
their way through Glendale. He talked to them in Italian
and used to get a kick out of watching their faces light
up.
With his extensive theatrical experience, Wally Maher is
capably suited to the role of the "private eye,"
"Michael Shayne." His secretary-girl friend, Phyllis, is
right in there pitching, too. For the best in mystery
dramas, "Michael Shayne" is on the air Tuesday nights at
9 o'clock.
Those who've had the chance to compare his
characterization of Mike Shayne to, for example his
Lieutenant Riley from Let George Do It, can't help but
notice the similarities--and why not? If you've got a
popular gig, let it ride. The public clearly couldn't
get enough of it. Were it not for Maher's premature
demise, one might easily imagine Wally Maher having
evolved into one of the great, durable character actors
of all time, much in the vein of Ken Christy for
example.
As with many West Coast ensemble productions of the era,
Michael Shayne: Private Detective soon evolved into a
very secure set of well-explored character arcs, among
which Cathy Lewis' character, Phyllis Knight, found
herself more and more integrated into the scripts. Joe
Forte's Lieutenant Farraday continued to grow into the
role as well. If you're noticing a great many parallels
between what you're reading--perhaps for the first
time--about Michael Shayne, you might notice the
increasing similarities to Let George Do It or Yours,
Truly Johnny Dollar. Just as with a good gig, if a good
formula is continuing to produce audience loyalty once
you find the right ensemble/concept/scripting mix, then
you'll naturally wish to milk it for all it's worth.
Freshness, innovation and novelty are the absolute
life's blood of the entertainment industries. The true
innovators of West Coast Radio were clearly onto
something, as program after program, previously
initiated on the West Coast, made the jump to full
network exposure. The tight, clever, well-balanced
ensemble productions emanating from the West Coast
garnered previously unheard-of audience loyalty of the
nature of that enjoyed by The Great Gildersleeve, Fibber
McGee and Molly before it, and naturally Amos 'n' Andy
and Lum 'n' Abner before them--but in a matter of
months, and years, instead of decades or more.
All
the above having been said, it was perhaps The New
Adventures of Michael Shayne that was the most jarring
of all Michael Shayne's incarnations. Bill Rousseau's
image of Michael Shayne was more after the pattern of
Jack Webb's characterizations of Pat Novak for Hire, or
Johnny Madero, Pier 23--but amp'd up about 150% in the
process. From some seventeen potential candidates,
Rousseau felt that Jeff Chandler was the natural pick
over his peers. Chandler could both amp up the
electricity of Shayne's character and raise the
introductory prologues about 10 decibels, as well as
completely reinventing Michael Shayne in Chandler's own
mold.
Chandler was aided by no less than Jack Webb himself,
who'd already collaborated often with Bill Rousseau in
several projects and who leant his talent to the New
Adventures of Michael Shayne--entirely unaccredited.
Indeed, many of Webb and Rousseau's old friends, allies
and peers alike, leant their considerable weight to The
New Adventures of Michael Shayne over it's comparatively
short run.
But much like the Pat Novak, For Hire productions that
competed with it, the important initial formula and
ensemble cast, soon gave way to several other
incarnations. Chandler left the production after some 26
performances, to be replaced, briefly, by Film actor,
Donald Curtis for two broadcast episodes. Thereafter,
Robert Sterling, best known for his work in Television's
Topper as one of the ghosts with the most. And finally
transitioning to Vinton Hayworth for the last
twenty-five episodes of The Adventures of Michael
Shayne. In even more of a transition, Michael Shayne
returned to his roots in Florida for the last
incarnation of Michael Shayne over Radio.
As with many of the more action-oriented genres from the
Golden Age of Radio, The Adventures of Michael Shayne
eventually made the jump to Television, albeit it a bit
later than many of its predecessors--in
1961 in the guise of Richard Denning. Denning portrayed
Michael Shayne as a far less emotional, far more
calculating and far and away less 'Irish' than all of
his predecessors--combined. But the new formula held up
for another thirty-two episodes. Based, as in its last
Radio incarnation, in Miami, Phyllis Hamilton became
'Lois Hamilton' in the TV version, performed by two
different actresses. Jerry Paris and Gary Clarke
alternated in sidekick duties as Tim Rourke and Dick
Hamilton, respectively. Not the franchise's greatest
send-up by any means--one is reminded of "in like a lion
out like a lamb." But it did, indeed extend the
franchise to a total of almost 35 years. Not bad for a
character its creator had all but abandoned for twenty
of those years.
The specific varying flavors of the Michael Shayne
incarnations over the years are also worth discussion.
Wally Maher's original Michael Shayne over Radio was
presented as a comedy-mystery. As such the interplay and
byplay between Cathy Lewis as Phyllis Knight and Wally
Maher as Michael Shayne, was often complimented by Joe
Forte as Lieutenant Farraday. The dialogue wasn't as
crisp as what one may have heard in a Film version of
The Thin Man, for example, or even a Film version of
Mike Shayne for that matter. But it was humorous, witty,
ironic and pretty much what radio listeners had come to
expect from a comedy detective mystery series.
What
elevated it a bit above its peers of the day, were the
talents of its stars, Wally Maher and Cathy Lewis. Wally
Maher, as already reported above was a particular
favorite of Brett Halliday. And of course Cathy Lewis
was a brilliant, versatile, highly sympathetic and
convincing actor in her own right. Joe Forte brought the
weight of decades of Radio character acting behind him,
and the Director for most of the Wally Maher run was
Michael Raffeto, better known for his long running
characters in One Man's Family and virtually all of
Carleton E. Morse's adventure dramas of the era.
Bill Rousseau's interpretation of Michael Shayne was an
almost 180 degree departure from all previous
incarnations of the Florida-based detective. For one, he
was plopped down in New Orleans for the transcribed,
syndicated run under the Broadcasters' Guild. Another
departure was the choice of Jeff Chandler as the
protagonist, the elimination of a steady love interest
or sidekick, and the introduction of stalwart
contributors to Rousseau's other radio noir productions
such as Jack Webb, William Conrad, Tudor Owen, and
Raymond Burr. Michael Shayne became a clone of Pat Novak
almost overnight. Chandler's twenty-six
characterizations of Mike Shayne were punctuated by
continual impending peril, a series of gunshots whizzing
past his ears at most opening credits, or the intent to
convey an omnipresent doom surrounding his character's
every movement from episode to episode. The twenty-six
scripts were as follows:
A Problem in Murder
The Man Who Lived Forever (a.k.a. Anthony Carrell; The
Man Who Couldn't Die)
The Case of Tahlani's Tears
The Case of The Bayou Monster
The Case Of the Blood-Stained Pearls
The Case of the Borrowed Heirloom
The Case Of the Carnival Killer
The Case Of the Constant Companion
The Case of the Corresponding Corpse
The Case Of the Crooked Wheel
The Case of the Deadly Dough
The Case of the Eager Victim (a.k.a. The Case of the
Willing Victim)
The Case of the Generous Killer
The Case of the Grey-Eyed Blonde
The Case of the High Priced Twins
The Case of the Hunted Bride
The Case Of the Left Handed Fan
The Case of the Mail Order Murders
The Case of the Model Murder
The Case of the Phantom Gun
The Case of the Phantom Neighbor
The Case of the Popular Corpse
The Case of the Purloined Corpse
The Case of the Wandering Finger Prints
The Hate That Killed
The Pursuit Of Death
That Chandler pulled it off for twenty-six episodes is
itself a tribute to his talent. But as with all good
things, Bill Rousseau's syndication of Michael Shayne
ran its course after one short season of transcriptions
were in the can. The series ran on in Canada, Jamaica,
various parts of the U.S., and reportedly in Australia
and Great Britain as well for the following three years,
until ABC determined to take one final run at Michael
Shayne.
ABC's take on Michael Shayne was not without its growing
pains. ABC inaugurated their 1952 Run during the
pinnacle of Election Year fever on October 7, 1952 (on
the West Coast) or October 9, 1952 (on the East Coast).
With Election Day only weeks away, The Adventures of
Michael Shayne first aired with a placeholder in the
role of the lead. Film actor Donald Curtis was brought
in for the first two to four episodes to kick off the
first ABC season. After only two broadcasts, the
remaining two broadcasts were preempted in most parts of
the country for either eleventh hour senatorial election
appeals in prime time, or for the Election Results
coverage itself.
By the time that ABC's Michael Shayne was gaining some
traction, the network pulled Donald Curtis, citing
'other commitments' and installed future Topper
Television co-star Robert Sterling in Curtis' place.
Sterling portrayed Michael Shayne for ten episodes, to
be replaced, yet again, by veteran Radio, Stage, Film
and Television actor, Vinton Hayworth. Hayworth remained
in the role from January 15, 1953 until the very last
Adventure of Michael Shayne over Radio on July 10,
1953--a total of twenty-five episodes in the role.
ABC's
conception of The Adventures of Michael Shayne was
another jarring departure, compared to Bill Rousseau's
syndicated send up starring Jeff Chandler. For the ABC
run, Michael Shayne returns to his roots in Miami,
Florida. Secretary Phyllis Knight from Cathy Lewis'
characterization in the original series with Wally Maher
returns to the format, but in the personage of Lucy
Hamilton this time around and portrayed by Dorothy
Donahue.
The ABC series, once it finally sorted out its cast,
proved to be an adequate depiction of Brett Halliday's
original character, albeit it of a somewhat less piquant
variety. But the series held up well enough to last
another 39 episodes over Radio. Not bad, considering
that in the view of most Golden Age Radio historians,
the Golden Age of Radio had passed the Golden mantel to
Television by around 1951 or 1952. That Radio's smallest
network--at the time--could re-launch and recapture a
fourth major incarnation of Michael Shayne over Radio
when everyone was making a mass exodus to Television
remains an accomplishment in itself.
Michael Shayne faded off into the Radio sunset, except
for seemingly endless repeats of the twenty-six,
syndicated Jeff Chandler episodes that kept resurfacing
well into 1954 during the era. Radio's last flirtation
with Jeff Chandler's Michael Shayne would come during
the 1968-1969 period with the AFRTS- denatured Bill
Rousseau-syndicated run of twenty-six programs. The
AFRTS transcriptions aired in Europe and Southeast Asia
over the Armed Forces Network and Far East Network
respectively.
But Radio wasn't quite the end of the line for durable
Michael Shayne. Ida Lupino, Dick Powell, Charles Boyer
and David Niven's Television upstart, Four Star
Productions aired thirty-two, hour long broadcasts of
"Michael Shayne" over the National Broadcasting Company
in 1960 and 1961. Starring Richard Denning as Michael
Shayne, the series brings back Lucy Hamilton from the
last Radio rendition of Michael Shayne, as portrayed
first by Patricia Donahue, then Margie Regan.
The Television series spawned a brief series of Dell
Comic Book adventures of Mike Shayne, but it died with
the Television series after a few issues based not on
the TV program but some of Brett Halliday's earliest
Michael Shayne novellas.
Michael Shayne's had quite a run at fame, fortune and
notoriety through the years. As resilient as he's proven
to be thus far, there's no reason not to imagine him
resurfacing yet again in the near future. For the
present we have twelve feature films, some 45 paperbacks
and novellas, at least sixty circulating exemplars of
his Radio incarnations, and we understand a full release
of Michael Shayne's first and only Television season is
on the horizon.
The red-haired Irishman lives on . . .
Text From Digital Deli Too
EPISODES
LIST:
Michael
Shayne 450402 25 Meet Me At Oakland Depot
Michael Shayne 450409 26 Haunted House
Michael Shayne 450416 27 Date At Cliff House
Michael Shayne 450423 28 Body In The Trunk
Michael Shayne 450430 29 Pirates In San Francisco Bay
Michael Shayne 450507 30 Big Voice Means A Big Body
Michael Shayne 450514 31 Date With A Wedding
Michael Shayne 450521 32 Murder Trial of Jack Holmes
Michael Shayne 450528 33 ReCreate A Murder
Michael Shayne 450604 34 Judge Stanton Murdered
Michael Shayne 450611 35 Mary Noble Suspects Uncle
Briggs
Michael Shayne 450618 36 Investment In An Invention
Michael Shayne 450625 37 Body By The Piano
Michael Shayne 450702 38 Malcolm Boyd Case
Michael Shayne 450709 39 Gossip Writer
Michael Shayne 450716 40 Tire Oriental Lines
Michael Shayne 450723 41 Strange Business Call
Michael Shayne 450730 42 Museum Thefts
Michael Shayne 450806 43 Missing Body
Michael Shayne 450813 44 Dr Grant's Dilemma
Michael Shayne 450820 45 Red Lead Mystery
Michael Shayne 450827 46 Behind The Footlights
Michael Shayne 450903 47 Signed, REM
Michael Shayne 450910 48 John M Crowder's Body
Michael Shayne 450917 49 Mr Dixon's Life In Danger
Michael Shayne 450924 50 Shadow William P Pringle
Michael Shayne 461105 01 Return To Huxley
Michael Shayne 461112 02 Poisoned Fan
Michael Shayne 470114 03 Judge Shot, Motive Revenge
Michael Shayne 480711 Case of the Wandering Finger
Prints
Michael Shayne 480715 04 Case of Anthony Carrell
Michael Shayne 480722 05 Case of The Hunted Bride
Michael Shayne 480729 06 Case of The Blood Stained
Pearls
Michael Shayne 480806 07 Case of the Phantom Gun
Michael Shayne 480813 08 Case of The Hate That Killed
Michael Shayne 480820 09 Case of the GreyEyed Blonde
Michael Shayne 480904 10 Case of The Generous Killer
Michael Shayne 480911 11 Case of the Model Murder
Michael Shayne 480918 12 Case of The Pursuit of Death
Michael Shayne 480925 13 Case of The Crooked Wheel
Michael Shayne 481009 15 Case of the Purloined Corpse
Michael Shayne 481016 16 Case of The LeftHanded Fan
Michael Shayne 481023 17 Case of the Deadly Dough
Michael Shayne 481030 18 Case of the Popular Corpse
Michael Shayne 481106 19 Case of the Bayou Monster
Michael Shayne 481113 20 Case of A Problem in Murder
Michael Shayne 481120 21 Case of the High Priced Twins
Michael Shayne 481127 22 Case of The Carnival Killer
Michael Shayne 481204 23 Case of The Constant Companion
Michael Shayne 481211 24 Case of The Borrowed Heirloom
Michael Shayne 481218 25 Case of the Eager Victim
Michael Shayne 490101 27 Case of the MailOrder Murders
Michael Shayne 490108 28 Case of the Phantom Neighbor
Michael Shayne 490115 29 Case of The Tahlani's Tears
Michael Shayne 490507 01 Man Who Lived Forever
Michael Shayne 490514 02 Hunted Bride
Michael Shayne 490521 03 Blood Stained Pearls
Michael Shayne 490528 04 Phantom Gun
Michael Shayne 490604 05 Hate That Killed
Michael Shayne 490611 06 Greyeyed Blonde
Michael Shayne 490618 07 Case of the Model Murder
(Repeat)
Michael Shayne 490625 08 Generous Killer
Michael Shayne 490702 09 Pursuit of Death
Michael Shayne 490709 10 Case of The Crooked Wheel
(Repeat)
Michael Shayne 490716 11 Wandering Fingerprints
Michael Shayne 490723 12 Purloined Corpse
Michael Shayne 490730 13 Lefthanded Fan
Michael Shayne 490806 14 Deadly Dough
Michael Shayne 490813 15 Popular Corpse
Michael Shayne 490820 16 Bayou Monster
Michael Shayne 490827 17 Problem In Murder
Michael Shayne 490827 The Hate That Killed
Michael Shayne 490903 18 High Priced Twins
Michael Shayne 490910 19 Carnival Killer
Michael Shayne 490917 20 Constant Companion
Michael Shayne 490924 21 Borrowed Heirloom
Michael Shayne 491001 22 Mailorder Murders
Michael Shayne 491008 23 Phantom Neighbor
Michael Shayne 491012 Case of the Phantom Gun (Repeat)
Michael Shayne 491015 24 Tahlanis Tears
Michael Shayne 491019 Case of The Hate That Killed
(Repeat)
Michael Shayne 491022 25 Eager Victim
Michael Shayne 491029 26 Corresponding Corpse
Michael Shayne 491102 Case of the Model Murder (Repeat)
Michael Shayne 491123 Case of The Crooked Wheel (Repeat)
Michael Shayne 491130 Case of The Wandering Fingerprints
(Repeat)
Michael Shayne 500104 Case of The Bayou Monster (Repeat)
Michael Shayne 530403 Case of The Queen of Narcotics
Michael Shayne The Left Handed Clue
Michael Shayne Too Many Suspects Too Many Alibis