The Shadow was one of the first radio dramas to hook listeners with secret coded messages,
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When
Street and Smith, a Depression era publisher of pulp fiction, decided to boost the
sagging sales of its flagship Detective Story Magazine
they took a flyer on radio, which
was just coming into its own as a platform for dramas. David Chrisman of the Ruthrauff
& Ryan advertising agency was hired to create a package that would
frame stories from the magazine adapted by editor/publisher
William Sweets. It was decided to
have the stories introduced by a
mysterious, nameless narrator. Several possibilities were tossed around
until writer Harry Engman Charlot
suggested the eerie and sinister sounding The
Shadow.
Detective Story Hour premiered on
Thursday July 31, 1930 on the CBS Radio
network. It was the first interaction of an American cultural phenomenon which would go on
to become one of the longest running an most popular radio dramas of all time,
a long running series of twice-a-month
pulp novel and spawn movie serials
and features, comic books, and a TV series. The character of The Shadow would help
inspire the superhero genre on in comic books, especially The BatMan and the Green Hornet on radio. The
Hornet was depicted as the modern nephew
of the Lone Ranger by as Detroit radio station desperate for a
mystery program to match The Shadow.
But
all of that was as yet in the future.
The character and the radio show both had some growing and adapting to
do.
In
those early broadcasts, the eerie
introduction that became famous was not yet in its full form. The Shadow did not yet have a secret identity and was not an active participant in the stories, just
a kind of omnipresent observer to
the unfolding yarn. But the narrator
voiced by James LaCurto and later Frank Readick uttered the now familiar
introduction “Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow
knows…”
The Shadow Magazine eventually came out twice a month with a complete short novel in each issue plus short stories and features. The Shadow in the magazine had a more complex back story than depicted on radio.
Audiences were hooked from the beginning. Smith
and Street were gratified by the success of the show, but somewhat stunned by the audience reaction to The
Shadow. But being smart purveyors of popular culture, the
company wasted no time in cashing in. On April 1, 1931 the company launched a new
magazine, The Shadow, a quarterly
which featured a complete novel in
each issue plus additional detective short stories. The editors commissioned Walter B. Gibson, a prolific pulp writer and stage magician as the principal author of the novels which
were published under the name Maxwell
Grant.
Gibson
fleshed out the character and invented the mythos
surrounding him. The new book was
such a sensation that within months it went from a four times a year schedule
to twice a month—requiring the
hyperactive writer to churn out 75,000 word stories every two weeks in addition
to later contributing to the radio program, comic books, and a daily syndicated
comic strip. Although eventually other
writers were brought in to take up some of the slack, Gibson would go on to pen
282 of the 325 Shadow novels. And after
the pulp magazine folded he went on to write three additional longer form
novels under his own name in a new series issued by Belmont Books.
In
the Gibson stories The Shadow’s secret identity was Kent Allard, a World War I
air ace who flew for France and
was known as the Black Eagle. After the war, Allard turned to the challenge
in waging war on criminals. He faked
his death in the South American jungles, then returned
to the States. Back in New
York City, he adopted numerous
identities to conceal his existence, Lamont
Cranston, a “wealthy young man about town,” being just one of them. Alard blackmailed the real playboy into allowing him to assume his
identity while he traveled the world.
Assuming
the identity of Cranston and others the Shadow pursued villains relentlessly by
night employing the skills of a cat
burglar, hypnotist, magician, and master of disguise to seemingly be anywhere. He would often torment the men—and occasional woman—he stalked them with ominous
taunts from the darkness, often driving them to near insanity. In the end either
The Shadow would cut the bad guy down in a blaze
of gun fire or lead him into a police
trap, or even have him killed by his own accomplices or victims. For most of the duration of the pulp series
there was no hint that The Shadow
possessed any supernatural powers.
Lurid covers with endangered beauties and oriental villains sold magazines.
The
lurid pulp covers gripped readers
with an unforgettable image of the anti-hero.
He wore a large, wide brimmed black hat
pulled low over his face revealing only intense staring eyes. Over an
ordinary black business suit he wore
a crimson lined black cape pulled up
revealing only a hawk-like nose.
With
the magazine launched, the company was still a little unsure how to use the
character on the radio show. They even
tried to employ him as the narrator for another short lived series based on a
Smith and Street rag, Love Story Hour, which took over the
original Thursday night slot. Detective
Story Hour shifted to Sunday evenings.
In September, 1931 the program acquired a commercial sponsor and was re-named the Blue Coal Radio Revue but
it remained an hour long program with Frank Readick starring as The
Shadow.
The
following year the show and its sponsor jumped
to NBC on Tuesday and Wednesday
nights. Readick remained the star,
although LaCurto sometimes filled in.
And the program was now officially what audiences had called it all
along The Shadow.
As
the radio dramas began to integrate
the narrator into the story lines, some of them borrowed from and adapted from
the novels for the sake of simplicity
some elements of character as portrayed by Gibson were dropped or altered. First to
go was any mention of Kent Allard or other assumed identities. The Shadow was Lamont Cranston. To avoid bringing the action to a screeching
halt to explain in each episode how the Shadow seems to be everywhere, a key
part of the novels, it was said simply that he “had the power to cloud men’s minds.”
This was inferred to be a form of hypnotism mastered by The Shadow in
the Orient. Later in the series it he seemed to have
acquired a super power of invisibility.
Agness Morehead was The Shadow's accomplice on the radio show.
One
of the most important differences between the books and the show was the
introduction of a female accomplice,
Margo Lane, who learns Cranston’s
secret, becomes his companion, possible lover, and abets him in his crusade. The part was added
to give a feminine voice to the
series, and Lane sometimes stepped in as narrator explaining her part in the
unfolding drama. Gibson was resentful of
this change and refused for quite a while to include Lane in his novels,
finally giving in to public pressure after 1940. In 1937 the program moved to the Mutual Network and Sunday nights where
it became an institution. And with a new Shadow, youthful wiz kid Orson Welles and Agnes Morehead as Margo Lane the program took on the form that is
most remembered, and which is still heard on old time radio programs and available in CD collections. Although the
famous introduction and the closing sinister laugh were still provided by
recording of Readick, Welles’s deep rich voice and nuanced performance
built tension as never before.
Orson Welles became the most famous voice of The Shadow.
Welles
only stayed with the show for two seasons, moving on to his own ambitious
Mercury Theater of the Air and Hollywood,
taking Morehead with him on both adventures, but his stamp remained on the
program through the several other actors called upon to portray the mysterious
crime fighter including Bill Johnstone
(1938-1943), John Archer
(1944-1945), and Bret Morrison (1943-1944,
1945-1954). Lane was portrayed by
Morehead through 1940 then by Majorie
Anderson (1940-1944), Grace Matthews
(1946-1949), and Gertrude Warner
(1949-1954).
Bret Morison and Marjorie Anderson were a '40's pairing as The Shadow and Margo Lane.
The
show remained popular and Blue Coal remained the usual sponsor on the East Coast until replaced by the U.S. Army and Air Force, and later by Wildroot
Cream Oil. After 1953 no regular
single sponsor could be found and the program was sustained by the network with spot
advertising. That was writing on the wall, listeners and
advertisers were abandoning long form
drama radio for the glamor of television. The
Shadow aired its last original
episode on December 26, 1954.
The
Shadow also lived across multiple other media.
There were several film versions, mostly by minor studios, beginning with a series of two reel shorts produced by Universal
Pictures during the first flush of success on the radio in 1930-31. The first entry in the series, A
Burglar to the Rescue, was filmed in New York City with the voice of The Shadow on radio, Frank
Readick. Subsequent instalments were
filmed cheaply in Hollywood with different actors. In 1937 and ’38 Rod La Rocque starred in two Grand
National Pictures releases.
Victor Jory played The Shadow in a Columbia Pictures serial. Poverty Row B-movie studios churned out cheep bottom-of-the-Double feature films.
The Shadow was a 15
episode cliff hanging serial
starring Victor Jory in probably the most memorable
cinematic portrayal for Columbia in
1940. Poverty row Monogram Pictures, best known for their westerns, made three super-low budget entries in the post
war years.
In
the 1958 two pilot episodes of a
failed TV series were slapped together
and released to theaters as Invisible Avenger.
The
character did not get a first class
film presentation until 1994 when Alec
Baldwin and Penelope Ann Miller appeared in The Shadow in what Universal
Pictures hoped would be a blockbuster. The film feature John Lone as an Asian
supervillain working to develop an atomic
bomb, and a supporting cast of Peter Boyle, Jonathon Winters, Ian
McKellan, and Tim Curry. Although the film made money, it was not warmly greeted by critics and failed to become a mega-hit.
The Shadow finally got a big budget production in 1994 when Alec Baldwin played the lead and Penelope Ann Miller played Margo Lane. It was supposed to set up a movie franchise for Universal Pictures, but failed to become a blockbuster.
The Shadow fared better in
illustrated print. Walter Gibson participated in a daily strip drawn by Vernon Greene which ran for two years,
1940-42 and covered six adventures adapted from his novels until it was cancelled along with many other strips
to preserve paper during the war years. The strips were assembled and released as two
comic books.
Publishers
Street and Smith published their own comic book series, Shadow Comics for 101
issues between 1940 and 1949 based on the magazine version of the hero. Archie Comics tried to cash in on
the super hero craze in 1964 with a new series based on the radio show. In the second issue of an eight book arc, a blond Lamont Cranston
and The Shadow was transformed into a muscular
superhero in green and blue tights. Loyal Shadow fans were not amused and neither was the intended teen age audience.
Street and Smith issued the first comic book which ran for 101 issues through the 1940.s.
D.C. Comics produced four
Shadow series—a 12-issue series (Nov. 1973 - Sept. 1975) drawing heavily on the
atmosphere of the novels and the graphic
content of their covers; a 1986 mini-series,
Shadow: Blood and Judgment that
brought the old hero to modern New York; and in 1987 a new a monthly series by writer
Andy Helfer and drawn primarily by
artists Bill Sienkiewicz and Kyle Baker continuing the modern
universe of the mini-series. During this
period The Shadow also made cross
appearances in other DC Comics, particularly Detective Comics where Batman acknowledges the now elderly Shadow as his inspiration and we learn that the
character had once saved the lives
of Bruce Wayne’s parents.
At DC Comics The Shadow had his own book and showed up with the company's superheroes, notably Batman in other books.
From
1989 to 1992, DC published a new Shadow series, The Shadow Strikes,
written by Gerard Jones and Eduardo Barreto set in the ‘30s and
returning The Shadow to his pulp origins.
Marvel Comics also had a
crack at The Shadow with a graphic novel,
The
Shadow 1941: Hitler’s Astrologer by writer Dennis O’Neil and artist Michael
Kaluta who had worked together on D.C.’s first series.
Dark Horse Comics acquired the
rights to The Shadow and published
the mini-series In The Coils of Leviathan in 1993, Hell’s Heat Wave, and The
Shadow and Doc Savage both in 1995 as well as two single issue specials.
In
2012 Dynamite Entertainment began
yet another new series written by Garth
Ennis and illustrated by Aaron
Campbell and a mini-series Masks, teaming the 1930 era Shadow with
the Spider, The Green Hornet and Kato,
and a 1930s version of Zorro.
It
seems that after all of these years pop culture fans still can’t get enough of
The Shadow.
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