Brett's Old Time Radio Show Episode 857, Sherlock Holmes, Murder On A Wager


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Mar 11 2025 26 mins   1

🎙️ Welcome to Brett’s Old Time Radio Show! 📻


Good evening, and a warm welcome back to the show! I hope you’ve had a fantastic day and that you're ready to unwind with another journey into the golden age of radio.


I’m Brett, your host for this evening, speaking to you from my home by the beautiful Lyme Bay. It’s a perfect night looking out of my studio window across the bay, and I hope the week is treating you kindly wherever you’re tuning in from.


Tonight, we’re once again dusting off the old studio archives to bring you another classic gem from the world of Old Time Radio. So sit back, relax, and let’s step into a world of adventure, mystery, and timeless storytelling.


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Now, let’s turn the dial back in time and enjoy the show!


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The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: A Legacy in Sound and Mystery

In the golden age of radio, when families huddled around their receivers to be transported into worlds of intrigue and adventure, one voice cut through the static like a blade—Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes. His clipped diction, sharp intellect, and unshakable confidence paired seamlessly with the warm, affable presence of Nigel Bruce as Dr. Watson. Together, they brought Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s legendary detective to life in The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, a radio drama that captivated audiences from 1939 to 1950. Over 374 episodes, this series wove a tapestry of mystery, deduction, and thrilling escapades, yet much of it has been lost to time, leaving behind an enigmatic collection of surviving recordings scattered across the internet, their audio quality often as weathered as an old case file.


A Broadcast Legacy Cloaked in Mystery

The series was more than an adaptation—it was a reinvention, a fresh interpretation of Holmes’s cases that introduced new stories, altered titles, and crafted original twists on familiar tales. Some episodes, such as the radio adaptation of The Adventure of the Red Circle, were rebranded (Mrs. Warren’s Lodger), while others bore completely original plots infused with the essence of Doyle’s world.


From its inception, the program underwent various rebrandings—Sherlock Holmes, Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson, and other titles surfaced before it cemented itself as The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. Its enduring popularity was fueled by its impeccable performances, immersive soundscapes, and writing that kept audiences on the edge of their seats.


The Voices Behind the Violin

At the heart of the series was the unparalleled chemistry between Rathbone and Bruce, who played the famed detective and his loyal companion across 220 episodes. Week after week, the duo invited listeners into the fog-drenched streets of Victorian London, where peril lurked in every shadow, and the sharp mind of Holmes could unravel any enigma.


However, the role that defined Rathbone eventually became a gilded cage. Fearing typecasting, he stepped away from the show after The Singular Affair of the Baconian Cipher. The baton—or rather, the deerstalker—was then passed to Tom Conway, though Bruce retained top billing. Despite a valiant effort, their partnership lasted only 39 episodes before both actors exited, leaving behind a void that subsequent performers would attempt to fill until the series concluded in 1950.


The Pen Behind the Pipe: Writing the Adventures

The program’s early scripts bore the unmistakable touch of Edith Meiser, a passionate Holmesian who had already adapted Conan Doyle’s works for radio in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1930–1935). She masterfully balanced faithfulness to the original stories with the demands of the radio format, ensuring Holmes’s razor-sharp deductions and Watson’s earnest narration remained front and center.


But in 1943, the landscape shifted. Meiser departed, reportedly over disagreements with a sponsor regarding the program’s level of violence. Enter Denis Green and Anthony Boucher, who took up the mantle, steering the show into a new era. Green, known for his meticulous plotting, and Boucher, an acclaimed mystery writer, crafted gripping narratives that upheld the intellectual rigor and atmospheric tension Holmes fans craved. Meiser briefly returned for the seventh season before passing the torch once more. The final season saw Denis Green return to bring the saga to a fitting close.


From Hollywood to the World: A Wartime Companion

Originally broadcast from Hollywood, The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes initially found a home on the Blue Network before transitioning to the Mutual Broadcasting System in 1943. During World War II, its influence extended far beyond American households—thanks to the Armed Forces Radio Service, Holmes’s deductive prowess reached soldiers stationed overseas, offering a brief escape from the grim realities of war.


The show’s journey took yet another turn when ABC took over for its sixth and ninth seasons, marking the detective’s migration across networks, much like his literary counterpart flitting between cases.


Sherlock Holmes: The Timeless Detective

Holmes himself needs no introduction—Doyle’s master detective, the lodger of 221B Baker Street, first appeared in A Study in Scarlet in 1887. From the moment he uttered his famous words, "You see, but you do not observe," he captured the imagination of readers and, later, listeners alike.


A man of unparalleled intellect, Holmes operated as a "consulting detective," his mind a finely tuned instrument capable of unraveling the most confounding mysteries. From aristocrats to pawnbrokers, his clientele spanned all walks of life, and his influence reached the highest echelons of power, from Scotland Yard to foreign royalty. Though dispassionate and analytical, his bond with Watson—his chronicler, friend, and steadfast companion—offered glimpses of the human beneath the legend.


Over the course of four novels and 56 short stories, Holmes cemented his place as literature’s greatest detective. His methods—deductive reasoning, forensic science, and unparalleled observation—transcended fiction, influencing real-world criminal investigations.


The Great Hiatus and Beyond

Doyle’s attempt to retire Holmes in The Final Problem (1893) backfired spectacularly—public outcry forced him to resurrect the sleuth in The Adventure of the Empty House (1903). This three-year gap in Holmes’s timeline, from 1891 to 1894, became known as "The Great Hiatus," sparking endless speculation and pastiche writing.


Eventually, the great detective retired to the Sussex Downs, turning his analytical mind to beekeeping. But even retirement couldn’t keep him from the occasional case, particularly when national security was at stake, as seen in His Last Bow.


The Immortal Voice of Mystery

Though The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes aired its final episode in 1950, its legacy endures. Rathbone and Bruce’s portrayals remain the gold standard, their performances living on in the surviving recordings that echo from a bygone era. The crackle of static, the rich narration, the measured cadence of Holmes’s deductions—it’s all still there, waiting for those who dare to listen.


The great detective himself might scoff at nostalgia, preferring cold logic to sentimentality. But even he would have to admit: the voice of Sherlock Holmes, preserved in these radio waves, is truly immortal.



📻 The Golden Age of Radio: When the Airwaves Ruled Entertainment 🎙️


Before television took center stage, the Golden Age of Radio (1920s–1950s) was the heartbeat of home entertainment. Families gathered around their radios each evening, transported into worlds of adventure, drama, mystery, and laughter. From thrilling detective tales and spine-chilling mysteries to heartfelt soap operas and lively variety shows, radio became the world’s first true mass media platform—uniting millions through sound alone.


Innovations in broadcasting gave rise to legendary networks like NBC, CBS, ABC, and Mutual, shaping entertainment for generations to come. The immediacy of live performances, the magic of sound effects, and the power of storytelling made radio an immersive experience unlike any other.


Though television eventually took the spotlight, the spirit of Old Time Radio lives on, reminding us of an era when voices, music, and imagination painted vivid pictures in the minds of listeners.


#GoldenAgeOfRadio #OldTimeRadio #ClassicBroadcasting #RadioDrama #OTR #HistoryOfRadio