Box 13
Box 13 is a syndicated radio drama about the escapades of newspaperman-turned-mystery novelist Dan Holiday, played by film star Alan Ladd. Created by Ladd's company, Mayfair Productions, Box 13 aired in different cities over different dates and times. It first aired in some United States radio markets in October 1947.
Synopsis
To seek out new ideas for his fiction, Holiday ran a classified ad in the Star-Times newspaper where he formerly worked: "Adventure wanted, will go anywhere, do anything – write Box 13, Star-Times". The stories followed Holiday's adventures when he responded to the letters sent to him by such people as a psycho killer and various victims.Cast
appeared as Holiday's scatterbrained secretary, Suzy, while Edmund MacDonald played police Lt. Kling. Supporting cast members included Betty Lou Gerson, Frank Lovejoy, Lurene Tuttle, Alan Reed, Luis Van Rooten, and John Beal. Vern Carstensen, who directed Box 13 for producer Richard Sanville, was also the show's announcer.Among the 52 episodes in the series were such mystery adventures as "The Sad Night", "Hot Box", "Last Will And Nursery Rhyme", "Hare And Hounds", "Hunt And Peck", "Death Is A Doll", "Tempest In a Casserole", and "Mexican Maze". The dramas featured music by Rudy Schrager. Russell Hughes, who had previously hired Ladd as a radio actor in 1935 at a $19 weekly salary, wrote most of the scripts, sometimes in collaboration with Ladd. The partners in Mayfair Productions were Ladd and Bernie Joslin, who had previously run the chain of Mayfair Restaurants.
Raymond Burr appeared in some episodes.
TV adaptation
At least one attempt to convert the series for television was tried when Ladd appeared in an adaptation of "Daytime Nightmare" on CBS' General Electric Theater. Russell Hughes, who was then working at Columbia, reworked the script for the small screen. "We hope it comes off well", said Ladd. "If so, the other 51 scenarios are on the shelf, waiting."The show was produced by Jaguar, Ladd's own company.
Plot
Dan Holiday is drugged and winds up in an asylum. The staff try to convince him he's someone he isn't. It is part of a scam to claim an inheritance.Attempted adaptations
The TV show did not result in a series. In 1956 Ladd announced that Jaguar would still attempt to make a series, only Ladd would not star as Holiday. Ladd's daughter Carol was reported as being involved in casting.In 1958 Jaguar hired Charles Bennett to adapt the series in a TV series.
In 1959 it was reported Ladd was working on scripts for a TV series with Aaron Spelling. Bill Leslie was to play the lead opposite Ann McRae.
Shortly before his death Ladd announced plans to make a feature film version of the show. He said he would play the lead and the movie would feature 13 cameos from stars that Ladd had worked with in the past. Possible names included William Bendix, Veronica Lake, Brian Donlevy, and Macdonald Carey.
Box 13 was also re-imagined as a comic book series in 2010 by David Gallaher and Steve Ellis and published by ComiXology. It is published digitally by comiXology and published in print by Red 5 Comics:
http://www.red5comics.com/?p=668
Episodes
# | Date | Title |
01 | Aug 22, 1948 | "The First Letter" |
02 | Aug 29, 1948 | "The Insurance Swindle Adventure" |
03 | Sept 5, 1948 | "Blackmail Is Murder" |
04 | Sept 12, 1948 | "'The Radio Actress Murder Case" |
05 | Sept 19, 1948 | "Extra, Extra" |
06 | Sept 26, 1948 | "Shanghaied" |
07 | Oct 3, 1948 | "George Flit, Detective" |
08 | Oct 10, 1948 | "Rendezvous in the Park at Night" |
09 | Oct 17, 1948 | "A Book of Poems by Sir Walter Scott" |
10 | Oct 24, 1948 | "Maria Theater Ticket Murder" |
11 | Oct 31, 1948 | "Catherine Daily" |
12 | Nov 7, 1948 | "Triple Cross" |
13 | Nov 14, 1948 | "Damsel In Distress" |
14 | Nov 21, 1948 | "Diamond in the Sky" |
15 | Nov 28, 1948 | "Double Right Cross |
16 | Dec 5, 1948 | "Look Pleasant, Please" |
17 | Dec 12, 1948 | "The Haunted Artist" |
18 | Dec 19, 1948 | "The Sad Night" |
19 | Dec 26, 1948 | "Hot Box" |
20 | Jan 2, 1949 | "The Better Man" |
21 | Jan 9, 1949 | "The Professor and the Puzzle" |
22 | Jan 16, 1949 | "The Dowager and Dan Holiday" |
23 | Jan 23, 1949 | "Three to Die" |
24 | Jan 30, 1949 | "The Philanthropist" |
25 | Feb 6, 1949 | "Last Will and Nursery Rhyme" |
26 | Feb 13, 1949 | "Delinquent Dilemma" |
27 | Feb 20, 1949 | "Flash of Light" |
28 | Feb 27, 1949 | "Hare and Hounds" |
29 | Mar 6, 1949 | "Hunt and Peck" |
30 | Mar 13, 1949 | "Death is a Doll" |
31 | Mar 20, 1949 | "One One Three Point Five" |
32 | Mar 27, 1949 | "Dan and the Wonderful Lamp" |
33 | Apr 3, 1949 | "Tempest in a Casserole" |
34 | Apr 10, 1949 | "Mexican Maze" |
35 | Apr 17, 1949 | "Sealed Instructions" |
36 | Apr 24, 1949 | "Find Me, Find Death" |
37 | May 1, 1949 | "Much Too Lucky" |
38 | May 8, 1949 | "One of These Four" |
39 | May 15, 1949 | "Daytime Nightmare" |
40 | May 22, 1949 | "Death is No Joke" |
41 | May 29, 1949 | "The Treasure of Hang Li" |
42 | June 5, 1949 | "Design for Danger" |
43 | June 12, 1949 | "The Dead Man Walks" |
44 | June 19, 1949 | "Killer at Large" |
45 | June 26, 1949 | "Speed To Burn" |
46 | July 3, 1949 | "House of Darkness" |
47 | July 10, 1949 | "Double Trouble" |
48 | July 17, 1949 | "The Biter Bitten" |
49 | July 24, 1949 | "A Perfect Crime" |
50 | July 31, 1949 | "Archimedes and the Roman" |
51 | Aug 7, 1949 | "The Clay Pigeon" |
52 | Aug 14, 1949 | "Round Robin" |