Tuesday, June 30, 2009

From Eric Beheim #2


Black Leopard-2, originally uploaded by bucklesw1.

While working Auto Theft Detail, LAPD detective Joe Friday and his partner Frank Smith take a report from a man named Clarence, who identifies himself as a show owner. While en route to a carnival date in Nevada, one of his trucks was broken into in Los Angeles and some animals were either stolen or escaped. Among the missing animals is a black leopard named “Dante.” The report sets off a block-by-block search in the area where the truck break-in was believed to have occurred. Once the story hits the newspapers, the police switchboard is flooded with calls from concerned citizens. Even the Griffith Park Zoo is consulted for advice on the habits of black leopards. While the search continues in the Hollywood Hills, Friday and Smith begin to check out Clarence’s story a little closer. They eventually learn that he had been a former circus press agent who had always wanted to take out his own show. This dream became so real to him that he actually began to believe his circus existed, when in reality, there was no show, no truck and no black leopard. The search is called off and Clarence is taken down to police headquarters. Following a sanity hearing, “appropriate action was taken.”



This program originally aired on the NBC Radio Network on June 15, 1954. The role of Clarence was played by versatile character actor Cliff Arquette, best remembered as TV’s Charlie Weaver.



Since this story was based on an actual event, some of you from the Los Angeles area might remember when it took place, and might even know who “Clarence” really was. Dum-dee-dum-dum!

8 comments:

Chic Silber said...

I believe Henry Morgan was the

original sidekick to Joe Friday

Jim A said...

Ben Alexander was the first sidekick. Somebody will no doubt discuss his career which began as a child actor.

Frank Ferrante said...

Ben Alexander was the original partner to Jack Webb on Dragnet. Henry Morgan, (Col. Potter from TV's M*A*S*H), came on board a little later. DUM-DEE-DUM-DUM! ~frank

Anonymous said...

Just the facts, please.

Jack Ryan said...

. . . former circus press agent who had always wanted to take out his own show. This dream became so real to him that he actually began to believe his circus existed, when in reality, there was no show, no truck and no black leopard . . .

Preposterous! A circus press agent who was delusional? That's gotta be fiction.

Eric said...

Actually, Jack Webb's original partner was radio actor Barton Yarborough, who played Sgt. Ben Romero. (This was when DRAGNET first appeared as a radio show in 1949.) Shortly after the December 20, 1951 broadcast, Yarborough died suddenly of a heart attack. (In the next week's program, Sgt. Friday is told that Ben Romero has died suddenly of a heart attack.) For a couple of episodes, Barney Phillips filled in as Friday's partner Ed Jacobs. Ben Alexander joined the cast in October 1952. The TV series began January 3, 1952. (Ironically, Webb wanted Lloyd Nolan to play Joe Friday on TV, but Nolan was busy with another series so Webb took the role.) Up until 1957, DRAGNET ran both as a radio show and as a television show. After going off the air for a few years, DRAGNET returned to TV in 1966, with Harry Morgan as Friday's partner Bill Gannon.
Most of the DRAGNET radio shows are available in good sound for about $20.00 as a set of MP3 discs. Check with OTRCAT.com.

Anonymous said...

Weren't the Dragnet TV programs recycled under the name "Badge 714"?

Eric said...

The old DRAGNET TV shows were syndicated under the title BADGE 714 (which was Joe Friday’s badge number.) After Jack Webb died, the LAPD retired badge #714 in his honor. The plot for the movie LA CONFIDENTIAL, which is set in Los Angeles in the early 1950s, includes a TV cop show called BADGE OF HONOR, which is clearly patterned after DRAGNET.