Ed Catto: Film Noir — Without the Film
Even though police procedurals are all the rage on TV right now, IâÂÂve always preferred detective shows and Film Noir movies. This week, letâÂÂs take a walk down some mean streets as I tell you about an outstanding Film Noir thriller. YouâÂÂll have to listen closely, as thereâÂÂs no film at all.
Broadway Is My Beat is a crime drama from the Golden Age of Radio. Originally broadcast in the late 40âÂÂs and early 50âÂÂs, this show follows the homicide caseload of Lt. Danny Clover, a cop assigned to the âÂÂBroadway Precinctâ of New York City.
Each week Lt. Clover must solve a murder. And itâÂÂs all done Ellery Queen/âÂÂfair playâ style, so the listener can figure out whodunit as well. These stories are pretty clever. ItâÂÂs always a race for the listener to keep up with the police lieutenant and discover what really happened before itâÂÂs revealed.
The writers played fast and loose with the geographical boundaries of the precinct, so Broadway Is My Beat also becomes a travel log of a New York City thatâÂÂs long gone. Any given episode might take you to Times SquareâÂÂs Dance Halls, or to a seedy apartment building or to an ethnic neighborhood that simply no longer exists.
And as an audio drama, youâÂÂll have to use your imagination for everything. I always tend to conjure up long dark shadows for most scenes and pretend itâÂÂs filmed in black and white. Of course, if IâÂÂve recently read an Ed Brubaker comic, I tend to imagine Sean Phillipsâ art (below). But if you envision Steranko, in full Chandler-mode, you canâÂÂt go wrong either.
These adventures offer a fascinating mix of purple prose and hard-boiled dialogue. Lt. Clover typically offers over-the-top narration for the reader, often speaking directly to youâ But when the characters talk, itâÂÂs a time capsule of New York, with loads of sass and moxie.
HereâÂÂs a great example of pulpy-but-poetic opening narration. This from a 1952 episode called The Eve Hunter Murder Case, written by Morton S. Fine:
The pallor of the long day ebbs finally from Broadway,
What had been sallow and gray is a sudden scarlet.
Where drabness was, where surfaces were drained of color,
ThereâÂÂs a glitter thatâÂÂs now silvery â darted through with splinters of neon light.
And at this edge of twilight the shock gathers ⦠waits for the revelers.
The sighing wind draws them into it one by one,
From the long corridors, from hall bedrooms, from the embrace of solitude.
They drift, they run, they whirl to the dancing of the wind
And shock waits..and shock comes!
The talent on this production is top notch. The best episodes of Broadway Is My Beat were directed by one of the most talented guys in the radio industry: Elliot Lewis. He was an important producer and a visionary with some of the later shows he created. He was also a very gifted comedian, appearing as guitar player Frankie Remley in the long-running Phil Harris â Alice Faye Show.
Larry Thor played the lead with an urgent, world-weary staccato for most of the showâÂÂs run. In fact, in so many episodes you can hear his impatience and frustration from constantly wading through deathâÂÂs aftermath. Quite often, the police characters in the series will have to pause and apologize because theyâÂÂve just been too short or too rude to one another.
When the show hit its stride, Alexander Courage was in charge of the music. You probably remember him for his best-known work: the Star Trek Theme.
You can find episodes of Broadway Is My Beat at Radio Spirits, one of the premiere companies selling old time radio shows. You can also discover many episodes on the web, and Radio Archives has a great online collection.
WeâÂÂll end this weekâÂÂs column the way Lt. Danny Clover ended each episode:
Broadway is my beat, from Times Square to Columbus Circle, the gaudiest, the most violent, the lonesomest mile in the world. ÃÂ 


