Monday, October 21, 2024

Around The Samovar


A samovar is a metal container traditionally used to boil water for tea. There's a central tube in which you burn coal or wood to heat the water. Many Russian samovars have a konforta, a sing-shaped attachment that holds a teapot filled with tea concentrate. They're often very decorative.

The first reference I ever read misnamed the program, perhaps deliberately. It was in a truly excellent book Poland Under Black Light by Janusz Anderman. My English translated copy is from 1985.

"...a shop trainee showers people standing in line with orangeade and hides, laughing, behind the empty shelves; no one reacts; many newspapers carry reports on the bear that has shown up in the Tatra, it is affectionately referred to as Teddy, and a special correspondent reports on it for the Express; on Polish radio there's a program "Teatime Round the Samovar".

The Program at first seemed not to exist. Then I found the name variation. The was a Russian music program named "Around the Samovar."With the correct name I found multiple references. the most detailed is the March 12th 1934 issue of the Jewish Daily Bulletin in the Kilocycles column by George Field. [SOURCE]

"WEVD presents two other worthwhile programs, at 10:15 p. m. the University of the Air will be in charge of Professor Ernest Sutherland Bates who discusses "Coordination in our Present-day Life" and at 10:30 Zinoida Nicolina, soprano, Simon Philipoff, balalaika artist, Zam's Gypsy orchestra appear on Around the Samovar program."

 A 1930 issue of the Arriba record lists the program on the Columbia System at 9:30 PM Eastern Standard Time. In 1931 the Alabama Digital archives list the program in July of 1931 at 7:00 PM. [SOURCE]  The May 1931 Cincinnati Radio Dial lists the program at 10:30 on WKRC. It gives the impression that the show moved around often in it's first year.  It was some time before I found anything other than listings on radio schedules. 

The February 1931 issue of "What's On air" answers our origin questions. [SOURCE]. Columbia cancelled the program Majestic Curiosity Shop and mailed a misprint of their schedule for that month. Listeners were displeased with the mix up but we now learn that "Around the Samovar" debuted Sunday January 4th, 1931 and got their first earful of Peter Biljo and his Balalaika Orchestra. Purportedly Biljo was born in Leningrad, today called Saint Petersburg in 1893. (They were sometimes also called the Bilji Balalaika Orchastra.)  The Ogdensburg Republican Journal from that same week made note of the change in the Daily radio Highlights column by C. E. Butterfield with the arcane note

That issue of the Cincinnati Radio Dial also lists off more performers: Valia Valentinova, contralto; Eli Spivak, baritone; Eliena Kazanova, violinist, and Peter Biljo, director of the balalaika orchestra.The Radio Pictoral Spring 1931 issue took a stab at describing the program. [SOURCE] It listed the above performers and a very short description: "Around the Samovar" instead of the Curosity Shop, WABC chain at 9, with, the Gauchoa Going on at 10.30."  It included a list of the stations that carried the program: WHEC, WKBW, WEAN, WNAC, WORC, WPG, WJAS, WLBW, WMAL, WCAO, WTAR, WDBJ, and WADC. But the Cincinnati Radio Dial had more description:

"Each broadcast of"Around the Samovar" presents some new and novel phase of Russian music or some charming folk song that introduces the listener to new musical enjoyment. The programs are carefully prepared and rehearsed before going on the air, although they give one an impression of gay spontaneity."
The only problem with that story is that it very clearly appears on a WABC schedule at 9:30 PM, March 22nd 1930. [SOURCE]  It aired between the Nit Wit Hour and the Paramount Publix Hour.  More here on that Nit Wit Hour. [LINK]


The October 3rd, 1929 Brooklyn Times Union also listed the program with a complete song listing, and cited all solo performances.(below)  I had to look up Chankamanka; it appears to be made up or misspelled. Further backing up the 1929 date is a thesis paper by Martin Edmund Kiszko The Origins and Place of the Balalaika in Russian Culture. 



Kiszko goes on to describe the program in more detail then anything else I ever found. [SOURCE] It includes two extracts from a September 22nd 1929 script for the program from the Kasura collection. University of Illinois. (See pages 101 and 102.)

"One of the most popular radio programmes of the late twenties, when recordings of Russian music hit their peak, was Around the Samovar, illustrated here with copies of the original 1929 scripts (document 2). Around the Samovar featured Peter Biljo's Balalaika Orchestra and Soloists. The show's radio scripts of 1929 display a repertoire primarily made up of ballads, gypsy songs, popular Russian dances for orchestra,arrangements of Russian and European art music, and violin solos. Predominant is the use of the baritone or soprano vocalist accompanied by orchestra."

It also appears in a June 1930 WABC schedule in the Radio Digest. It seems clear that seasons of the program aired from Spring of 1929 through 1930. Wireless World even paused to call it "A little Russian Programme" in their Future Features column of 1929. That may be it's actual debut. Also on WABC in 1929 was the program "In a Russian Village." It was already airing weekly in June of 1929 , and debut on the network at 8:00 June 7th. This appear in the Encyclopedia of American Radio, 1920-1960 by Luther Sies. It's short description states that it aired in 1929 and 1930 on CBS, featuring Peter Biljo and his Russian Musicians. It appears to be very similar to the Around the Samovar program lacking only the bevy of vocalists. The 1930 Who is Who in Radio describes Peter as the Director of Russian programs at Columbia Broadcasting.

The book The Ultimate History of Network Radio Programming by Jay Hickerson provides a bit of an Epilogue. In July and August of 1934 Biljo also directed the program Balalaika Orchestra aka Samovar Serenade for CBS. Then Peter Biljo pops up in 1938 advertised along choice liquors in a Russian restaurant advert.Sometime between 1934 and 1938 Peter's radio career came to an end. 

Peter Biljo died in Woodbury, CT in 1963. His earliest 78 was released by Brunswick in 1928. More here. The name of his radio program was borrowed by other musicians for their songs and albums including Leonid Bolotine, Vasily Andreyev even writer Bill Sarnoff.  The earliest appearance of his name is a 1926 issue of Billboard index of "legitimate" stage. This notes a performance of his balalaika Orchestra at Aeolian Hall backing vocalist Nadiejda Plevitzkaia alongside pianist Max Rabinovitch.  In an exciting twist it was later found that Plevitskaya was recruited by the NKVD (soviet secret police) he was arrested and eventually imprisoned for espionage in France. It's the basis of the French film Triple Agent (2004).

But getting back to the start of this query, how did Janusz Anderman hear this program having been born in 1949 in Poland? He's about 75 years old and still writing. His last book was Shaving of Losers published in 2021. He worked at Radio Wolna aka Radio Free Europe in the late 1970s. He also published the radio play "Stadion" in 1989. It's possible he became aware of those early American Russian programs possibly though radio Wolna or the then famous story of Ms. Plevitskaya. He's still alive today... Perhaps I should ask him.

Monday, October 14, 2024

DJ Shorty Fincher

I bumped into Shorty Fincher before, reading about Lucky Lang. Shorty was actually named Luther Clark “Shorty” Fincher and he was born in 1899 in Iukia, MS according to his biography in this song book. I am aware of one other Fincher song book and it's dates with a signature to 1941. [SOURCE] At that time he was on WORK in York, PA. I suspect my song book is the older of the two, being more plain, having possibly a 1937 or 1938 publication.

As is often the case his obituary reveals more information than any other source. He died in 1958 and was 58 years old so his year of birth is accurate. Had he lived to the following November he'd have been 59. At the time he was operating Valley View Park in Hallam, PA. He was also a DJ on WGCB in Red Lion. The obit is probably the source for the alsobooks.com information stating the following

"Fincher came to York county in 1940, and his large car with steer horns on the radiator soon became a common sight. For a time he had a music group called Shorty Fincher and his Prarie Pals. He was heard on WORK and WNOW radio in his early years."
It gives the town he was born in as Iuki, MS which is not what the song book says. I am assuming they're both spelling variations of Iuka, MS. Regardless the family moved to Anniston, Alabama, when he was one year old. He was survived by his wife Alexandra "Sallie" Fincher, four sons: James, Fred,  and Donald; and a daughter Nellie named for his mother. the obit goes on to name all his siblings but hiding his sisters names behind their husbands as a Mrs. so they're not worth including. it was more interesting that many still lived around Anniston, AL but some were local to York or Philadelphia. More here.

One of 14 brothers he and two others started a band, The Cotton Pickers, in 1932. The Cotton Pickers included Shorty, his brother Hamilton (who performed as the comedian "Rawhide"), Alexandra Kaspura as "Lonesome Valley Sally," Florence "Yodeling Flo" Morosco, Dolph Hewitt and Ted Buchanan on guitar.  The Cotton-pickers relocated to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where they had a regular program on KQV-AM. Around then he recorded four sides for Columbia records as the "Crazy Hillbillies Band". [SOURCE] That name is due to a sponsorship from Crazy Water Crystals. He also recorded under the name Colonel Jack [Brinkley] and Shorty's Crazy Hillbillies, as well as six other sides for Okeh. 

If you didn't know, crazy water crystals were a laxative. It was disturbingly popular. The company sponsored radio programs all over the South. The Crazy Mountaineers, Dick Hartman's Tennessee Ramblers, The Crazy Hickory Nuts, The Lone Star Quartet, Shorty's Crazy Hillbillies, The Crazy water Crystal Gang, [SOURCE]  and the Crazy Water Crystal Program itself. Their ads and sponsored programs were aired on WBAP, WPTF, WBT, KRBC and several border blasters as well.

From that 1932 group Dolph Hewitt (aka Adolph Edward Hewitt) went on to a career of his own. He got into WWVA at the age of 16, over a year before Fincher. His first performed with Frankie More and his Log Cabin Gang. In the 1940s Dolph moved to St. Louis and performed at KMOX. That went well and he graduated to an ABC Radio Network slot with Pappy Cheshire’s Ozark Champions. In 1946 he joined Radio Station WLS with the Sage Riders on the National Barn Dance. He recorded several sides for Kapp and Victor records. More here.

Back in Pittsburgh, Hamilton Fincher was hired by Doc Williams as a comedian for his band, the Border Riders. Williams and the Border Riders went to Wheeling, West Virginia, along with Hamilton. Shorty Fincher followed them shortly thereafter with the Cotton Pickers and joined the WWVA Jamboree, which was broadcast on Saturday nights over WWVA from Wheeling. Through WWVA, Fincher also co-hosted his own show, the Shorty & Sally Fincher Jamboree Show, with Lonesome Valley Sally. 

 Some sources report that Shortly was operating an amusement park at Dreamers Beach in Delaware in 1949. But a 1949 issue of Billboard reports that the first Wisconsin folk music park began operation that May in West Bend, WI.  That's about 30 miles from Milwaukee. The issue specifically says that "Valley View Park, which was operated last year by Shorty Fincher, will run this year with Nemo Lippert, of the Range Riders."  That note would put Shortly in Wisconsin in 1948. Nemo Lippert was another country artist from PA. His range Riders performed on WNOW in York. He was later on WTPA-TV in Harrisburg.


 In this part of their career, Shorty and Sallie operated their own amusement park in Hellam, PA. Purportedly the park became more of a flea market in the 1960s after Shorty died. In 1953 The Emmitsburg Chronicle of Maryland puts Shorty Fincher and Sallie at a Firemen's carnival and ox roast. The York Dispatch has them at another Firemen's carnival in July of 1954. They were playing the country version of the oldies circuit, but I'm sure they had a good time. I found one obituary that stated Shorty was a disc jockey and salesman for radio station 1440 WGCB-AM in Red Lion, PA. The station signed on in 1950 so that narrows down the time frame. While Shorty died in 1958, Sallie lived until 1987 operating the park for decades after his passing. Joan Concilio of the York Dispatch has been writing a series of articles about the park's history that are highly recommended. [LINK]

Monday, October 07, 2024

Angst and Cooking (Part 2)

I had no idea this cookbook would warrant a part 2 post. But since I wrote that post in 2014 almost everyone mentioned has died. That first post is here; where I spent some time untangling all the Angst's: Alice, Helen, Roy, Bud, Lisa and I'm sure there were others. Just as the prior book was undated, so is this one. It seems intuitive that Volume 1 precedes Volume 2 but there was also a third one that lacks a "volume" appellation though it seems to precede both. Volume 2 has one magnificent difference, four pages of black and white head shots. I picked up this copy at a yard sale

The first  cookbook referred solely to WPAM. Then the first volume of this series lists both WLSH and WPAM on the cover. As you can see this one, Volume II, refers to WLSH on the cover, but mentioned WPAM on the inside text. Missing from my first post was the origin of WLSH. It signed on in 1952 as a 1,000 watt daytimer owned by Miners Broadcasting which also owned 1450 WPAM-AM and 1460 WMBA-AM. Bud Angst oversaw the construction of WLSH, so it's safe to say the Angst's were there from the get-go.  Bud died in 2016 and his obit [LINK] tells us a little more about all that:

"After graduating from high school Bud enlisted in the Coast Guard during WW2 & served as a radio operator in the Mediterranean. After the war Bud made radio his chosen career. Under the banner of Miners Broadcasting Service Bud & his partners established 3 AM radio stations in PAWPAM Pottsville, WMBA Ambridge, & WLSH Lansford. WLSH signed on the air December 24, 1952 & it's where Bud called "home" for almost 40 years... In 1977 because of FCC duopoly rules, Bud became sole owner of WLSH. Miners Broadcasting Services was replaced by Pocono Anthracite Communications & all ties to WPAM & WMBA were severed."
That really fills in most of the gaps. That Facebook page also has great pictures of WLSH. That same obit mentions the programs that led to these cook books. "Alice's Ask Your Neighbor show spawned 2 very successful cookbooks during the 1970s..." Kelly Monitz Socha at Times News dates one of them to 1978. [LINK] That's further than I got back in 2014. But the Skook News reports that it was printed in 1974. [SOURCE] It further confirms the earlier edition that I found "There was another cookbook before "Volume 1", but it only had 16 pages of local recipes." 10,000 copies of Vol 1 were printed and then 20,000 copies of volume 2.

Alice Angst died in 2020, her obit [SOURCE] confirms that she's Bud's wife and that they met in 1946. She worked at both WPAM and WLSH, where she was the host of the long-running radio talk show, Ask Your Neighbor. It's branding appears on 2 of the 3 editions. Alice and Bud had two daughters, Bonnie (Bim) and Lisa. (Alice contributes a Roman Salad recipe and another for sausage stew.)

Helen Louise (Bouslough) Angst was the WPAM host, she died in 2021. Her obit [LINK] confirmed that she was a book-keeper at WPAM in Pottsville. I had assumed the program was simulcast but all sources confirm that Helen and Alice hosted their own shows, but co-edited the cook books. I think she was Bud's sister. (She contributes a classic Brownie recipe among other items.)


I wrote enough about Bud last time he was a beloved local figure in local radio, politics and civil society in the coal country around Lehighton. (He contributes one recipe for Broken leg hot punch.) Al Sword later worked at WTHT and became a newspaper reporter. It's hard to find more information about him despite the unique name. But Walter Reabold died in 2003 at the age of 76, he had long since left radio and was the manager for Progressive Merchants in Lehighton. (His wife Sarah contributed a good donut recipe, and a meatloaf with sausage to the cookbook.) Jack Meyers remains obscure. Sales people are like that.

Mark Osif remains a mystery but Mike Berzosky was still with WLSH as late as 1982 evidences by issues of the Hazelton Standard-Speaker newspaper. The Carbon-Tamaqua Unit of the American Cancer Society had it's seventh telethon back in 1986 and that too listed Mike Berzosk, though it's the last time I can find his name in print. He hosted the The Dutch Trader radio program, and it ran for at least 20 years so that makes sense. Jerry Tray pops up in a few sorts articles in the late 1980s, but most prominently in 1980 in a Pottsville Republican newspaper article about an FCC investigation putting him at WPAM and WZTA under Curran Communications apparently after leaving WLSH.

"Another former Curran Communications employee, Jerry Tray, told The REPUBLICAN that he had been ordered on numerous occasions by James J.  Curran Jr. to slant the news. Tray, who worked at radio station WZTA, Lansford, and who was fired in June, 1979, for having a "bad attitude..."

I found one great article about Howard Ondick, the man had guts. When ordered by a judge to stop recording a public meeting Ondick said "no."  Hilarity did not ensue. But under pressure in a room of reporters the prison commission backed down. [SOURCE] The man has chutzpah. His name later appears in conjunction with WPPA and WAVT in Pottsville, I'm pretty confident that's the same news man.

Billie Schuetrumpf got married to Michael Harakel and fades from the record. Michael's obit mentions that she was still alive in 2017. Her name is one of the few here who also appears in that pre-duopoly edition of the cook book along with Theresa Homick and Mary Jane Yeager who are absent here. (Except that Yeager contributed a recepie for Lime French Dressing.) Lisa Angst Long Kowalsi passed in 2022, she had was the owner of her own accounting firm LA Long and Associates. Evelyn C. (Kenlin) Kowatch died just last year. She had been the Postmaster for the Andreas United States Postal Office and was retired. 

Herb Davis is one of several in radio with that name notably at WCKY and "Mr. Money" on the Channel 20 daily game show in DC "Dialing for Dollars. He is neither of those gents. Barbara (DeGiosio) Giantesano survived her husband Richard in 2020. Stella DiFebo died in 1992. Her obit says that she was born in Italy and was known locally as "Aunt Stella" as a frequent contributor to the "Ask Your Neighbor" cooking show on WLSH in Lansford. (She contributes very meaty recipes for venison, beef brisket, leg of lamb, bacon ribs.)
 

In 1989, Bud sold WLSH radio to Harold G. Fulmer III of Allentown. The Fulmer family continues to own & operate WLSH today. In 2014 WLSH and the American Cancer Society partnered to reprint the Great Radio Ask Your Neighbor Cookbook so in addition to my yellowed copies, there are fresh printings out there. They printed another 1,000 copies, and they're more affordable then the local collector items that are going for $50 now.

Monday, September 30, 2024

Works Cited

 

I've been at this for almost 20 years now and gradually I've noticed that this blog has been cited a few times as a primary source. I do quite a bit of original research so why not? It's nice that it gets added to the cannon so to speak. So it has come to pass that I've tried to catalog all these citations and well, there are a lot more than I expected.

Wikipedia has been pilfering my content for years without attribution. But real authors cite their sources, so this URL has been appearing in nonfiction books, and even school text books almost since it's inception in 2005. The tally is Eight books, 14 periodicals and a whole bevy of thesis papers.

Text Author
Publisher
Year
Cue the Sun!: The Invention of Reality TV Nussbaum, Emily Penguin Random House 2024
The Beautiful Spy: The Life and Crimes of Vera Eriksen Tremain, David
History Press
2019
Radio After the Golden Age: The Evolution of American Broadcasting Since 1960 Cox, Jim
McFarland & Company
2013
White Robes and Burning Crosses: A History of the Ku Klux Klan from 1866 Newton, Michael
McFarland & Company 2014
Marketing Recorded Music: How Music Companies Brand and Market Artists Donham, Tammy
Routledge
2006
Sound Recording and Reproduction
Russell, Jesse
Lennex Corp
 2012
Pengembangan Media Audio/Radio Ajar, Bahan
Susilaning
2022
Guglielmo Marconi: Marquess, Radio, Invention of radio, History of radio McBrewser, John Apphascipt
2009

 

But that's just books, what about magazines, newspapers and other periodicals. Well there are even more. This is just what I'm aware of, there's probably more out there:

Periodical/ Issue
Article
Author
Year
Discuts: Numero 3 De: Mysterieux Discques!
Malbert, Alexis
2011
The WASHRAG; Vol. 22, Issue 08 News Briefs
Wireless Association of South Hills 2020
DX News, Vol 89, Issue 01
The Sale of WMBI in Chicago MacHard, Kenneth 2021
The Resonator. Vol 7, No. 9
The Way We Were
Belghaus, Fred  2022
The Resonator. Vol 7, No. 10 The Way We Were
Belghaus, Fred  2022
The Resonator. Vol 5, No. 6 The Way We Were
Belghaus, Fred  2020
The Resonator. Vol 5, No. 5 The Way We Were
Belghaus, Fred 2020
Galene 61, Number 80 Bulletin del'Association Galene 61 2016
Radiorama, Number 114 RadiDal 1982 dalla parte del Radioascoltorama Radiorama 2021
SARA News, June 2021
From NAA to Today: A Breif Look at Commercial and Military Call Letters
Lynch, Jim 2021
The Barn No. 351
Beaumont Amateur Radio Club
Horzepa, Stan
2022
Paper Radio, No 12
First Broadcast From a Train
Moe, Frederick
2014
ARSC Journal Vol. 44, No. 1
Let's Go Surfing
Brooks, Tim
2013
The Blurb
Did You Know?
Phil-Mont Mobile Radio Club2021

Monday, September 23, 2024

The Lost Lost World

I'm reading the book The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner. It's not about running. It's a book by Alan Sillitoe about the bleak working class life in Nottingham, England; published in 1959. It's not about radio. (It's not about music either, though Sillitoe has inspired both The Smiths and the Arctic Monkeys.) My copy is a very crumbly Signet paperback which may not survive this reading. It's not about radio. But there was a passing reference which is relevant to our on-going radio theme here:

"The governor would have a fit if he could see me sliding down the bank because I could break my neck or ankle, but I can't not do it because its the only risk I take and the only excitement I ever get , flying flat out like one of them pterodactyls from the 'Lost World' I once heard on the wireless..."

This seemed to be a reference from life. Alan Sillitoe, having been born in 1928 could have heard the Lost World on the BBC either as a youth or an adult, or both. The reference even contextualizes the time and place of the novel.But which broadcast was he referring to?

The Lost World was written by Arthur Conan Doyle and first published in 1912, [LINK]. So it wasn't new, but already becoming a classic when Sillitoe was a young man. The Lost World has been translated into a radio drama many times. Ever popular, "Lost Worlds" have become their own sub-genre of science fiction. Because of that timeline, we have the interesting question of which version Sillitoe was referring to. Sillitoe would have been about sixteen in 1944, the same age as the fictional protagonist Colin Smith. For that reason I favor the first two broadcast versions, and generally the 1944 BBC broadcast. Sillitoe would have been 21 for the 1949 version and already on a military pension in France recovering from tuberculosis.

I've collated multiple sources which describe various radio versions of the Lost World, those include: the Conan Doyle website, and the books Carbon Dates by Donald F. Glut, and  Dinosaurs by the Decades by Randy Moore. The sources all reference different but largely overlapping catalogs of the different radio adaptations. The three  that predate the Sillitoe book are from 1938, 1944 and 1949. That first 1938 radio script of Lost World was written by the playright Mervyn Mills and broadcast by the BBC as six, 45-minute episodes from 2 November, 1938 on Wednesday. (Mills also wrote the pulp novel Long Haul.) 


Title Episodes
Station/Release
Year
Link
 The Lost World 6
BBC
 1938
N/A 
The Lost World 6
BBC
1944
N/A 
The Lost World 6
BBC Light Programme
1949 N/A
The Lost World 5
BBC
1952
N/A 
The Lost World 1
BBC
1958
N/A 
Dinosaurs!
4
MGM/Leo the Lion Records
1966
 LINK
The Lost World 3
 BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial)
1975
LINK
The Lost World 1
 BBC1 (BBC for Schools)
1975
LINK
The Lost World 3
(RNZ) Radio New Zealand
1980
N/A
The Lost World 3
Audio book & VHS
1997
LINK
The Lost World 2
BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial
2011
LINK


In 1944 BBC Secretary Peggy Wells wrote a six, 25-minute episode version, which was broadcast live in April and May that year. Wells contributions to radio are under-appreciated, she adapted world by Noel Coward, H.E. Bates, A.A. Milne, Jane Austen, Graham Greene, Hugh Williams, Thomas Anstey Guthrie and she also contributed works to the program Saturday Night Theater plays on BBC into the 1970s. There is no complete source for her contributions though she appears multiple times in the book Women Writers Dramatized by H. Philip Bolton. She started at the BBC before 1945, and by the 1970s her name literally appeared in the BBC Handbook. More here.  

That 1944 version was a dramatic reading starring Carr as the sole narrator, playing the part of all characters. Carr is better known today as a writer of detective novels. Born in the US in 1906, he relocated to England in the 1930s. There became an author, and in addition to his 52 detective novels, also wrote radio plays. His scripts appeared in the Suspense series, and other works for the BBC. In the 1940s he even hosted the series Murder by Experts, which was broadcast on WOR for the Mutual network. More here.

Carr was a genuine fan of Doyle. In 1945 he wrote radio adaptions for two other Doyle tales: The Adventure of the Speckled Band, and Silver Blaze. Later in 1948, Doyle's son, Adrian granted Carr access to family papers so that he could write an official biography of Arthur Conan Doyle published in 1949: The Life of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. 

Peggy Wells revised her 1944 script in 1949 for producer Ayton Whitaker for a live October broadcast on the BBC Light Programme. The cast included with narrator Richard Williams, and actors: Abraham Sofaer, Ivor Barnard, Lewis Stringer, Cyril Gardiner.  In 1952 an adaptation by John Keir Cross was broadcast in five 20-minute episodes. (He was the author of Angry Planet) More here. According to Robert Lewis Taylor, writing for the New Yorker in 1951, [SOURCE] Adrian Doyle specifically requested that John Dickson Carr act in an advisory capacity for the1944 radio adaptation. Carr's biography, The Man who Explained Miracles, by Douglas Greene does not credit Whitaker or Wells leading to some dubious attribution in secondary sources.

The 1958 version is poorly documented. But the basic facts are known and documented on the BBC website. It was broadcast on Thursday January 2nd, 1958 at 5:00 PM on BBC Home Service Basic, on the program Children's Hour. Generally described as "excerpts" it was adapted by Marion MacWilliam and Ian G. Ball. The cast included: Olive Shapley as host, Hilda Lewis, Effie Morrison, Joan Fitzpatrick, Cuthbertson Leonard Maguire, David Webster and Eileen McCallum.

In 1975, Barry Campbell was commissioned to revise Peggy Wells' 1944 scripts and convert them into three, 55-minute episodes. But by then Well's 2nd episode script was already lost. It had to be creatively reconstructed before the broadcast. That versions cast included Francis de Wolff, Gerald Harper, Kevin McHugh, and Carleton Hobbs. Campbell adapted enough fiction into radio dramas that he has his own Discogs page.

I have also read that a second radio adaptation was released in 1975 as part of the "BBC for Schools" program which was not the same. The BBC Schools series aired from 1957 into 1983. But this specific broadcast does not seem to be well documented. Beyond being highly plausible, all I've found is a passing reference in an issue of Educational Television International magazine. 

The 1980 RNZ broadcast an adaptation produced by Peggy Wells and Barry Campbell. Peggy Wells would have to have been in her late 60s at this point in her career and without a doubt the most experienced adapter of the text. Campbell had revised the text only 5 years earlier for his version. The team up is interesting, clearly they knew each other from their time at the BBC. This version starred Terrence Cooper as Professor Challenger and was complete with incidental score and dinosaur audio effects. (Some sources incorrectly cite the broadcast date as 1982.) More here.


Terrence Cooper died in 1997 and likely missed the next popular adaptation aka the New Zealand version. This adaptation differs from the original version significantly. It was produced by The Alien Voices, a radio drama company and they performed live with a full team of foleys for sound effects. Alien Voices was founded by Star Trek actors Leonard Nimoy and John de Lancie. All the characters are played by actors from the Star Trek TV series. You can actually buy an audio book version of this one which I do recommend. 

The most recent version was on the BBC in 2011. That versions cast included Jamie Glover, Brian Robb Jonathan Forbes, Jasmine Hyde, Jane Whittenshaw, Nyasha Hatendi and Vinicius Salles. More here. Out of all those 11 versions, somewhat inexplicably the only one which was officially endorsed by the estate of Arthur Conan Doyle was the 1966 LP version (CH-1016) that came out in 1966 on MGM/ Leo the Lion records. It was narrated by Basil Rathbone. More here.