Not the Lone Ranger. A younger fellow. Radio show lasted from 1933 to 1950. He was an All-American Boy.
Signing off now, Edgar. Please toss mine aside if you wish to continue the game.
G'night all.
YES!!! Jack Armstrong, the All-American Boy.
I have a 33 1/3 record album of Jack Armstrong deep in my collection somewhere.
What spin-off of Fibber McGee and Molly (actually, The Johnson's Wax Program, with Fibber McGee and Molly) became a long running hit in its own right?
Could it be....................."The Great Gildersleeve"?
Oooh. She sang on Arthur Godfrey's Show. I have a 33 1/3 recording of Godfrey and Haleloki doing Hawaiian songs, but must admit they don't sound too good these days. (lol)
If Arthur Godfrey is who Phoenix has in mind, I pass my question to the next player as I won't be here until late afternoon tomorrow. Thank You
A radio serial. Three guys have all these adventures. The cast changed once or twice - The guys I remember were Jack, Doc and Reggie. Name the show.
Raggedyaggie- You are absolutely right about Haleloki!
My show was "I Love a Mystery."
In the mid fifties, a tv series about a man and some ghosts, originally a movie.
Is it "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir?"
No, that was a woman and aghost. Mine is a man and two ghosts. If memory serves, the ghosts had a dog ghost pet.
Oooh! Topper. I never saw it on TV. In the movie Constance Bennett and Cary Grant played the ghosts. I think Asta was the dog, but I'm not sure.
Raggedyaggie- Asta the dog was from "The Thin Man".
Oh, I know Asta was in the Thin Man, Phoenix, but there was a, I think, wire-haired terrier in Topper, too. I'm going to try to track that down. The dog was a ghost, too, and sometimes you'd only see its tail wagging or a bone, etc.
Found it. I loved that dog. My mom had one that looked just like Asta. He was not just a wire-haired terrier, he was a holy terror. (lol)
"Asta was kept busy with The Thin Man series, but again showed his versatility when cast as ghost dog Mr Atlas in Topper takes a Trip in 1939.
Asta fathered several pups, although - scandalously for the time - he never married except on screen in After The Thin Man. He was one of the great screwball entertainers of the 30s and 40s and after his retirement, he dedicated his life to chasing cats and catching balls. It was a dog's life."
(He was also in "Bringing Up Baby", with Hepburn and Grant.
The (ghost) dog in Topper was Neal, a St. Bernard