{
  "title": "BBC CHRISTMAS GHOST STORIES",
  "category": "[CHRONOLOGY]",
  "article": "[SHORT-STORIES, FOLKLORE, OR RADIO-SCRIPTS]\nThe English ghost story tradition was represented in early programming on the BBC not so much\nby anything like a regular series but by a number of special programs throughout the Twenties\nand Thirties.\nThe earliest known radio broadcast of ghost stories was a pre-Christmas quarter-hour,\nemanating from the BBC studios in Birmingham in 1923 and featuring Mr. John Hingeley as\nstoryteller. This was followed later in the evening by the enactment of scenes from Dickens’ A\nChristmas Carol by Percy Edgar, soon to be a key figure in the production of the first radio\nfantasy series at the Birmingham station.\n[“On Ghost Stories,” The Times, December 8, 1925] “At this season of the year, when winter is\ncome in earnest and his own fireside makes a strong claim even upon the least domesticated of\nmen, there is a tendency to revive, in favour of ghosts and goblins, the old practice of story-telling,\nor at least of story-reading, which is otherwise so greatly fallen into decay… one of the best of\nwinter’s traditions… the reading aloud of ghost stories is too good an entertainment to perish of\nmodesty or self-consciousness. Its shared excitement, the feeling it gives of harmonious\nadventure, of ‘common thrill,’ shuts out the world for an hour or two as nothing else shuts it out.”\nIn 1926 “Ghost” Programme was a one-shot which certainly had a strong kernel of an idea for a\nregular series which has never really been followed up on—a horror-variety hour, if you will,\nfeaturing musical numbers, storytelling and dramatic sketches, all in the vein of the spectral and\nmacabre.\nE. F. Benson (reader—1928, The Confessions of Charles Linkworth), Arthur Bird (scriptwriter—\n1927, Hate), Jan Bussell (producer—1936, The Ghost of Grassington), John Cheatle (producer—\n1938, Madam, Will You Walk?), Diana Dale (scriptwriter—1936, The Ghost of Grassington),\nMajor C. Eagle-Bott (storyteller—1927, A Ghost Story), Dorothy Eaves (scriptwriter—1930,\nPhantomimes), John Hingeley (storyteller—1923, Ghost Stories), Ernest Longstaffe (producer—\n1938, The Pig and Whistle), Father John O’Connor (commentator—1937, It Might Happen to\nYou), D. E. Ormerod (producer—1932, The Spectral Dog), Ruth Wynn Owen (scriptwriter—1937,\nIt Might Happen to You), Charles Penrose (scriptwriter—1938, The Pig and Whistle), Walter\nPitchford (programme arranger—1935, Ghosts at the Priory), Owen Reed (producer—1935,\nGhosts at the Priory),  Howard Rose (scriptwriter—1932, “Q”), Professor A. Hamilton Thompson\n(speaker—1927, Medieval Ghost Stories), C. Whitaker-Wilson (scriptwriter—1938, Madam, Will\nYou Walk?).\nCAST [“THE TELEGRAM,” 1926]: Adrian Byrne (Robert Stone), Reginald Dance (Long), Michael\nHogan (John Bedford), J. C. Lawrence (Sergeant Campbell), Henry Oscar (Sir William Brent),\nBryan Powley (Harold Gandy).\nCAST [“GHOULIES AND GHOSTIES,” 1927]: G. Lynch Clarke, Marion Foreman, Daniel Roberts,\nVera Shipton, Susie Stevens.\nCAST [“HATE,” 1927]: Stephen Campbell (Bill Carfax), Pauline Carr (Lady Carfax), John Evered\n(Brandon Carfax), Derek Lessingham (Thompson, the butler), Molly Seymour (Joan Allingham),\nCharles Stapylton (Sir Henry Carfax / Roger Carfax).\nCAST [“THE GHOST OF GLASTONBURY TUNNEL,” NOTTINGHAM, 1928] Ronald Cheeseman\n(Mr. Spencer), Margaret Gulford (Mrs. Taunton), Frank Leaver (The Rev. Frederick Driver),\nEdward Murray (Colonel Charles Taunton), Nora Porter (Mrs. Lammele).\nCAST [“THE GHOST OF GLASTONBURY TUNNEL,” PLYMOUTH, 1928] Stephen Campbell\n(The Rev. Frederick Driver), Pauline Carr (Mrs. Lammele), Molly Seymour (Mrs. Taunton),\nCharles Stapylton (Colonel Charles Taunton), Douglas Watt (Mr. Spencer).\nCAST [“PHANTOMIME,” 1930]: Richard Barron, Mary Cardew, Glyn Eastman, Elsie Eaves,\nSidney Evans, Nan Porter, John Rorke.\nCAST [“Q,” 1932]: Ralph Truman, Osmund Willson.\nCAST [“THE SPECTRAL DOG,” 1932]: A. G. Mitcheson, F. A. Nichols, Ernest Retlaw, J. Edward\nRoberts, G. B. Smith, James Stephenson, H. R. Williams.\nCAST [1936, “The Ghost of Grassington”]: Ian Baldwin (John Burnop), F. A. Bean, F. J. O.\nCoddington, Frank Crosland, James Harrison, E. Parsons (Dr. Petty), I. R. Phillips, C. B. Pulman\n(Joe Weekes), Philip Robinson, H. C. Rycroft (Tom Lee), Roni Vine (Jane Lee), Mary Wilkinson.\nCAST [“MADAM, WILL YOU WALK?” 1938]: Franklyn Bellamy, George Bellamy, A. Bromley-\nDavenport, G. F. Campbell Browne, Laidman Browne, Gordon McLeod, Leslie Perrins, Spencer\nTrevor, C. Whitaker-Wilson, Gladys Young.\nCAST [1938, The Pig and Whistle]: Sidney Burchall (Jimmy Larkin), George Ellis (Jeremiah\nJones, the landlord), Miriam Ferris (Rosie Jones, the landlady), Charles Penrose (Jolly Old\nGarge/P.C. Evergreen), John Rorke (‘Erb, Rosie’s Cockney cousin), Charles Wreford (Old\nGranfer), Gladys Young (Widow Throstle).\nMR. JOHN HINGELEY (BIRMINGHAM)\n[Saturday—7:45-8:00 PM]\nDecember 22, 1923\n“Ghost Stories”\nA. J. ALAN (2LO, LONDON)\n[Friday—10:30-10:40 PM]\nDecember 26, 1924\n[THE TIMES: “…Christmas Ghost Story…”]\n(5IT, BIRMINGHAM)\n[Wednesday—9:20-9:40 PM]\nDecember 23, 1925\n“The Haunted Castle”\n[THE TIMES: “…Mr. George Ockement…”]\nA. J. ALAN (2LO, LONDON)\n[Friday—9:35-10:00 PM]\nDecember 25, 1925\n“The Diver”\nKATE LOVELL (6LV, LIVERPOOL)\n[Saturday—4:00-4:15 PM]\nDecember 11, 1926\n“A True Ghost Story”\n(2BE, BELFAST)\n[Wednesday—8:00-9:30 PM]\nDecember 22, 1926\n“The Vindictive Staircase”\n[THE TIMES: “…a ghost story set to music by Edgar L. Bainton for Chorus\nand Orchestra…words by Wilfrid Wilson Gibbons…”]\n(5PY, PLYMOUTH)\n[Friday—4:00-4:15 PM]\nDecember 24, 1926\n“My Christmas Ghosts”\n[THE TIMES: “…H. C. L. Johns…”]\nA. J. ALAN (2LO, LONDON)\n[Friday—8:25-9:00 PM]\nDecember 24, 1926\n“My Adventure in Norfolk”\n(2LS, LEEDS-BRADFORD)\n(Saturday—5:00-5:15 PM]\nDecember 25, 1926\n“Haunted Houses”\n[THE TIMES: “…read by the author, ‘Petronius’…”]\n(5WA, CARDIFF)\n[Monday—4:45-5:00 PM]\nDecember 27, 1926\n“Laying a Ghost”\n[THE TIMES: “…Mary Manston”…]\nA. J. ALAN (2LO, LONDON)\n[Wednesday—10:35-11:00 PM]\nDecember 21, 1927\n“The Visitors’ Book”\n(6LV, LIVERPOOL)\n[Wednesday—7:45-9:00 PM]\nDecember 22, 1927\n“The Ghost of Jerry Bundler”\n[THE TIMES: “…a play by W. W. Jacobs and Charles Rock, played by the\nLiverpool Radio Players…”]\n(5GB, DAVENTRY)\n[Thursday—8:00-9:00 PM]\nDecember 22, 1927\n“Phantom Hoofs”\n[THE TIMES: “…a play by David Hawkes, with Gladys Joiner, Ethel\nMalpas, and Wortley Allen…”]\n(2BD, ABERDEEN)\n[Thursday—9:50-10:35 PM]\nDecember 22, 1927\n“Out of the Shadows”\n[THE TIMES: “…a psychic mystery play in one act, by David Hawkes, with\nGladys Pirie, G. M. Hancock, Catherine Hollingworth, and Max Anton…”]\nA GHOST STORY (6BM, BOURNEMOUTH)\n[Tuesday—7:00-7:15 PM]\nDecember 27, 1927\n“The Creeping Horror on Christmas Eve”\n[THE TIMES: “…Major C. Eagle-Bott…”]\n(2LO, LONDON)\n[Monday—10:30-11:00 PM]\nDecember 3, 1928\n“The Ghost Ship”\n[THE TIMES: “…by Richard Middleton, read by V. C. Clinton Baddeley…”]\n(2ZY, MANCHESTER)\n[Tuesday—7:00-7:15 PM\nDecember 18, 1928\n“Medieval Ghost Stories, from Leeds”\n(5WA, CARDIFF)\n[Saturday—7:00-7:15 PM]\nDecember 22, 1928\n“More Ghost Stories”\n[THE TIMES: “…Miss Esylt Newbery…”]\n(2LO, LONDON)\n[Saturday—9:15-9:30 PM]\nDecember 22, 1928\n“Ghosts”\n[THE TIMES: “…by Gerald Heard…”]\n(2LO, LONDON)\n[Monday—9:15-9:30 PM]\nDecember 24, 1928\n“The Confessions of Charles Linkworth”\n[“…a ghost story by E. F. Benson, specially adapted for broadcasting and\nread by the author…”]\nA. J. ALAN (2LO, LONDON)\n[Monday—10:35-10:50 PM]\nDecember 31, 1928\n“A Surprise Item”\n(5WA, CARDIFF)\n[Tuesday—6:00-6:15 PM]\nDecember 24, 1929\n“Welsh Ghost Stories”\n(2LO, LONDON)\n[Tuesday—7:00-7:45 PM]\nDecember 24, 1929\n“The Haunted Hour”\n[THE TIMES: “…Mr. E. F. Benson, Mr. W. W. Jacobs, and Mr. Desmond\nMcCarthy will tell ghost stories…”]\n(2ZY, MANCHESTER)\n[Tuesday—7:45-8:30 PM]\nDecember 24, 1929\n“In a Haunted Room”\n[THE TIMES: “…L. Du Garde Peach…”]\nA. J. ALAN (2LO, LONDON)\n[Thursday—10:15-10:30 PM]\nDecember 26, 1929\n“17:45”\n[OG-NOTE: This story was reprinted in Best of A. J. Alan (1954) under the title “The\nWhite Bungalow.”]\n(CARDIFF, WEST REGIONAL)\n[Tuesday—7:45-9:00 PM]\nDecember 2, 1930\n“Phantomime”\n[THE TIMES: “…a ghostly programme, by Dorothy Eaves...with music by\nthe West Regional Trio…”]\nA. J. ALAN (LONDON REGIONAL PROGRAMME)\n[Tuesday—8:30-9:00 PM]\nDecember 2, 1930\n“The Well”\n(NATIONAL)\n[Wednesday—10:30-11:00 PM]\nDecember 24, 1930\n“And Afterwards”\n[THE TIMES: “…a Creepy Interlude by Lady Cynthia Asquith, Mr. Felix\nAylmer, and Captain Robert A. L. Hartman…”]\nTHE CHILDRENS HOUR (MIDLAND REGIONAL PROGRAMME)\n[Tuesday—5:15-6:00 PM]\nDecember 22, 1931\n“The Ghost of Widdecombe Manor”\n[THE TIMES: “…a story, by Mildred Forster…”]\n(MIDLAND REGIONAL PROGRAMME)\n[Tuesday—5:15-6:00 PM]\nJanuary 5, 1932 “The Worm of Spindlestonheugh”\n[THE TIMES: “…a play founded on a Northumberland Legend, by Sybil\nClarke…”]\nETC., ETC. (MIDLAND REGIONAL PROGRAMME)\n[Friday—9:15-10:15 PM\nDecember 23, 1932\n“The Man Who Married a Skeleton”\n[THE TIMES: “…R. Crompton Rhodes reading one of his own short\nstories…”]\n(NATIONAL)\n[Sunday—10:00-10:30 PM]\nDecember 25, 1932\n“Thurnley Abbey”\n[THE TIMES: “…a ghost story by Mr. Perceval Landon, read by Mr.\nFranklyn Dyall…”]\n(MIDLAND REGIONAL)\n[Thursday-10:05-10:35 PM]\nJanuary 5, 1933\n“The House of Desolation”\n[THE TIMES: “…a ghost story, written and told by Alan Griff…”]\n(WEST REGIONAL)\n[Thursday—8:00-8:15 PM]\nDecember 28, 1933\n“Sweet Chariot”\n[THE\nTIMES: “…A Devonshire ghost story, by Molly O’Fogerty\nChapman…”]\n(WEST REGIONAL PROGRAMME)\n[Monday—8:45-9:15 PM]\nDecember 24, 1934\n“A Hair-raising Drama”\n[THE TIMES: “…by Brinley Jones…”]\nA CHRISTMAS PARTY (NATIONAL PROGRAMME)\n[Tuesday—7:30-9:30 PM]\nDecember 25, 1934\n“The Visitors’ Book”\n[THE TIMES: “…Comedians; dance music; ghost stories; chorus songs;\ncharades\nand\nmusical\ngames;\nall\nkinds\nof\nhappy-go-lucky\nentertainment… At some stage of the proceedings someone will tell a\nghost story…”]\n(NATIONAL PROGRAMME)\n[Friday—10:00-10:45 PM]\nDecember 28, 1934\n“The Cart of Death”\n[THE TIMES: “…adapted and translated by Marianne Helweg from the\nstory of Selma Lagerlof, produced by M. H. Allen, with Roy Emerton,\nGladys Young, Marne Maitland, Janet Taylor, Gwendolen Evans, John\nCheatle, Mary O’Farrell, Wallace Evenett, Edward Craven, Ruth\nAnderson, Winifred Evens…”]\nA.J. ALAN (EMPIRE SHORTWAVE SERVICE)\n[Tuesday—10:00-10:15 AM]\nDecember 24, 1935\n“The Visitors’ Book”\n[KINGSTON ?????: “…a creepy story, by A.J. Alan, told by the Author.”\nBroadcast on Empire Transmission—5.]\n(NORTHERN PROGRAMME)\n[Wednesday—9:15-10:00 PM]\nDecember 22, 1937\n“Guineas for a Ghost”\n[THE TIMES: “…a frivolous affair written by Maurice Horspool… The\nghost is tenant of an old mansion to which a descendant of the family has\nreturned. One of the scenes is laid in a county court, which is rather an\nunusual place to be taken in a ghost story, and here the author springs\nhis final surprise. The producer will be Edward Wilkinson…”]\n(NORTHERN PROGRAMME)\n[Friday—8:00-8:30 PM]\nDecember 24, 1937\n“Out of the Ordinary”\n[THE TIMES: “…Two stories that some people would say are about\nghosts…”]\nTHE PIG AND WHISTLE (REGIONAL)\n[Friday—8:10-8:40 PM]\nDecember 23, 1938\n“Bob Evergreen’s Christmas Ghost Story”\n[THE TIMES: “…Even the Pig and Whistle will go ghostly when P. C.\nEvergreen tells a ghost story…”]\n(NORTHERN SERVICE)\n[Tuesday—7:30-7:40 PM]\nDecember 27, 1938\n“The Little Ghost”\n[THE TIMES: “…a short story by James R. Gregson…”]\nTHREE STORIES BY ALGERNON BLACKWOOD (HOME SERVICE)\n[Monday—12:30-1:00 PM]\nDecember 25, 1939\n“Transition” / ? / ?\n(HOME SERVICE)\n[Tuesday—6:45-7:05 PM]\nDecember 24, 1940\n“King’s Evidence”\nOTHER GHOST STORY BROADCASTS NOT OTHERWISE COVERED IN THIS BOOK:\n(6LV, LIVERPOOL)\n[Friday—9:05-9:30 PM]\nAug. 28, 1925\n“In the Library” (by W. W.\nJacobs and H. C. Sargeant)\n“GHOST” PROGRAMME (2LO, LONDON)\n[Wednesday—10:15-11:00 PM]\nMay 26, 1926\n“The Telegram” / “The Judge’s\nHouse”\n[Listed in the Times as “Wireless\nOrchestra—Prelude, ‘The Spectre’s\nBride’ (Dvorak). ‘The Telegram,’ play\nby Rupert Croft-Cooke. Orchestra—\n‘A Haunted Place’ (Schumann); ‘Valse\nTriste’ (Sibelius). ‘The Judge’s\nHouse,’ a reading from ‘Dracula’s\nGuest and Other Weird Stories,’ by\nBram Stoker. Orchestra—‘Danse\nMacabre’ (Saint-Saens)”]\n(2LO, LONDON)\n[Monday—7:25-7:45 PM]\nApril 18, 1927\n“The Haunted Gallery”\n[“…Mr. Louis Golding will read a\nshort story…”]\nVARIETY PROGRAMME (5WA, CARDIFF)\n[Monday—7:45-9:00 PM]\nOct. 31, 1927\n“Ghoulies and Ghosties”\n[“…a Fantasy in one scene…”]\n(5PY, PLYMOUTH)\n[Tuesday—6:00-6:30 PM]\nNov. 15, 1927\n“Hate”\n[“…Here is a play that might be\ndescribed as a modern tale of old-\nfashioned ghosts. You must imagine\nthe ancestors of Sir Henry Carfax,\n‘good haters all,’ and the old\nGeorgian tragedy re-enacted every\nmidnight…”]\n(2BE, BELFAST)\n[Monday—9:45-9:57 PM]\nJan. 16, 1928\n“The Vindictive Staircase”\n[“…a ghost story set to music by\nEdgar L. Bainton for Chorus and\nOrchestra…”]\n(6ST, STOKE-ON-TRENT)\n[Tuesday—7:00-7:15 PM]\nFeb. 14, 1928\n“Ghosts, Seen and Imagined”\n[“…by Colin Sherlocke…”]\n(5NG, NOTTINGHAM)\n[Tuesday—7:45-9:00]\nFeb. 28, 1928\n“The Ghost of Glastonbury\nTunnel” (by Geoffrey Bevan)\n[“…The action takes place in a\nfirst-class compartment of the\nNewmarket Express…”]\n[Broadcast with “Sea Silence—A Play\nof Terror on the High Seas” by Edwin\nLewis.]\n(5PY, PLYMOUTH)\n[Tuesday—6:00-6:30 PM]\nMarch 13, 1928 “The Ghost of Glastonbury\nTunnel”\n[“…Ghosts have on many occasions\nproved useful to disguise even more\nsinister revelations, and none more\napplicable to the theory than ‘The\nGhost of Glastonbury Tunnel.’ We\nhope, then, that our play this evening\nwill be a timely warning to listeners\nwho experience a desire to travel on\nthe Lowmarket Express…”]\n(5WA, CARDIFF)\n[Saturday—7:00-7:15 PM]\nApril 14, 1928\n“More Ghosts, and other\nUncanny Happenings”\n[“…Esylt Newbery…”]\n(2BE, BELFAST)\n[Wednesday—5:00-5:15 PM]\nSep. 5, 1928\n“Uncanny Tales of Ancient\nUlster”\n[“…Clifford Carter…”]\n(2EH, EDINBURGH)\n[Saturday—7:00-7:15 PM]\nAug. 17, 1929\n“Ancient and Modern Ghosts”\n[“…Mr. J. W. Berries…”]\nMR. LEWIS SPENCE (EDINBURGH)\n[Tuesday—7:00-7:30 PM]\nAug. 5, 1930\n“Maister Mudie”\n[“…Reading from an Eerie Short\nStory…”]\nVARIETY PROGRAMME (LONDON REGIONAL)\n[Monday—8:00-9:00 PM]\nJan. 25, 1932\n“Q” (by Stephen Leacock)\n[“…a psychic story of the\nsupernatural…”]\n(NORTH REGIONAL PROGRAMME)\n[Tuesday—7:30-8:00 PM]\nJuly 5, 1932\n“The Spectral Dog”\n[“…a story of the Isle of Man, by\nLeslie W. A. Baily…”]\nINQUIRY INTO THE UNKNOWN (NATIONAL PROGRAMME, LONDON)\n[Friday—9:20-9:35 PM]\nMarch 2, 1934 “Ghosts and Haunted Houses”\n[“…by Sir Ernest Bennett…”]\n(NORTHERN IRELAND PROGRAMME, BELFAST)\n[Wednesday—7:45-8:30 PM]\nOct. 31, 1934\n“The Ghost of Gillhall”\n[“…a tale of Old Ireland, retold and\ndramatized for broadcasting by\nPatrick Riddell; produced by Lance\nSieveking…”]\n(MIDLAND REGIONAL)\n[Saturday—7:45-8:30 PM]\nMarch 9, 1935 “Ghosts at the Priory”\n[“…an assortment of weird\nexperiences told around the fireside\nand relayed from a Haunted House;\nprogramme arranged by Walter\nPitchford; produced by Owen\nReed…”]\nTHREE SHORT PLAYS (NEWCASTLE)\n[Friday—7:50-8:45 PM]\nMarch 29, 1935 “The Diet” / “Just Off\nPiccadilly” / “Geordie’s\nWooing”\n[“…played by Newcastle Radio\nPlayers; produced by Jan Bussell… s\nGhost Play, by James Parish…”]\nNORTHERN FESTIVAL OF ONE-ACT PLAYS (NORTHERN)\n[Saturday—9:30-9:55 PM]\nApril 11, 1936\n“Five at the George”\n[“…A Ghost Play by Stuart Ready;\nproduced by Jan Bussell…”]\n(NORTH PROGRAMME, YORKSHIRE)\n[Thursday—9:05-10:00 PM]\nNov. 19, 1936\n“The Ghost of Grassington”\n[“…The action takes place in 1776 and\n1779 in the valley of the Wharfe. Here,\non a secluded road between\nGrassington and Kilnsey, stands Grass\nWood, where, at times, a ghost is said\nto walk—the ghost of an apothecary\nwho was foully done to death…”]\nIT MIGHT HAPPEN TO YOU (NORTHERN PROGRAMME)\n[???day—8:45-9:00 PM]\nNov. 8, 1937\n“The Haunted House”\n[“…by Ruth Wynn Owen; comments\nby Father John O’Connor…”]\nHAUNTED HOUSES (STAGSHAW)\n[Friday—8:00-8:15 PM\nNov. 26, 1937\n“Angrove Hall, Great Ayton”\n(by J. Fairfax-Blakeborough)\n(NATIONAL PROGRAMME, LONDON)\n[Friday—10:40-11:00 PM]\nFeb. 11, 1938\n“The Disappearance of Ghosts”\n[“…A talk by Humphrey Jennings…\nHe is to trace how ghosts, treated by\nGreek and Elizabethan writers, and\neven as late as the nineteenth century\nas real phenomena, are now treated\nwith skepticism…”]\n(EMPIRE PROGRAMME, LONDON)\n[Wednesday—6:15-     PM]\nAug. 17, 1938\n“Ghost in Little Haddam”\n(WALES)\n[Friday—6:40-7:00 PM]\nFeb. 10, 1939\n“Eerie Stories: Margaret\nJenkins”\n(NORTHERN IRELAND PROGRAMME, BELFAST)\n[Friday—8:30-9:10 PM]\nJune 2, 1939\n“Ghosts of Belfast”\n[“…a programme by N. C. Hunter…”]\nNORTHERN PROGRAMME)\n[Wednesday—7:05-7:20 PM]\nAug. 16, 1939\n“The Knocking on the Window\nPane”\n[“…a Story about a Ghost, written and\ntold by Harry Buckle…”]\n(HOME SERVICE)\n[Monday—10:00-10:25 PM]\nApril 1, 1940\n“Five at the George”\n[“…A play by Stuart Ready, produced\nby Edward Wilkinson…”]\n[Tuesday—11:00-11:15 PM]\nMay 7, 1940\n“Proof”\n[“…listeners are to hear a ghost story\nby Mr. Richard Hearne…”]\n(PROGRAMME FOR THE FORCES)\n[Wednesday—9:20-9:35 PM]\nMay 15, 1940\n“Proof”\n[“…A ghost story, by Richard Hearne;\nproduced by M. H. Allen…”]",
  "origination": "",
  "duration": "",
  "personnel": "",
  "extant_recordings": "",
  "chronology": "",
  "sources": "",
  "gallery": "",
  "images": []
}