{
  "title": "THE HAUNTING HOUR",
  "category": "",
  "article": "“No! No! Stay where you are! Do not break the stillness of this moment! For this is a time of mystery, a\ntime when the imagination is free and moves swiftly. This is the Haunting Hour!”\nA series which used horror trappings but had very little of genuine horror about it. “In ‘Haunting\nHour’,” noted Variety reviewer Tomm., “the net’s recording division has made an attempt to\ncombine the supernatural and the straight crime program. Result is somewhat detrimental to\neach treatment, but the show emerges as better than fair radio.”",
  "origination": "EAJ-7, Madrid (Cadena SER).",
  "duration": "Circa 1950s.",
  "personnel": "John Dietz (director—1942, Suspense), Lucille Fletcher (scriptwriter), Orson\nWelles (director—1941, 1946).\nCAST [1941]: Ray Collins, Joseph Cotton, Agnes Moorehead (Mrs. Adams), Orson Welles (Ronald\nAdams).\nCAST [1942, Suspense]: Orson Welles (Ronald Adams), et al.\nCAST [1942, Phillip Morris]: Orson Welles (Ronald Adams), et al.\nCAST [1946]: Orson Welles (Ronald Adams), et al.",
  "extant_recordings": "All excerpt the Phillip Morris show.\nLADY ESTHER PRESENTS ORSON WELLES (KNX)\nNov. ??, 1941\n“The Hitch-hiker”\nSUSPENSE (WABC)\n??? ??, 1942\n“The Hitch-hiker”\nTHE PHILLIP MORRIS PLAYHOUSE\n??? ??, 1942\n“The Hitch-hiker”\nTHE MERCURY SUMMER THEATRE",
  "chronology": "",
  "sources": "",
  "gallery": "",
  "images": []
}