{
  "title": "THE KEY NOTE",
  "category": "[STAGE-PLAY]",
  "article": "Another mystery extravaganza by husband-wife team Ted and Virginia Maxwell, who were\nresponsible for the horror-farce The Cross-Eyed Parrot, which Carlton Morse used as the basis\nfor his first radio mystery serial.\n[Border Cities Star, October 21, 1931] “The story evolves briefly around Brandon Annixter, a\npower in the financial world, who will stop at nothing to gain his desires… Mignon Stanley [is] an\nunwilling tool of Annixter… Two Arabians enter into the story, Khalid and Ali, devotees of the\noccult, who introduce mysterious tappings and spirit voices into the scenes… Ivy Daniels, ward of\nAnnixter, around whom romance settles in the form of Preston Enderly, an aspiring young\nlawyer… Some snappy dialogue and rare comedy are thrown in by…Hepworth Fairweather, a\nwealthy friend of Annixter, to whom Aggie Gwendolyn Jenkins (of uncertain age) has taken a\nfancy…”\nTHE KLX PLAYERS (KLX, OAKLAND)\n[Friday—8:00-9:30 PM]\nAugust 19, 1927\n“The Key Note”\n[OAKLAND TRIBUNE: “…ACT I. Evening. Home of Brandon Annixter, San\nFrancisco, California. ACT II. After midnight. Same setting. ACT III.\nDawn. Same setting…”]\nCAST: Violette Bristow (Aggie Gwendolyn Jenkins), Everett Gordon (Ali, Prince\nof Hashim), Rudolph Koslich (Khalid, Sword of God), Carlisle Partridge (Brandon\nAnnixter), Harriet Romayne (Ivy Daniels), Wilfred Smith (Preston Enderly),\nAdelaide Whittaker (Mignon Stanley), Frank Young (Hepworth Fairweather).",
  "origination": "",
  "duration": "",
  "personnel": "",
  "extant_recordings": "",
  "chronology": "",
  "sources": "",
  "gallery": "",
  "images": []
}