DARK DESTINY

[RADIO-SERIES]

”The lives of some are doomed from the beginning. There are souls born beneath dark stars who

must travel by strange and terrible roads to meet their destinies. THIS is the tale of one of

these…”

This 1942 series is the earliest venture into the supernatural by the writing team of Robert Arthur

and David Kogan, who later collaborated onThe Mysterious Traveler,The Sealed BookandThe

Strange Doctor Weird. The two young men had met the year before in a writing class and, as their

friendship grew, decided to form a partnership as radio writers and packagers, who would bring

series deals to the networks but retain control over them (similar to the business model ofInner

Sanctumcreator Himan Brown).

The director of the series was veteran producer Jack Johnstone, whose flair for the fantastic had

been demonstrated in previous series likeBuck RogersandWho Knows?

[Press release—OCTOBER 4, 1942—

Ogden Standard Examiner—“Ethel Clark’s Radio Flashes”]

“Stories of the occult, of fate and destiny, of the mystic supernatural, will march in somber and

weird procession through Mutual microphones when ‘Dark Destiny,’ a new chiller series makes its

debut soon. ‘Dark Destiny’ will present stories based on the premise that: ‘There are lives

foredoomed from the beginning. There are souls born beneath dark stars who must travel by

strange and terrible roads to meet their destinies.’ Jack Johnstone, noted for his use of unusual

voice and sound effects, will produce and direct the series. ‘Dark Destiny’ will replace Morton

Gould’s ‘Music for America.’”

Many of the episodes were rebroadcast in the years to come on the scripting duo’s longest-

running series,The Mysterious Traveler.In 1952 Arthur and Kogan revivedDark Destinyas a

short-lived television series for WOR-TV. It ran for four weeks, using revampedTravelerscripts—

“Bury Her Deep” (March 17), “Murder by Proxy” (March 24), “Dig Your Own Grave” (March 31),

and “The Music Box” (April 7).

ORIGINATION:

WOR, New York (MBS).

DURATION:

August 26-October 7, 1942 (Wednesday series), October 17-November 21, 1942 (Saturday

series), November 26, 1942-March 11, 1943 (Thursday series).

PERSONNEL:

Robert Arthur (scriptwriter), Jack Johnstone (producer), David Kogan (scriptwriter).

CASTS:

Alfred Shirley, et al.

[CHRONOLOGY]
DARK DESTINY (WOR, NEW YORK)
[Wednesday—9:30-10:00 PM]

August 26, 1942It Is Later Than You Think”

September 2, 1942The Curse of the Tomb”

[

VARIETY?:

“…A blind bodyguard will accompany an English archeologist

into an ancient mausoleum, the idea being that only the sightless man

has ears sensitive enough to hear supernatural voices cursing the savant

for disturbing the entombed sleep of dead kings…”]

September 23, 1942“The Man Who Couldn’t Die”

September 30, 1942Escape into the Night”

October 7, 1942The Knives of Death”

[Saturday—8:00-8:30 PM]

October 17, 1942Murderer at Large”

October 24, 1942The Bell of Life”

October 31, 1942Masquerade”

EXTANT RECORDING

November 7, 1942“Till Death Do Us Part”

November 14, 1942The Dynasty of Death”

November 21, 1942No Escape”

[Thursday—8:30-9:00 PM]

November 26, 1942Full Fathom Fifty”

December 3, 1942Extra! Extra!”

December 10, 1942“Mortal Clay”

DECEMBER 13, 1942:

[Ogden Standard-Examiner—“Ethel Clark’s Radio Flashes”]

“‘Dark Destiny,’ horror story series produced and directed by Jack Johnstone,

has replaced Tom Howard’s ‘It Pays to Be Ignorant’ on Thursday nights.”

December 17, 1942They Who Sleep

December 24, 1942No One on the Line

December 31, 1942It Is Later Than You Think”

January 7, 1943Murder Goes Free”

January 14, 1943The Whisper of Death”

January 21, 1943“The House of Cain

January 28, 1943If You Believe”

February 4, 1943Horror by Night”

February 11, 1943Five Miles Down”

February 18, 1943Death Won’t Wait”

February 25, 1943The Cat from Hell”

March 4, 1943Flight to Safety”

March 11, 1943The Hand with Claws”