THE BLACK CASTLE

[RADIO-SERIES]

”Come, follow me, please, for again we visit the wizard who dwells yonder in the great hall.”

Although clearly derivative from the West Coast programThe Black Chapel, this WOR series

nevertheless managed to up-the-ante on its predecessor by serving as a tour-de-force for versatile

New York radio actor Don Douglas, who supplied all the voices in each story as well as the cracked

cacklings of the Wizard of the Castle and his pet raven Diablo.

[St. Petersburg Times, August 15, 1943—“Around the Dial” by Sylvia Norman] “…a one-man

show ghost series, featuring Don Douglas, who takes the part of all of the characters appearing in

the stories…”]

[Roy Sullivan,

Miami Daily News] “This is a one-man ghost show, enacted by Don Douglas.

Maybe this is so frightening that Don can’t find actors to help him out. Maybe he just wants to

take all the parts to show he can.”

[Bob Francis,

The Billboard] “This comparative newcomer to the designed-for-thrill lists differs

from competitors in that all spine-icing is soloed by Don Douglas. Douglas makes the

announcements, builds the horror pattern as the wizard ofBlack Castle, and finally switches to

each part called for in the latter’s ensuing, chiller-diller yarn.

“One-man dramas obviously offer presentation difficulties not experienced in shows using a cast

of actors. Speed ofCastleis checked here and there by over-lengthy interpolations to explain

scene changes.This may have been particularly acute in show caught (Sept. 11). The yarn about an

invisible murderer, based on an idea much better developed by a fellow named Wells, was as

tenuous as its menace. Probably a hard nut for the producer-director, W. Keys Perrin, to crack.

“Except for the fact that he is inclined to ham the wizard, making the role often seem more silly

than awesome, Douglas puts on a good 15 minutes. His vocal changes are sharp and clear, and his

characterizations come over effectively. With better material and tempo the stretch can throw as

good a punch as any of the current hair-raisers.”

[The Billboard, Jan. 22, 1944] “In line with Tiny Ruffner’s policy of building WOR’s daytime

listening audience, Don Douglas’sBlack Castle, one man show chiller which has been airing

Tuesday and Thursday nights, will go on Monday thru Friday at 2:45-3 p.m., starting January 31.

The eve shots will continue for at least two weeks and if reaction is favorable, they will be dropped

in favor of five a week daytime slot. This means that Douglas will do seven shows a week for

awhile. Reversing the usual trend, if show clicks, daytime will be the reward.”

[Broadcasting, March 27, 1944] “WOR New York on April 3 starts a weekly quarter-hour

Consumer Quizprogram. Studio audience will be quizzed on various products and when unable to

answer, will be given the facts from a bulletin supplied by the U. S. Testing Co., New York, which

tests fabrics and other products for quality.Consumer Quizwill form part of a ‘WOR Matinee’

including the two next pro shows,The Black CastleandSongs bySunny Skylar, with the

audience invited to remain and view the entire performance.”

For an early-evening show the series was surprisingly heavy on physical horror, as evidenced by

elements in the two surviving broadcasts.

ORIGINATION

: WOR, New York City, New York (MBS).

DURATION

: August 7-September 18, 1943 (Saturday afternoon series), September 25-

November 13, 1943 (Saturday evening series), November 16, 1943-March 16, 1944 (Tuesday-

Thursday evening series), January 31-June 22, 1944 (Monday through Friday daytime series).

PERSONNEL

: Don Douglas (all voices), Arthur Henley (scriptwriter), W. Keys Perrin

(producer-director), Lillian Schoen (scriptwriter).

EXTANT RECORDINGS

: “Jungle Death” (9/25/43), “Escape to Death” (12/16/43).

[CHRONOLOGY]
THE BLACK CASTLE (WOR, NEW YORK—MBS)
[Saturday—3:00-3:15 PM]

August 7, 1943

August 14, 1943

August 21, 1943

August 28, 1943

September 4, 1943

September 11, 1943

[“…about an invisible murderer…”]

September 18, 1943

[Saturday—7:15-7:30 PM]

September 25, 1943Jungle Death

EXTANT RECORDING

October 2, 1943

October 9, 1943

October 16, 1943

October 23, 1943

October 30, 1943

November 6, 1943

November 13, 1943

[Tuesday & Thursday—8:00-8:15 PM]

November 16, 1943

November 18, 1943

November 25, 1943

[Saturday—7:15-7:30 PM]

November 27, 1943

[Tuesday & Thursday—8:00-8:15 PM]

November 30, 1943

December 2, 1943

December 7, 1943

December 9, 1943

December 14, 1943

December 16, 1943Escape to Death

EXTANT RECORDING

December 21, 1943

December 23, 1943

December 28, 1943

December 30, 1943

January 4, 1944

January 11, 1944

January 13, 1944

January 18, 1944

January 20, 1944

January 25, 1944

January 27, 1944

February 1, 1944

February 3, 1944

February 8, 1944

February 10, 1944

February 15, 1944

February 17, 1944

February 22, 1944

February 24, 1944

February 29, 1944

March 2, 1944

March 7, 1944

March 9, 1944

March 14, 1944

March 16, 1944

THE BLACK CASTLE (1944 AFTERNOON SERIES)

[Monday thru Friday—3:00-3:15 PM]

January 31, 1944

February 1, 1944

February 2, 1944

February 3, 1944

February 4, 1944

February 7-11, 1944

February 14-18, 1944

February 21-25, 1944

February 28, 1944

February 29, 1944

March 1-3, 1944

March 6-10, 1944

March 13-17, 1944

March 20-24, 1944

March 27-31, 1944

April 3-7, 1944

April 10-14, 1944

April 17-21, 1944

April 24-28, 1944

May 1-5, 1944

May 8-12, 1944

May 15-19, 1944

May 22-26, 1944

May 29-31, 1944

June 1-2, 1944

June 5-9, 1944

June 12-16, 1944

June 19-22, 1944