The Missing Masterpiece (Aired March 28, 1950)
For over twelve years, from 1949 through 1962 (including a one year hiatus in 1954-1955), this series recounted the cases "the man with the action-packed expense account, America’s fabulous freelance insurance investigator, Johnny Dollar". Johnny was an accomplished 'padder' of his expense account. The name of the show derives from the fact that he closed each show by totaling his expense account, and signing it "End of report... Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar". Terry Salomonson in his authoritative "A Radio Broadcast Log of the Drama Program Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar", notes that the original working title was "Yours Truly, Lloyd London". Salomonson writes "Lloyd London was scratched out of the body of (the Dick Powell) audition script and Johnny Dollar was written in. Thus the show was re-titled on this script and the main character was renamed. Why this was done was unclear – possibly to prevent a legal run-in with Lloyd’s of London Insurance Company." Although based in Hartford, Connecticut, the insurance capital of the world, freelancer Johnny Dollar managed to get around quite a bit – his adventures taking him all over the world.
THIS EPISODE:
March 28, 1950. CBS network. "The Missing Masterpiece". Sustaining. A $250,000 painting is stolen from a failing Boston art gallery. Possibly recorded March 23, 1950. Edmond O'Brien, Charles McGraw, Walter Burke, Lillian Buyeff, Robert Griffin, James Nusser, Joan Banks, Tyler McVey, Leith Stevens (music), Gil Doud (writer), Paul Dudley (writer), Jaime del Valle (producer, director). 29:01.
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