Sunday, July 27, 2014

Little Old NEW YORK


By DANTON WALKER


Stacy Harris, the intrepid G-Man on Jerry Devine's This Is Your FBI, is a man without an existing birthplace.  The tiny lumber settlement in Canada where he was born disappeared from the map two years after that event.

-The Morning Herald (Uniontown, PA) July 27, 1948

Saturday, July 5, 2014

The Lyons Den


By Leonard Lyons

With only five hours' notice, K. T. Stevens substituted for Margaret Sullavan in Voice of the Turtle.  Before the curtain went up, producer Alfred de Liagre announced the substitution, with the usual money back if you want it offer...Small groups in the theater immediately began to confer: "It's almost 9 o'clock...what other show can we see now?...etc." In a seat up front sat Stacy Harris, Miss Stevens' boy friend, who recently was decorated by De Gaulle. He heard theater seats snapping up, and the shuffling of people's feet.  "I don't care how many walk out," he vowed grimly, "I'm staying."  He sat tensely until someone tapped him: "Better stand up, too mister.  That's The Star-Spangled Banner they're playing."

 -Salt Lake Tribune, Oct. 11, 1944



The daughter of director Sam Wood, K. T. Stevens enjoyed a long and successful career in acting.  She died in 1994.

Leonard Lyons was a Pulitzer-nominated columnist based in New York.  He died in 1976.

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Target Practice


Those frequent gun shots on The Adventures of the Thin Man have finally had their effect on actress Elspeth Eric--she's acquired a 22-calibre rifle and is shooting it out on her own.  Another radio refugee from the whodunits, Stacy Harris, gifted the rifle to Miss Eric, and the two can be seen out on the countryside these fall mornings, taking pot shots at tin cans, rocks, and assorted vegetable and mineral targets.  "No birds or animals," says Miss Eric. "Too gruesome!"

-Harrisburg (PA) Telegraph Nov. 9, 1946

Born in 1907, Elspeth Eric was a successful radio actress and writer.  She died in 1993.



Saturday, May 10, 2014

Cheers Grow Dim and Colors Fade for Artist-Athlete, Critically Ill


Artist-Athlete Is Losing Hope
A serious illness has almost stripped from the heart of Stanley D. Harris, 20 year-old Roosevelt High School graduate, the will to live.  Until a few days ago young Harris, who lies in critical condition in Swedish Hospital, was taxed to find the time to do all the living he wanted to enjoy.

Artist and athlete, Harris is a curious combination of robust directness and quiet subtlety.  In high school, he alternated between playing football and lying on Seattle docks, sketching ships in quiet moods.  On other occasions he spent hilarious, voluble moments as Roosevelt's cheer leader.

He didn't like leading leather-lunged students in wild cries.  He felt it was "sissy."  But he found nothing "sissy" in several outlets of his artistic nature, carving figures in soap, and during the winter, in snow; making sketches and paintings.

Physicians at Swedish Hospital planned today to give the youth a little milk.  Recently he had been fed through the veins.  The youth's mother, Mrs. David Harris, 7803 W. Green Lake Way, took heart at that news, she said.

Only last Monday her son said to her: "Mother, I don't think I want to live.  I want to kiss you good-bye."

The hopeless tone in his voice, the tired look in his eyes, discouraged Mrs. Harris.  It sounded so unlike the virile son who used to stride about the house in his corduroys, eager for whatever he planned to do next.

Parents do Leading

If Stanley Harris isn't interested in life anymore--if the zest has been taken away from him by the long, dreary twenty days since his operation after he suffered a burst appendix--Stanley Harris' parents are doing the cheer-leading and cheering for their sick son.  They've taken a houseboat along Westlake Avenue, where bright sunlight streams across the decks of dozens of ships that would make fine subjects for the youth who likes to sketch and paint them.

Young Harris learned to draw and paint without instruction.  He engaged in art work, swimming and amateur acting with equal enthusiasm.  He graduated from Roosevelt last year, and since then has been doing whatever he could find in the way of work.  Stanley Harris may face another operation in a few days, but he doesn't know it yet.  That is best.  He is already too indifferent to his future for his physical good.


-Seattle Daily Times Apr. 16, 1936

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Dragnet, April 26, 1954



Stacy Harris pops up as a used car dealer in the Dragnet comic strip dated April 26, 1954.  
This time the artist is Mel Keefer.  

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Actor Moved By Applause




HOLLYWOOD--Sixty cast and crew members on 20th Century-Fox's Return to Peyton Place set paid Stacy Harris one of the highest tributes an actor can earn when they broke into spontaneous applause for his dramatic performance in an emotional scene.

Stacy, playing Leslie Harrington in the daytime NBC-TV drama, was deeply moved.

"I starred as a Broadway actor, won a New York Critics' Award, have 20 motion pictures to my credit and appeared in 350 television shows," he said.  "But never have I received such an ovation from my co-workers."



-Abilene (TX) Reporter News Apr. 8, 1973

This article was published posthumously.

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Actor, former Seattleite, dies at 54

LOS ANGELES -- (UPI) -- Stacy Harris, actor, sportswriter, cartoonist and soldier of fortune, died of a heart attack yesterday.  He was 54.

Harris played the role of Leslie Harrington in the television series Return to Peyton Place, and frequently had roles in Jack Webb productions, including the original Dragnet on radio.  He played the lead in This Is Your F.B.I. on radio for several years and was the star of the Doorway To Danger TV series in 1953.

Born in Big Timber, Que., in 1918, Harris was a finalist in the Golden Gloves Boxing Tournament in Seattle in 1934.  He later worked as a sportswriter for The San Francisco Chronicle in the 1930s and as a staff cartoonist for The New Orleans Times-Picayune after World War II.

He left The Chronicle in the 1930s to join the Army Air Corps, but was injured in a crash after winning his wings and was given a medical discharge.

He came to Hollywood and got radio acting jobs, but when World War II broke out he became a merchant seaman and then went to Africa as an ambulance driver for the Gaullist Free French Forces.  On arrival he transferred to the Foreign Legion, won the Croix de Guerre in combat, was wounded and was given another medical discharge.

Harris was the son of David S. Harris, 1421 Minor Ave. in Seattle, who had been a department store Santa Claus here since the early '50s.  Funeral services were pending.

-Seattle Daily Times March 14, 1973

Monday, February 24, 2014

The Helen Corday Murder, Part VII









 *Alas, the strip from Thursday, August 7, 1952 is missing. However, the good news is that I found a better source for many of the daily comic strips, which are much clearer than the set reprinted here.  I hope to update them within the next week.  Stay tuned, because they really are quite stylish and fun.

*Update, Mar. 23: Still looking for the strip from Aug. 7, 1952.  It's the one where the cartoon Stacy Harris killer goes berserk.  I think we'll get lucky. 

I also missed a very big (and glaringly obvious) inside joke the first time around: the killer of Helen Corday is named Stanley Meyer in the comic strip.  The real Stanley Meyer produced the b&w Dragnet tv series as well as the 1954 film.

I found out some more information about the comic strip, along with some cleaner copies of the first few strips here.  Right as rain, the artist made the effort to depict Barney Phillips as Ed Jacobs, at least initially. 

I also found a week's worth of preview comic strips, which I posted on my other blog, here.  We're treated to seeing Joe Friday at home with his mother and a very clear depiction of Barton Yarborough as his partner.

Friday, February 14, 2014

Just Between You and Me


Meet the cast of Return to Peyton Place, new afternoon serial

The excitement around Hollywood is enormous about Return to Peyton Place.  The actors are scattered all over the globe, and as we go to press, Nicole is tracking down people from Hawaii to St. Louis, New York to Capa San Lucas in Baja California.  And yet in just two days after our deadline the entire cast will have gathered together in beautiful downtown Burbank, where a few stars will be renewing old friendships, but most will be meeting for the first time.  Then husbands, wives, sweethearts will instantly develop, as they fall into the characters we all learned to love or hate on the original Peyton Place.

...Stacy Harris (Leslie Harrington), that eligible bachelor who never stops working, is an old colleague of Nicole's (we necked together "in the line of duty," as we both remembered, as actors on some of the old NBC Matinee Theatres).  Most of the things he told me were "just between you and me," which cracked up us since that's this column!  But we respect this fine actor with the romantic voice, and are pleased to report that he "looks forward to the show, my Dad's farm is paid for, and no, just never yet met the right girl" since his first marriage broke up many years ago.  We know you'll be marvelous on the show, Stacy.

-Afternoon TV, June 1972

Return to Peyton Place aired weekday afternoons on NBC from April 3, 1972 to January 4, 1974.  Every former toddler of a certain age knew better than to disturb their mother while her "stories" were on.  Alas, I do not remember Return to Peyton Place.  My mom was more of a Young & the Restless and Edge of Night kind of girl.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Radio Player to Debut in New Ladd Picture

HOLLYWOOD -- Stacy Harris, famous for his long-standing role in the radio program This is Your F.B.I. has been signed by Paramount to make his debut as a screen actor in Postal Inspector with Alan Ladd and Phyllis Calvert.

Harris will appear as a hard boiled yegg in the cast which also marks the film debut for another New York radio personality, young and lovely Blossom Plumb.

Harris' career started simultaneously with Burt Lancaster's on Broadway.  They both made their footlight bows auspiciously in A Sound of Hunting.  While Lancaster moved to Hollywood and films, Harris went into radio.

Postal Inspector will be directed by Lewis Allen and produced by Robert Fellows.


-Medicine Hat News (Alberta, Canada), July 22, 1949


A Sound of Hunting by Harry Brown opened on Broadway at the Lyceum Theatre on November 20, 1945 and closed three weeks later. A World War II comedy/drama, it was filmed by Edward Dmytryk as Eight Iron Men in 1952.  Barney Phillips was cast as Capt. Trelawny, the role played by Stacy Harris on Broadway.

Monday, January 13, 2014

The Helen Corday Murder, Part I

 






 
 
Dragnet, the radio program, first aired on June 3, 1949. 
 
The Helen Corday Murder was the fifth episode to air on July 7, 1949.  The story revolves around the brutal murder of a young woman, found bludgeoned to death by a piece of steel pipe. With the help of forensic evidence and a lucky break, Joe Friday and his partner Ben Romero (played by Barton Yarborough) apprehend the suspect after a short, but thrilling car chase.  Stacy Harris played the suspect, Frank Phillip Larson.
 
Dragnet, the tv series, made its debut on December 16, 1951.  The first episode was called The Human Bomb with Stacy Harris playing Vernon Carney, a mad bomber who holds City Hall hostage in an attempt to free his incarcerated brother, Elwood (played by Sam Edwards).  Raymond Burr plays the then Assistant LAPD Chief Thad Brown.
 
Shortly after the second episode was filmed, actor Barton Yarborough died of a heart attack on December 19, 1951.  Barney Phillips stepped in to play Ed Jacobs, who became Friday's partner for the rest of the season.  Beginning in the Fall of 1952, Friday's partner was Frank Smith, played by Ben Alexander for the rest of the black & white series.
 
Dragnet, the comic strip, made its debut on Friday, June 21, 1952.  Its first story was The Helen Corday Murder, adapted from the radio play.  Although Friday's partner is Ed Jacobs by this time on the tv show, the artist Joe Scheiber depicts him as Barton Yarborough and not Barney Phillips.  Stacy Harris is depicted as the suspect, albeit with a different name this time.

The Helen Corday Murder was adapted for television as The Big Barrette toward the end of the second season on June 18, 1953, one year after the comic strip version ran.  Olan Soule played Ray Pinker, who was the crime lab technician for the black & white, color, and both film versions of the series (with slightly different character names).  Once again, Stacy Harris gives a truly chilling performance as the psychotically deranged Larson.

A retrospective of Dragnet, the comic strip, can be found here

The radio broadcast of The Helen Corday Murder can be found here.

The television episode of The Big Barrette can be found here.

The Helen Corday Murder will be updated here every Monday over the next seven weeks.  The reproduction quality is what it is, but it's fun.  Stay tuned.