Premium Only Content

Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons 1949 The Case of Murder and the Star of Death
Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons was one of radio's longest running shows, airing October 12, 1937, to April 19, 1955, continuing well into the television era. It was produced by Frank and Anne Hummert, who based it upon Robert W. Chambers' 1906 novel The Tracer of Lost Persons. The sponsors included Whitehall Pharmacal (as in Anacin, Kolynos Toothpaste, BiSoDol antacid mints, Hill's cold tablets and Heet liniment), Dentyne, Aerowax, RCA Victor and Chesterfield cigarettes. It aired on the NBC Blue network until 1947, when it switched to CBS.
Characters and story
Bennett Kilpack began as Mr. Keen in 1937 with Arthur Hughes and then Phil Clarke stepping into the role later in the series. The kindly Keen and his faithful assistant, Mike Clancy (Jim Kelly), entertained listeners for 18 years. With 1690 nationwide broadcasts, Mr. Keen was the most resilient private detective in a namesake role. The nearest competitors were Nick Carter, Master Detective (726 broadcasts), The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (657) and The Adventures of the Falcon (473). Only 59 of the 1690 Mr. Keen programs are known to survive.
Richard Leonard directed scripts by Barbara Bates, Stedman Coles, Frank Hummert, Lawrence Klee and Bob Shaw. James Fleming and Larry Elliott were the announcers. Al Rickey's band provided the background music, including the program's theme, "Someday I'll Find You."
Satires
The cliches, stereotypes and simplistic dialogue provided much fodder for Bob and Ray's parody, Mr. Trace, Keener Than Most Persons, broadcast in numerous variations. It was also combined with rival detective show Martin Kane, Private Eye and satirized by Harvey Kurtzman and Jack Davis in Mad magazine's fifth issue (June–July 1953), as Kane Keen! Private Eye.
The character of Mr. Keen was referenced by Alfred Hitchcock in one of his television shows, according to The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion by Patrik Wikstrom and Martin Grams, Jr. Mr. Keen is also mentioned in the stage version of Bye Bye Birdie by the character Mr. Harry MacAfee, who was played by Paul Lynde.
In the "Honeymooners" sketch, "Razor Blades", appearing on the October 12, 1951 episode of Cavalcade of Stars, Ralph Kramden cannot find his razor blades. When he questions Alice Kramden about it, she responds, "What am I? Mrs. Keen, Tracer of Lost Razor Blades?".
-
2:12:28
Badlands Media
16 hours agoBaseless Conspiracies Ep. 144: NATO Narratives, Media Meltdowns & a Brightcore Boost with Kim Bright
114K21 -
2:02:11
Inverted World Live
11 hours agoGiant Underground Blob Moving Toward NY | Ep. 85
51.8K21 -
2:46:21
TimcastIRL
10 hours agoTexas GOP Greenlights ARREST WARRANTS For Dems Who FLED State | Timcast IRL
248K93 -
3:16:50
Laura Loomer
10 hours agoEP137: EXPOSED: How Tucker Carlson Became Hunter Biden's Wingman
77.2K95 -
4:22:34
Akademiks
9 hours agoNicki Minaj vs Dez Bryant. Trump Calls out Charlamagne. Diddy Denied Bail Again! ICEMAN soon?
62.1K3 -
3:16:28
Nerdrotic
11 hours ago $10.69 earnedNerdrotic at Night 504
89.1K3 -
8:20:30
Dr Disrespect
19 hours ago🔴LIVE - DR DISRESPECT - WARZONE - RANDOMLY GENERATED LOADOUTS EVENT
236K9 -
1:36:07
Glenn Greenwald
13 hours agoTrump Admin Unleashes More Policies That Prioritize Israel Over American Citizens; The Smear Campaign Against Gaza Aid Whistleblower with Journalist Mel Witte | SYSTEM UPDATE #497
152K198 -
58:14
MattMorseTV
11 hours ago $15.50 earned🔴Hakeem just lost EVERYTHING.🔴
88.2K64 -
9:21:36
Rallied
15 hours ago $3.20 earnedWARZONE CHALLENGES WITH DRDISRESPECT & BOB
88.5K5