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Draft:Jane Speed

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Jane Speed
BornJane Helen Krisher
(1920-01-04)January 4, 1920
Akron, Ohio, U.S.
DiedMarch 5, 1991(1991-03-05) (aged 71)
New York City, U.S.
OccupationMystery writer, radio scriptwriter
GenreMurder mystery, screwball comedy, romantic comedy
Years active1941–1953, 1963–1980

Jane Speed (born Jane Helen Krisher; January 4, 1920 – March 5, 1991)[1] was an American mystery writer, radio dramatist and actress, best known for her crime fiction,[2][3][4] published primarily in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine.[5]

Early life and career

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Jane Krisher was born and raised in Akron, Ohio,[1] the only child of William Chester Krisher and Helen E. Roush.[6] Her first stage assignment of note came in the fall of 1935 at Akron's First Congregational Church, where she served as prompter and assistant to the director in a production of the British anti-war play Ashes of Victory.[7] The following spring, she took part in an amateur radio program which concluded with a production of the three-act play, The Tinker.[8][9][a] After graduating from Buchtel High School in 1937, Krisher attended first Ohio Wesleyan University, where she became a member of Theta Alpha Phi,[11] and then Northwestern University's School of Speech, joining Alpha Gamma Delta and graduating in 1941 with a Bachelor of Science in Speech.[12][1][13] At Buchtel, she studied drama with Mrs. T. C. Laughlin,[14][15] and at Northwestern with Alvina Krause.[16][17] Krisher's collegiate résumé includes roles in Ayn Rand's Night of January 16th,[14] Dion Boucicault's The Poor of New York.[18], Lenore Coffee's Family Portrait[17] and H. L. Mencken's The Artist,[14] as well as the female lead in Seumas O'Kelly's The Matchmakers.[18]

Radio

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Following her graduation and return to Akron, two of Krisher's original radio dramas aired locally, both of which she directed.[19][20] She also continued to perform onstage, with Akron's Little Theater group.[21] Subsequently, she worked as a copywriter and continuity writer at WFMJ in Youngstown, Ohio.[1] It was there, in the fall of 1942, that Krisher met her soon-to-be husband, James Speed, a fellow WFMJ employee.[12]

In 1946, following the birth of her first child and completion of her husband's military service, Speed relocated to New York City. On June 6, her radio drama "My Dear Aunt Caroline" aired on Elaine Sterne Carrington's anthology series showcasing new writers, Carrington Playhouse,[1][22][23] performed live at New York's Longacre Theatre under Perry Lafferty's direction and broadcast nationally on the Mutual Broadcasting System.[24] Recounting "the near tragedy brought about by the dominance by an older woman over a young girl,"[16] Speed's narrative clearly anticipates the oppressive family relationships that would characterize her most popular mystery stories roughly 20 years later.[25][26]

The next two scripts sold were "The Perfect Wife" and "A Hard Bargain" (broadcast on Family Theater and The Whistler,[b][c] respectively), the former a gentle domestic comedy starring Spring Byington and Ralph Morgan,[30][31] the latter a noir-ish tale of one "small doubt, fed by growing uncertainty, grow[ing] into suspicion as lethal as poison."[32] A new production of "A Hard Bargain" aired more than 2½ years later on Murder by Experts,[33] Dave Kogan's and Robert Arthur's short-lived but twice-Edgar Award-winning series.[34]

"Farewell to Birdie McKeesler," Speed's tale of a severely typing-challenged office employee whose dismissal proves considerably easier said than done,[35] was produced three times in five years, first in 1948 on Family Theater with June Haver,[36][37] then in 1950—with "McKeesler" changed to "McKeever"—on Skippy Hollywood Theatre, with Gloria Grahame,[38] and, finally, adapted for television in 1953 on Your Jeweler's Showcase, starring Marilyn Erskine.[39] The latter production was frequently re-aired over the next decade;[40] it was shown on KCOP-TV in Los Angeles as late as August 1966,[41] and, more than three years later, on ATV in Great Britain.[42] Moreover, the film was subsequently re-released by producer Stuart Reynolds and screened as a teaching tool addressing both workplace interaction and interpersonal communication in general.[43][44] The remainder of Speed's produced output during this period includes four episodes of Armstrong's Theatre of Today[5] and her adaptation of Richard Hughes' novel A High Wind in Jamaica, which aired on NBC University Theater.[45]

Hollywood interlude

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On June 16, 1947, roughly five months prior to her second nationally broadcast radio drama (and the first one produced in Hollywood), Speed, together with veteran character actors Harry Davenport and Kathryn Card, was named by The Hollywood Reporter as a late addition to the cast of Warner Brothers' Mary Hagen (ultimately released as That Hagen Girl, starring Shirley Temple and Ronald Reagan).[46][47] Although whatever dialogue the film's shooting script may have assigned her character did not make it into the finished film, Speed's uncredited 16-second appearance at the very beginning of a nightclub scene late in the film—as a cigarette girl emerging from a crowd of anonymous dancers and wending her way past seated diners towards the club's bar (tended by an uncredited Gino Corrado)—is clearly the focal point of a carefully designed traveling crane shot.[48][49][d]

Crime fiction: a new beginning

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In the wake of radio drama's demise in the early 1950s, Speed's roughly 25-year transition from stage to page concluded in March 1963 with the publication of "According to Plan," her professional mystery-writing debut,[5] which thus became—by editor Frederic Dannay's reckoning—"the 247th 'first story' to be published by Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine."[53] Almost without exception Speed's crime fiction, all of which debuted between 1963 and 1980, did so in EQMM, the sole outlier being "Poor Eva", which first appeared in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine in 1977.[54][55] Her first two stories were included in Anthony Boucher's honor roll for detective fiction of 1963,[56][57] as were her next three, in the 1964, '65 and '66 editions, respectively.[58] Her 1969 story, "The Unhappening", was likewise honored by Boucher's successor Allen J. Hubin;[59] in addition, it appeared the following year in Ellery Queen's Grand Slam (25th anniversary annual): 25 stories from 'Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine'.[60]

"The Freya of Fire Island", Speed's third published story, appeared in the September 1964 issue and shortly thereafter in Ellery Queen's 20th Anniversary Annual.[61] In his introduction, editor Fred Dannay—aka Ellery Queen—observed: "Her style gets firmer with each story, her insight deeper, her observation sharper."[62] Regarding her 1966 novelette "Sounds in the Night", Dannay's introduction—entitled "Sui Generis"—notes that Speed's latest work "is not of the fast, grating, or slam-bang school. It chooses its own inherent speed, growing, growing... warmly human, sympathetically understanding, probing with the gentle touch of a highly skilled surgeon."[63] Six years later, Speed spelled out in verse her personal mystery preferences, chief among them being "to read not of dolls pulled about by plots, but of humans tied up in their self-made knots."[64]

"End of the Day" (EQMM, March 1965), described by Dannay as "a superb character study [of] a nervous, harassed mother of two [and] wife of a demanding, sarcastic, belittling husband,"[25] appears to have created an immediate buzz; barely had the March issue hit the newsstands when Speed was contacted by noted mystery/suspense editor Joan Kahn in hopes of giving her employer Harper & Row the inside track on any upcoming novel.[65] Although the novel never materialized, more than two decades later, Kahn did include another popular Speed story, "Fair's Fair",[66] in Ready or Not, Here Come Fourteen Frightening Stories, the last in Kahn's series of wide-ranging short fiction anthologies. Speed's entry was singled out by both School Library Journal[67] and McAllen Monitor critic Wanda Koeller, who writes, "'Fair's Fair' is my favorite. [...] The author does an excellent job of doing what a frightening story should do — keep you on the edge of your seat. [...] It is written very plainly by Jane Speed, but offers a complex and sinister message."[26] More recently, Mystery.com's 2021 review of the February 1967 issue of EQMM awarded "Fair's Fair" 4 of 5 stars (as contrasted with another seven of the issue's 12 stories, which received 3 or fewer, and with the issue's overall score of 3.5).[68]

Kahn and Dannay were not alone in their regard for Speed's work. For the 1977 edition of Best Detective Stories of the Year, Edward D. Hoch selected her story "View From the Inside".[69] Five years later, two of her stories and three by Hoch appeared in Martin Greenberg's anthology Miniature Mysteries: 100 Malicious Little Mystery Stories. Reviewing that collection, the San Francisco Examiner Magazine singled out Speed, Hoch, and fellow contributors Kay Nolte Smith, Jack Ritchie, Francis M. Nevins and Helen McCloy as "some of the most respected names in the profession."[2] Reviewing the same book, Kiplinger's Changing Times selected an almost entirely different group to represent the best of the best, yet likewise included Speed:

Included are works by some of the best writers in the field, such as Edward Wellen, Michael Gilbert, Lawrence Treat and Jane Speed.[3]

In retrospect, "End of the Day" may be Speed's most enduring work; aside from numerous subsequent printings,[70][71][72] it almost singlehandedly resurrected the author's previous career in the form of radio dramatizations and readings in South Africa, Italy, and, in Germany, by RAI Bozen, Radio Bremen and Sender Freies Berlin.[73] One production, starring Elisabeth Wiedemann and Henning Schlüter [de], debuted on July 3, 1976.[74] In addition, a reading of Speed's "Poor Eva" was aired by SFB in 1979 and again in 1981.[75][76] In 2018, more than half a century after its publication, "End of the Day" was performed live for the benefit of Seattle Central Library patrons[77][4] (part of that library's longstanding program, "Thrilling Tales! A Story Time for Grownups"[78]).

Personal life and death

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From 1943 until her death in 1991, Speed was married to James Speed, with whom she had three children.[79] Following the appearance of her last published story in 1980, much of her time was taken up in managing the affairs of her aging father in Akron and, following his death in 1988, successfully contesting a fraudulent will which, ironically, would have left her a considerably larger sum than did the actual document drawn up by him almost a decade earlier.[80]

On March 5, 1991, Jane Speed died of natural causes, survived by her husband and children,[79] as well as her son-in-law, poet John Curl, and her granddaughter, film and video producer Rachel Curl.[81]

Works

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Radio

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Television

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Short stories

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Except where otherwise indicated, information is derived from Galactic Central.[54]

Notes

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  1. ^ This almost certainly the then already widely performed three-act, religious play penned by the Ohio-born and educated Fred Eastman, longtime Professor of religious drama and literature at Chicago Theological Seminary.[10]
  2. ^ Although initially purchased for Suspense, "A Hard Bargain" found its way to The Whistler when the former series expanded from a 30 to a 60-minute format.[27]
  3. ^ The Whistler aired Speed's "A Hard Bargain" on its 'east of the Rockies'—i.e. Household Finance Corp.—edition only,[28] while the rest of the country heard "What Makes a Murderer," a new production of the show's like-named 8/13/45 episode.[29]
  4. ^ The party responsible for Speed's presence here is most likely the film's dialogue director, Herschel Daugherty, who, as of June 23, 1941, had been a longtime faculty member at the Pasadena Playhouse.[50] It was approximately one week later that Jane Krisher—who, as evidenced by her Northwestern résumé, was at that time at least as much focused on acting as on writing or directing[14][51]—embarked with three fellow Northwestern graduates on a three-part California road trip, the first stop being Pasadena.[52]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ellett, Ryan (May-June 2023) "Jane Speed: Another Overlooked Writer from Radio’s Golden Age". The Old Radio Times. pp. 5–7.
  2. ^ a b Lachtman, Howard (August 21, 1983). "Lachtman on Mysteries". The San Francisco Examiner Magazine. p. 5.
  3. ^ a b "The Bookshelf: Fiction". Changing Times. August 1983. p. 74.
  4. ^ a b Constant, Paul (August 13, 2018). "Your Week in Readings: The best literary events from August 13th - August 19th". The Seattle Review of Books.
  5. ^ a b c Ellett, op. cit., p. 6
  6. ^ Washburn, Elizabeth Fesseden (1986). Snively-Snavely: The Swiss Ancestors and American Descendants of Johann Jacob Schnebele (1659-1743) and Other Snivelys and Snavelys of Southeastern Pennsylvania. Madison, WS: Gateway Press. p. 380. See also:
  7. ^ "Miss Krisher Directs Play". The Akron Beacon Journal. October 31, 1935. p. 12. See also:
  8. ^ Geyer, Marion (April 16, 1936). “Women of Church Assist Committee in Charge of Demonstration; Various Groups, Classes to Present Activities in Connection With Character Building Program for Young People”. The Akron Beacon Journal. p. 46.
  9. ^ Geyer, Marion (April 17, 1936). “Annual All-Church Night Is Scheduled; Young People of West Congregational Open Program With Supper”. The Akron Beacon Journal. p. 8.
  10. ^ "Obituary Notices". Progress-Bulletin. April 6, 1963. p. 10. See also:
  11. ^ "In the Colleges: Pupils Wed, With Honors, at Miami; Denison University; Ohio Wesleyan". The Akron Beacon Journal. March 5, 1939. p. 20.
  12. ^ a b "Studio Staff Members Wed". The Akron Beacon Journal. April 11, 1943. p. 23.
  13. ^ Northwestern University (1941). Eighty-Third Annual Commencement. p. 27.
  14. ^ a b c d "News of Akronites in College and High School: Cast in Two University Productions; Jane Krisher Has Roles in Northwestern Plays; Others Honored; Jane Krisher, Popular Dramatist". The Akron Beacon Journal. May 5, 1940. p. 54.
  15. ^ "Akron Monnett Club Gives Party Honoring High School, Wesleyan College Students". The Akron Beacon Journal. April 6, 1934. p. 18.
  16. ^ a b c Offineer, Bee (June 6, 1946). "Two Summer Shows Debut Tonight; Reminders'". The Akron Beacon Journal. p. 16.
  17. ^ a b "N.U. Amateurs Offer Play Thru Saturday". Chicago Sunday Tribune. July 21, 1940. p. 101.
  18. ^ a b "In the Colleges". The Akron Beacon Journal. November 5, 1939. p. 21.
  19. ^ a b Doran, Dorothy (September 19, 1941). "Around the Dial: Top Radio Shows of Other Seasons Stay in Spotlight; Paragraphs: Jane Krisher, young scripter". The Akron Beacon Journal. p. 36.
  20. ^ a b Doran, Dorothy (October 2, 1941). "Around the Dial: 'Mortimer Meek' Will Come Back in Weekly Show; Tonight's Toppers; Dot's Dashes; Local Cast". The Akron Beacon Journal. p. 32.
  21. ^ Gloss, Edward E. (October 25, 1941). "Virtue Again is Rewarded in Third Act". The Akron Beacon Journal. p. 11.
  22. ^ "Today's Radio Highlights". The Gazette and Daily. June 6, 1946. p. 18.
  23. ^ Palmer, Zuma (June 7, 1946). "Frank Morgan's New Role Good". Hollywood Citizen-News. p. 16.
  24. ^ Carrington, Elaine (January 8, 1947). ""Queen of Soapers Asks: Does Radio Want New Writers?". Variety. p. 110. ProQuest 1285902690. I am inordinately proud of many of our productions and of the roster of new writers who have been launched on their careers as a result of Playhouse productions under the direction of Perry Lafferty. There is Kenneth Greeberg, who wrote 'The Sparrow;' Winifred Wolfe, who wrote 'Portrait of a Girl'; Howard Rodman, who wrote 'Ride a Cock Horse'; Carolyn Darling, who wrote 'Enter Youth'; Jane Speed, who wrote 'My Dear Aunt Caroline'; and from a radio station in Hartford, Ralph Klein with his unusual and clever mystery stories. See also:
    • "MBS to Try Scripts by Unknowns; New Dramatic 'Playhouse' Will Be Produced by Soap Serial Writer, Mrs. Carrington". Broadcasting, Telecasting. February 4, 1946. p. 9. ProQuest 1014888227. The show, to be called The Carrington Playhouse, will be broadcast Thursdays from 8 to 8:30 p.m., beginning Feb. 21. Mrs. Carrington will select the scripts and produce the shows. Perry Lafferty will be the director.
    • "Inside Stuff––Radio". Variety. February 27, 1946. p. 44. ProQuest 1285871269. "Carrington Playhouse," preeming over MBS last Thursday (21) brought to the Longacre theatre, N. Y., Mutual studio, something of a legit first-night atmosphere, what with prominent guests, et al.
  25. ^ a b Dannay, Frederic, ed. (March 1965). Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. p. 84.
  26. ^ a b c Koeller, Wanda (May 15, 1988). "Scare Me Just a Little". The McAllen Monitor. p. 57.
  27. ^ Ellett, op. cit., p. 6
  28. ^ a b "Radio Roundup". Hollywood Citizen News. March 8, 1948. p. 22.
  29. ^ "Episode Search: What_Makes_a_Murderer". OTRR.org.
  30. ^ Palmer, Zuma (November 13, 1947). "Many Fingers in Comedy Mixing Bowl". Hollywood Citizen-News. p. 32.
  31. ^ a b "Ralph Morgan Will Appear on 'Family Theater'". The Messenger (Belleville, Illinois). November 7, 1947. p. 5.
  32. ^ a b "KGLO – CBS". Globe-Gazette. April 7, 1948. p. 2.
  33. ^ "Succumbs". Janesville Daily Gazette. October 23, 1950. p. 12.
  34. ^ Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 470. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. See also:
  35. ^ Reed, Alan; Ohmart, Ben (2009). Yabba Dabba Doo!: The Alan Reed Story. Albany, GA: BearManor Media. p. 178. ISBN 1-59393-313-4.
  36. ^ Von Pelt, Rita (October 14, 1948). "Today in Radio: Screen Stars to Air Views; Murphy is Host". The Atlanta Constitution. p. 22.
  37. ^ a b Palmer, Zuma (October 14, 1948). "Affect of Public Service Shows Can Not Be Measured". Hollywood Citizen-News, p. 28.
  38. ^ a b Hammerston, Claude (August 31, 1950). "Radio Highlights: Rollicking Comedy". The Ottawa Citizen. p. 23. See also:
  39. ^ a b "Tuesday, December 22 (Cont'd)". The Ross Reports on Television. December 21-27, 1953. p. 8.
  40. ^ "Search results for 'Farewell to Birdie McKeever' from 1955 to 1964" at Newspapers.com.
  41. ^ "Television Log". Long Beach Independent. August 4, 1966. p. D-8.
  42. ^ "Television and Radio". The Guardian Journal. September 9, 1969. p. 10.
  43. ^ National Institute of Health (1960). Mental Health Motion Pictures: A Selective Guide, 1960, Volume 15. Washington: United States Government Printing Office. pp. 30–31. See also:
  44. ^ "Secretaries Will Meet Tuesday". The Baltimore Sun. September 9, 1960. p. 24. See also:
  45. ^ "Audio and Video: Eisenhower Will Talk on Korea". The Akron Beacon Journal. September 4, 1950. p. 28.
  46. ^ "Up-to-the-Minute Casting News". The Hollywood Reporter. June 16, 1947. p. 9. ProQuest 2322717854. Soledad Jiminez, Anne O'Neal, Nina Compana, 'Adventures of Black Bart,' U-I; Harry Davenport, Kathryn Card, Jane Speed, 'Mary Hagen,' Warners
  47. ^ Jane Speed filmography. American Film Institute.
  48. ^ snakeblskn (September 30, 2016). "1947 swing dance/lindy hop clip". YouTube.
  49. ^ That Hagen Girl (1947; from 1:06:22 to 1:06:38) Internet Archive.
  50. ^ "Pasadena Playhouse Association: Playhouse Staff; Associate Directors". Playbill. July 23, 1941. p. 7.
  51. ^ Doran, Dorothy (December 20, 1941). "Around the Dial". The Akron Beacon Journal. p. 8.
  52. ^ Henrietta Jr. (June 25, 1941). "The Tattle-Tale.....". The Akron Beacon Journal. p. 12.
  53. ^ Dannay, Frederic, ed. (March 1963). Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. p. 82.
  54. ^ a b "Speed, Jane (fl. 1960s-1980s) (chron.)". Galactic Central.
  55. ^ Speed, Jane (August 1977) "Poor Eva". Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine. pp. 24–32.
  56. ^ Dannay, Frederic, editor: Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. September 1964.
  57. ^ Boucher, Anthony (1964). Best Detective Fiction of the Year, 19th Annual Collection. New York; E.P. Dutton. & Company. p. 284.
  58. ^ Boucher, Anthony (1965). Best Detective Fiction of the Year, 19th Annual Collection. New York; E.P. Dutton. & Company. p. 271. See also:
  59. ^ Hubin, Allen J. (1970). Best Detective Fiction of the Year, 19th Annual Collection. New York; E.P. Dutton. & Company. p. 284.
  60. ^ Queen, Ellery (1970). Ellery Queen's Grand Slam (25th Anniversary Annual): 25 Stories from Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. New York: World Publishing. pp. 71–84. OCLC 39640801.
  61. ^ a b Ellery Queen's 20th anniversary annual; 20 stories from Ellery Queen's mystery magazine.. Catalog.loc.gov.
  62. ^ Dannay, Frederic, ed. (1965). Ellery Queen's 20th anniversary annual; 20 stories from 'Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine'. New York: Random House. p. 247. OCLC 54612.
  63. ^ Dannay, Frederic, ed. (September 1966). Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. p. 99.
  64. ^ Speed, Jane (June 1972). "Who-Dun-It". Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. p. 98.
  65. ^ "Private correspondence, Joan Kahn, February 5, 1965." Mediafire.
  66. ^ Letter seeking French rights to "Fair's Fair". See also:
  67. ^ Yaakov, Juliet (1990). Junior High School Library Catalog ISBN 0-8242-0799-8. pp. 433–434
  68. ^ Lewis, Steve (December 10, 2021). "Diary Review: ELLERY QUEEN’S MYSTERY MAGAZINE – February 1967.". MysteryFile.com
  69. ^ a b c d e f g Contento, William G.; Greenberg, Martin H. (1991). Index to Crime and Mystery Anthologies. Boston, MA: G.K. Hall & Company. pp.  562, 611, 616, 625, 660, 673, 679, 686. ISBN 0-8161-8629-4.
  70. ^ a b "With malice toward all : an anthology of mystery stories, by the Mystery Writers of America ; edited and with a foreword by Robert L. Fish". DallasLibrary.org.
  71. ^ Request for German one-time reprint rights for "End of the Day". See also:
  72. ^ Payment for Finnish rights for "Fair's Fair".
  73. ^ Ellett, op. cit., pp. 6–7
  74. ^ "Jane Speed – Ende Des Tages". ARD®Hörspieldatenbank.
  75. ^ "Poor Eva" produced and broadcast by SFB on Feb 2, 1979
  76. ^ "Poor Eva" rebroadcast by SFB in 1981
  77. ^ Ellett, op. cit., p. 7
  78. ^ W. David (June 8, 2018). "Shelf Talk Blog: Don’t be afraid of the dark: Thrilling Tales just for you!". The Seattle Public Library. See also:
  79. ^ a b Ellett, op. cit., p. 7
  80. ^ McBane, Richard (May 2, 1989). "Akron Heir Gives Up Largest Part of Fortune; Akron Man's Heir to Share Fortune. The Akron Beacon Journal. pp. 1, 5.
  81. ^ "James Edward Speed". Legacy.com. September 28, 2009. See also:
  82. ^ Old Time Radio Researchers (March 7, 2023). "Family Theater - The Perfect Wife". YouTube.
  83. ^ "Radio and Television". The New York Herald Tribune. April 7, 1948. p. 35. ProQuest 1327269502.
  84. ^ Old Time Radio Researchers (Mar 18, 2023 ). "Family Theater - Farewell to Birdie McKeesler". YouTube.
  85. ^ "Programs on the Air: Afternoon". The New York Times. March 4, 1950. p. 28. ProQuest 111495408. 12:00-WNBC–News, Charles F. McCarthy; WOR–Man on the Farm; WJZ–Home Gardener–Phil Alampi; WCBS–Theatre of Today: Second Best, With Teri Keane, Bill Quinn
  86. ^ "On the Radio: Afternoon". The New York Times. May 6, 1950. p. 30. ProQuest 111374099. 12:00-WNBC–News, Charles F. McCarthy; WOR–Man on the Farm; WJZ–Home Gardener–Phil Alampi; WCBS–Theatre of Today: Good Old Annie, with Grace Matthews
  87. ^ "Sunday's Radio Features". New York Daily News. August 20, 1950. p. 31C.
  88. ^ Dennis Morrison (Mar 31, 2023). "A HIGH WIND IN JAMAICA - NBC UNIVERSITY RADIO THEATER!!!!!". YouTube.
  89. ^ "Radio and Television: Radio Program Notes". New York Herald Tribune. October 23, 1950. p. 27. ProQuest 1327426254. Crime Fighters: 'Headquarters Homicide,' WOR, 8:30
    Murder by Experts: 'A Hard Bargain,' WOR, 9
    Jussi Bjoerling, tenor, sings with Don Voorhees' orchestra, WNBC, 9
  90. ^ "On the Radio: Afternoon". The New York Times. May 6, 1950. p. 15. ProQuest 112031238. 12:00-WNBC–News Reports; WOR–Man on the Farm; WJZ–101 Ranch Boys–Western Variety; WCBS–Theatre of Today: A Wonderful Guy, with Vinton Hayworth and Joan Alexander
  91. ^ a b c "Jane Speed, U.S.A., Author's List". Ameqlist.com.
  92. ^ "FORGOTTEN BOOKS #544: ELLERY QUEEN’S GRAND SLAM: 25TH ANNUAL MYSTERY ANTHOLOGY Edited by Ellery Queen". GeorgeKelley.org. Retrieved May 8, 2023.
  93. ^ "Alt for Damerne payment for serial use of 'The Unhappening'; April 1977". Mediafire.
  94. ^ "Kvinner og Klær payment for use of 'A Shock of Recognition'". Mediafire.
  95. ^ Speed, Jane (November 1, 1978). "View from the Inside". The Australian Women's Weekly. pp. 147–159
  96. ^ "Contents". Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. August 1977. p. 3.

Further reading

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Articles

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Books

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Audio

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Video

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Category:1920 births Category:1991 deaths Category:20th-century actresses Category:20th-century American women writers Category:American mystery writers Category:American radio writers Category:American women short story writers Category:Northwestern University alumni Category:Ohio Wesleyan University alumni Category:People from Akron, Ohio Category:Writers from New York City Category:Writers from Ohio