The man who made the discovery is the prolific pop culture chronicler Martin Grams, Jr., whose many books include The ‘Alfred Hitchcock Presents’ Companion, The Shadow: The History and Mystery of the Radio Program 1930-1954, and The Radio Adventures of Sam Spade, to name just a few. Unlike most people who research what is generally referred to as “old-time radio” or OTR, Martin moves mountains to get to primary sources. (Network radio programs were generally produced by advertising agencies, not the networks themselves. Some of these companies still exist, although not all of them welcome inquiries from historians.)
Combine his detective skills with a bit of luck and you have the makings of an intriguing footnote to King Kong history. I will quote from Martin’s blog post: ” Until recently, the radio serial, produced from March 18 to April 22, was considered ‘lost.’ Among the Holy Grail’s of vintage radio broadcasts, no recordings were known to exist, produced from air checks.
An LP record, produced many years later, has often been distributed over the Internet and mistakenly labeled as a chapter from the 1933 radio serial. To date, recordings of the 1933 broadcasts still do not exist. Few would not even know of its existence if it was not for a brief mention in the RKO press book for King Kong, and a number of newspaper listings. A collector residing in Virginia, however, who buys and sells radio scripts on eBay, apparently had in his possession originals of all 15 radio scripts – safely protected in a cardboard box –this discovery a historic find indeed.
“The adaptation was handled by William S. Rainey, who was hired to adapt the screenplay and/or novelization into 16 chapters, each running 15 minutes in length. For the most part, Rainey remained faithful to the material. Rainey also doubled as the narrator for the opening and closing of every radio broadcast, and on occasion supplied voices of natives, sailors and spectators when action called for it. It was not uncommon during the thirties for radio actors, writers, directors and sound men to double for roles before the days of unions and guilds. Alois Havrilla, the director of the serial, was an accomplished radio announcer in his own right and it appears he also doubled for roles of natives, sailors and spectators.”
To hear an extended 7-minute radio commercial for the 1933 RKO Radio Picture, visit this YouTube post: King Kong Radio Advertisement.
And who knows? Perhaps some day someone will stumble onto a cache of transcription discs, just as treasure hunters continue to find rare prints and negatives of long-lost movies.