Mr. ChameleonMr. Chameleon is a detective fiction radio drama created by Frank Hummert and produced by Frank and Anne Hummert.[1] It ran on CBS Radio from July 14, 1948,[2] to 1951[3] or 1953.[1] The series starred Karl Swenson as a New York police detective who is a master of disguise, and who assumes a new identity in each episode in order to catch a criminal.[1] The listening audience is always aware of who Mr. Chameleon is, no matter in which disguise he appears.[1] According to the series' opening voice-over, "Chameleon" is not a nickname or pseudonym but the character's actual surname, one which he has tried to live up to since childhood.[4] His motto is, "The innocent must be protected and the guilty must be punished."[5] The theme song is John Jacob Loeb and Paul Francis Webster's "Masquerade".[1] In addition to Swenson, Frank Butler was heard in the role of Dave Arnold[6] (a sergeant who was Mr. Chameleon's assistant[7]), and Richard Keith portrayed the police commissioner. The announcers were George Bryan, Howard Claney, and Roger Knapp. The program was directed by Richard Leonard and written by Marie Baumer.[1] Victor Arden's orchestra provided music.[6] Broadcast initially on Wednesdays at 8 p.m. Eastern Time, Mr. Chameleon replaced The American Melody Hour. Sponsors of the program included Sterling Drug[2] and Bayer aspirin.[1] The July 26, 1950, episode was "The Mystery Room Murder Case".[8] Critical responseA review of the premiere episode in the trade publication Variety said that the cast "turns in graphic characterizations" and rated the quality of production as "Grade A throughout".[9] The review said that the show had the ingredients to make it successful.[9] A review in the trade publication Billboard during the fourth year of Mr. Chameleon described it as "actually nothing but a night time soap opera in the camouflage of a weekly mystery series."[10] It said that in the specific episode being reviewed, "Script, performance and production were all ridiculously melodramatic and devoid of any real character or animation."[10] The reviewer also wrote that the title character used too many cliches, had too much self confidence, and was a "stuffy individual".[10] References
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