Arthur was born on November 10, 1909, in Fort Mills, Corregidor Island in the Philippines while his father, Robert Arthur Sr., was stationed there as a lieutenant in the United States Army. Arthur spent his childhood moving from place to place, wherever his father was stationed.[8]
Additionally, Arthur wrote a number of mystery novels for children and young adults. His most successful stories were a series of mystery books called The Three Investigators.
In 1959, he moved to Hollywood and began writing and editing screenplays and scripts for television shows.[11]
Radio
Arthur, along with his writing partner David Kogan, was honored three times by the Mystery Writers of America with Edgar Awards for his radio work: twice for "best radio drama"—in 1950 for Murder by Experts and 1953 for The Mysterious Traveler[12][13]—and once, regarding his work on both of the aforementioned shows, in 1951 for "outstanding achievement in producing, directing and writing radio mystery shows."[6]
Other radio credits include: Dark Destiny (1942), Adventure Into Fear (1945), The Sealed Book (1945), The Teller of Tales (1950) and Mystery Time (1952).
Bibliography
"Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators" novels
Three Investigator novels numbered 10 and 12 to 43 were written by other authors.
Short story collections by Robert Arthur Jr.
Ghosts and More Ghosts (1963)
Mystery and More Mystery (1966)
The Midnight Visitor
Short story collections edited by Robert Arthur Jr.
Alfred Hitchcock Presents Stories for Late at Night (1961)
Alfred Hitchcock's Haunted Houseful (1961)
Alfred Hitchcock's Ghostly Gallery (1962)
Alfred Hitchcock's Solve-Them-Yourself-Mysteries (1963) (All stories written by Robert Arthur with the exception of "The Mystery of the Sinister Theft")
Alfred Hitchcock Presents Stories That My Mother Never Told Me (1963)
Alfred Hitchcock's Monster Museum (1965)
Alfred Hitchcock Presents Stories Not for the Nervous (1965)
Alfred Hitchcock's Sinister Spies (1966)
Alfred Hitchcock Presents Stories That Scared Even Me (1967)
Alfred Hitchcock's Spellbinders in Suspense (1967)
Alfred Hitchcock Presents Stories They Wouldn't Let Me Do On TV (1968)
^Keating, Patrick (July 7, 2010). "'Red Gate Rover, come over, come over.' 'Three Investigators' mystery series finally make it to film". Michigan Chronicle. p. B2. ProQuest741333214. Arthur (Nov. 10, 1909 - May 2, 1969), whose credits include co-creation of the radio program The Mysterious Traveler; and editing or ghost-editing various Alfred Hitchcock short story anthologies, wrote 10 books in the series before his death; including the first Three Investigators book I read, in fourth grade: The Mystery of the Talking Skull.
^Idato, Michael (January 8, 2023). "New flesh on solid mystery bones: Couch life". The Age. p. 16. ProQuest2769958004. Even the title of the opening episode (Dead Man's Hand) feels straight out of junior mystery literature. It could have been a Hardy Boys or Nancy Drew title, or better yet Robert Arthur Jnr's The Three Investigators, which, of the three franchises, was always the one that felt most enmeshed in the American 'burbs.
^Boucher, Anthony (April 23, 1953). "Criminals at Large". The New York Times. p. BR31. ProQuest112741661. At their annual awards banquet last week the Mystery Writers of America bestowed busts of Edgar Allan Poe (known to writers as 'Edgars' and to publishers' cliche experts as 'much-coveted Edgars') upon the authors of the following 1952 books [...] The other Edgars (to 'The Mysterious Traveler' in radio, to 'Dragnet' in TV and to 'Five Fingers' in films) lie outside the scope of this department, but I must observe that in the last eight years of M.W.A. awards, I can't recall a more completely unarguable batch of winning books.
"Air Checks; Production Notes and Personal Intelligence,"Billboard (May 5, 1951), p. 6. "Mystery Writers of America have cited two Mutual network mystery dramas and their producer-directors for 'outstanding achievement.' Shows are 'Murder by Experts' and 'Mysterious Traveler,' both produced and directed by Robert A. Arthur and David Kogan."
^Gianakos, Larry James (1987). Television Drama Series Programming : A Comprehensive Chronicle, 1982-1984. Metuchen, N.J. : Scarecrow Press. p. 604, 608, 612. ISBN0810818760.
^Boucher, Anthony (April 23, 1953). "Criminals at Large". The New York Times. p. BR31. ProQuest112741661. At their annual awards banquet last week the Mystery Writers of America bestowed busts of Edgar Allan Poe (known to writers as ]Edgars' and to publishers' cliche experts as 'much-coveted Edgars') upon the authors of the following 1952 books [...] The other Edgars (to 'The Mysterious Traveler' in radio, to 'Dragnet' in TV and to 'Five Fingers' in films) lie outside the scope of this department, but I must observe that in the last eight years of M.W.A. awards, I can't recall a more completely unarguable batch of winning books.