Boston Blackie


Boston Blackie is a fictional character created by author Jack Boyle. Blackie was originally depicted as a jewel thief and safecracker in Boyle's stories, and became a private detective in adaptations for films, radio and television where he was described as an "enemy to those who make him an enemy, friend to those who have no friend."
Actor Chester Morris played the character in 14 Columbia Pictures films and in a 1944 NBC radio series.

Jack Boyle

Writer Jack Boyle was born in Oakland, California, and grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. While working as a newspaper editor in San Francisco, he became an opium addict and was drawn into crime to support his habit. He was sent to San Quentin for writing bad checks. Later convicted of robbery in Denver, Colorado, Boyle was serving time at the Colorado State Penitentiary when he created the character of Boston Blackie.

Books

The first four stories appeared in The American Magazine in 1914, with Boyle writing under the pen name "No. 6606". From 1917 to 1919, Boston Blackie stories appeared in The Red Book magazine, and from 1918 they were adapted for motion pictures.
When Boston Blackie began to find success on the screen, Boyle edited the Red Book magazine stories into a book, Boston Blackie. He revised and rearranged the order of the stories to create a cohesive narrative—a common practice at the time known in publishing as a fixup. This was the only appearance of Boston Blackie in book form, but his adventures continued to appear in periodicals.

Short stories

YearTitlePublisherPublication dateNotes
1914""'July 1914As No. 6606
1914""'August 1914As No. 6606
1914"Death Cell Visions"'September 1914As No. 6606
1914""'October 1914As No. 6606
1917"Boston Blackie's Mary"'November 1917
1917""'December 1917
1918"Fred the Count"'January 1918
1918"Miss Doris, Safe-Cracker"'May 1918
1918"Boston Blackie's Little Pal"'June 1918
1918"Alibi Ann"'July 1918
1918"Miss Doris's 'Raffles'"'August 1918
1918""'October 1918
1918""'December 1918
1919""'January 1919
1919""April 1919
1919""CosmopolitanJune 1919
1919"Alias Prince Charming"CosmopolitanJuly 1919
1919"Black Dan"CosmopolitanOctober 1919
1919""CosmopolitanNovember 1919
1920"Grandad's Girl"CosmopolitanMarch 1920
1920""CosmopolitanMay 1920
1920""CosmopolitanOctober 1920
1920"Boomerang Bill"CosmopolitanDecember 1920

Films

The earliest Boston Blackie film adaptations were silent, dating from 1918 to 1927. Columbia Pictures revived the property in 1941 with Meet Boston Blackie, a fast, 58-minute B movie starring Chester Morris. Although the running time was brief, Columbia gave the picture good production values and an imaginative director, Robert Florey. The film was successful, and a series followed.
In the Columbia features, Boston Blackie is a reformed jewel thief who is always suspected when a daring crime is committed. In order to clear himself, he investigates personally and brings the actual culprit to justice, sometimes using disguises. An undercurrent of comedy runs throughout the action/detective series.
In one of these films, After Midnight with Boston Blackie, the character's real name was revealed to be Horatio Black.
Morris gave the Blackie character his own personal charm: he could be light and flippant or stern and dangerous, as the situation demanded. His sidekick, the Runt, was always on hand to help his old friend. George E. Stone played Runt in all but the first and last films. Charles Wagenheim and Sid Tomack, respectively, substituted for Stone when he was not available.
Blackie's friendly adversaries were Inspector Farraday of the police and his assistant, Sergeant Matthews. Matthews was originally played as a hapless victim of circumstance by Walter Sande; he was replaced by Lyle Latell, who played it dumber, and then by comedian Frank Sully, who played it even dumber.
Blackie and Runt were often assisted in their endeavors by their friends: the cheerful but easily flustered millionaire Arthur Manleder, and the streetwise pawnbroker Jumbo Madigan. A variety of actresses including Rochelle Hudson, Harriet Hilliard, Adele Mara and Ann Savage took turns playing various gal Friday characters.
The films are highly typical of Columbia's B movies of the 1940s, with an assortment of veteran character actors, new faces on the way up and stock-company players familiar from Columbia's features, serials, and short subjects. The series was also a useful training ground for promising directors, including Edward Dmytryk, Oscar Boetticher, William Castle, and finally Seymour Friedman, who went on to work prolifically in Columbia's television department. The Boston Blackie series ran until 1949.

Filmography

YearTitleActorNotes
1918Boston Blackie's Little PalAdapted from "Boston Blackie's Little Pal"
1919'
1919'Adapted from "Miss Doris, Safe-Cracker"
1919Blackie's RedemptionAdapted from "Boston Blackie's Mary" and "Fred the Count"
1922Boomerang BillAdapted from "Boomerang Bill"
1922Missing MillionsAdapted from "A Problem in Grand Larceny" and "An Answer in Grand Larceny"
1922'
1923Boston BlackieAdapted from "The Water-Cross"
1923Crooked AlleyAdapted from Boyle's original story, "The Daughter of Crooked Alley"
1924Through the DarkAdapted from "The Daughter of Mother McGinn"
1927'
1941Meet Boston Blackie
1941Confessions of Boston Blackie
1942Alias Boston Blackie
1942Boston Blackie Goes Hollywood
1943After Midnight with Boston Blackie
1943'
1944One Mysterious Night
1945Boston Blackie Booked on Suspicion
1945Boston Blackie's Rendezvous
1946'
1946
1946Boston Blackie and the Law
1948Trapped by Boston Blackie
1949Boston Blackie's Chinese Venture

Radio

Concurrent with the Columbia Pictures films, a Boston Blackie radio series—also starring Chester Morris—aired on NBC June 23 – September 15, 1944, as a summer replacement for Amos 'n' Andy. Richard Lane played Inspector Farraday. Harlow Wilcox was the announcer for the 30-minute program.
A new incarnation of the Boston Blackie radio series aired April 11, 1945 – October 25, 1950, starring Richard Kollmar. Maurice Tarplin played Inspector Farraday; Jan Miner was Mary. More than 200 half-hour episodes were transcribed and syndicated by Frederick Ziv to Mutual and other network outlets.

Television

Kent Taylor starred in the Ziv-produced half-hour TV series Boston Blackie. Syndicated in September 1951, it ran for 58 episodes, lasting until 1953, continuing in repeats over the following decade. Lois Collier appeared as Mary Wesley and Frank Orth was Inspector Farraday. The series was set in Los Angeles; Mary and Blackie had a dog named Whitie, and comedy sometimes took precedence over crime.
Television historian Tim Brooks in The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946–Present described Boston Blackie as "a memorable B-grade television series … The term 'B' is used in all the best senses: a certain vitality and sense of humor substituted more than adequately for the normal criteria of expensive production and famous stars."

Graphic novels

Scripter Stefan Petrucha and artist Kirk Van Wormer created the graphic novel Boston Blackie with a cover by Tim Seelig. A jewel heist at a costume ball goes horribly wrong, and the five-year-old son of the wealthy Greene family disappears and is presumed dead; the body is never found. The main suspect is Boston Blackie, who is still haunted seven years later by what happened that night. Drawn back into the case, he finds that the truth of what happened that night is awash in a watery grave. A sequel to the graphic novel was published years later.

In popular culture

  • In the 1955 film Tight Spot, Ginger Rogers exclaims "Well, aren't we the real life-size Boston Blackies."
  • In a 1957 song "Searchin" by The Coasters, there is a reference to "Sergeant Friday, Charlie Chan and Boston Blackie."
  • A 1957 Daffy Duck cartoon, Boston Quackie, is a direct parody of the television serial, with Daffy as the detective – who needs everyone else's help to solve his case.
  • Jimmy Buffett's song "Pencil Thin Mustache" references Boston Blackie, as do some versions of "The Wabash Cannonball".
  • Boston Blackie's Restaurant was a bar and grill with locations in Chicago and Deerfield, Illinois.
  • In a 1967 episode of Bewitched, "Boston Blackie" is mentioned in fond remembrance by Aunt Clara, who confuses him as attending the First Thanksgiving with famous Pilgrims.
  • In Errol Morris' 1988 documentary The Thin Blue Line, interviewee Emily Miller cites Boston Blackie as an inspiration for wanting to become a "detective, or the wife of a detective." The film's score by Philip Glass also has a cue titled "Boston Blackie."
  • In Chuck E. Weiss's 2014 release, Red Beans and Weiss, track 3 is entitled "Boston Blackie" and comprises four verses, sandwiching three repetitions of the chorus; the chorus lyrics include "I'm just like Boston Blackie, yes I am", and, derived from the original stories, "Friends to those who have no friends".
  • In a 2007 television episode of Mad Men, when talking about John F. Kennedy as a potential opponent for 1960 presidential candidate Richard M. Nixon, character Bert Cooper says, "It's going to be Kennedy. 'Boston Blackie' won West Virginia."
  • In chapter 7 of the 2007 novel Now and Then by Robert B. Parker, Hawk refers to Spenser as 'Boston Blackie' after Spenser directs him to "Follow that car."