A perhaps justly forgotten television show was Charlie Wild, Private Detective, which ran on three of the four major networks un the early 1950s. We can thank the Red Scare of the 1950s for the existence of this program. The Adventures of Sam Spade, starring Howard Duff, was an extremely popular radio show, but Dashiell Hammett, the creator of Sam Spade, was a Communist, and Duff himjself, though not a Communist, had some leftist leanings. The show's sposor, Wildroot Crram Oil, oanicjed and immediately cancelled the show, replacing it the very next week with Charlie Wild, Private Eye; Wild was a tough New Yotk City private detective. This program ran on NBC Radio for 13 episodes (September 24-December 17, 1950) before moving over to CBS Radio, retitled Charlie Wild, Private Detective, and replacing star George Petrie with Kevin Morrison (later Kevin O'Morrison and John MacQuade) for a further 26 episodes (January 7-July 1, 1951). On December 22, 1950, the show also appeared omn CBS Television, running for seven episode with Kevin Morrison as Wild, before Morrison was replaced with John McQuade fpr a final 14 episodes, ending on June 27, 1951. The program moved to ABC on September 11, 1951, and stayed there for 19 episodes, until February 26, 1952. The final move of the short-lived show took it to the Dumont Network, from March 13-July 3, 1952. The television program was also known as The Affairs of Charlie Wild and Charlie Wild, Private Eye. The show was known to recycle plots from the radio series, and some of the CBS programs were simulcasts of the radio show. Charlie Wild's secretary was named Effie Perrine, the same name of Sam Spade's secretary -- if she were the same character, she moved from California to New Yorrk in the space of a week. Confused yet?
Charlie Wild, like Spade, "chased beautiful dames, hated chiselerss, and got involved in a slugfest every episode." The show was apparently known for its trite, worn plots and stilted dialog.
In "The Case of the Double Trouble," Charlie is given $500 to guard a valuable parchment. The shnow features Philip Truex as identical twins Terrence and Thomas Tillinghast (the "Double Trouble" of the title). Also featured in the cast are John Shellie, Phillipa Bevins, and and Yale Wexler. This is one of the very episodes not to feture Chloris Leachman as Effie Perine.
The episode was written by Palmer Thompson, who had a career in episodic television from 1952 to 1969, including five episodes of Charlie Wild, Private Detective and 43 episode of Lamp Unto My Feet. The episode was one of only two directed by Charles Adams, who has no further directorial credits on IMDb. Herbert Brodkin began his producing career with eight episodes of Charlie wildm Private Detective; he went on to produce 18 eoisodes of The Doctors and the Nurses, 71 eoisodes ofThe Defenders, and a nunber of television movies.
Decide for yourself whether Charlie Wild was fit to fill Sam Spade's shoes:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=49RdvH0PFAw&t=8s