Michael Shayne | |
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Poster for Time to Kill starring Lloyd Nolan as Michael Shayne.
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First appearance | Dividend on Death |
Last appearance | Win Some, Lose Some |
Created by | Brett Halliday |
Portrayed by |
Lloyd Nolan (film) Hugh Beaumont (film) Jeff Chandler (radio) Wally Maher (radio) Richard Denning (television) |
Information | |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | Private detective |
Nationality | American |
Michael Shayne | |
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Denning as Shayne with guest star Pat Crowley.
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Genre | Detective fiction |
Starring |
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Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 32 |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
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Running time | 60 min |
Production company(s) | Four Star Productions |
Distributor | NBC |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Picture format | Black-and-white |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | September 30, 1960 | – May 19, 1961
Michael "Mike" Shayne is a fictional private detective character created during the late 1930s by writer Brett Halliday. The character appeared in a series of seven films starring Lloyd Nolan for Twentieth Century Fox, four films from the low-budget Producers Releasing Corporation with Hugh Beaumont, a radio series under a variety of titles between 1944 and 1953, and later in 1960–1961 in a 32-episode NBC television series starring Richard Denning in the title role.
Shayne debuted in the novel Dividend on Death first published in 1939, written by Halliday, a pseudonym of Davis Dresser. There were fifty Shayne novels published in hardcover, by Dresser (until 1958) and a variety of ghost-writers. Twenty-seven more were written as paperback originals, for a total of 77; 300 short stories, a dozen films, radio programs and television shows, and a few comic book appearances have included the character.
The books were typically well plotted, with Shayne often gathering the suspects at the end and explaining the crime and naming the murderer. Shayne was initially married in the novels, his wife being Phyllis (Brighton) Shayne, who was a somewhat limited character, and was often out of town. Dresser "killed her off" when he sold the movie rights to the series. In the book Blood on the Black Market, the comedy aspect of the earlier novels disappears, and Shayne is forced to deal with his wife's death. Other recurring characters in the stories were reporter Tim Rourke, Policeman Lt. Gentry and Shayne's secretary Lucy Hamilton.
Halliday later created Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine, first introduced in 1956 by Renown Publications under the title Michael Shayne Mystery Magazine. The magazine continued for nearly three decades, always having at least one Shayne novella included in each edition. By this time, "Brett Halliday" was simply a house name. For several years the magazine was edited by Frank Belknap Long.