June 1, 1952 (1952-06-01) – January 1, 1955 (1955-01-01)
China Smith is a 30-minute American syndicated television adventure series starring Dan Duryea. It is set in Singapore.[1] It was released in the fall of 1952. The program's alternate title was The Affairs of China Smith, and the last 26 episodes were syndicated with the title The New Adventures of China Smith.[2]
Premise
The title character was a soldier of fortune,[3] "an opportunistic con artist and sometimes private eye" who sought adventure.[2] Episodes had Smith confronting characters who ranged from Communists to "bigger crooks than he was."[3] He often helped people who were innocent but somehow were entangled with villains.[4] The other regular characters were a madam who helped Smith and a chief of police who sometimes helped and sometimes interfered.[3]
Much of the cast and crew also worked on the film World for Ransom, which is considered an extension of the television program.
Production
Bernard Tabakin was the producer.[6] Arthur Person was the director,[7] with Robert Aldrich directing two episodes.[3] Robert C. Dennis was the writer.[8]
The series was made with a two-year gap; the first 26 episodes being filmed in Mexico in 1952, the second 26 episodes were shot in 1954-1955[2] in San Francisco and Los Angeles. The change occurred after the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) complained that the productions in Mexico deprived AFTRA members of work.[6] Divisions of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) and the American Federation of Labor (AFL) also protested the Mexican filming. Roy Brewer, who was chair of the AFL's Hollywood Film Council and representative of the West Coast IATSE, complained to Thrifty Drug Stores, which sponsored the show on KECA-TV, resulting in the company's withdrawal of the six Mexican-filmed episodes from the station.[9] Tabakin was removed from the council's "'unfair' list" after he agreed to limit production of TV shows to the United States.[10]
Production of the show was stopped in April 1954 by the Screen Actors Guild's (SAG) cancellation of the contract that it had with producer Tableau Television, Limited (TT). SAG charged that TT had not met the contract's requirements for royalty payments to actors.[11]
China Smith was financed and distributed by Proktor Syndication International[8] (PSI-TV).[12]
Episode list
No. overall
Title
Directed by
Written by
Original air date
1
"The Bamboo Coffin"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
()
2
"Celestial Pebbles"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
()
3
"The Corpse With The Purple Ear"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
()
4
"Cruise To Colombo"
Arthur Pierson
Story by : Lindsay Hardy Teleplay by : Robert C. Dennis
()
5
"Curse Of The River Gods"
TBD
TBD
()
6
"Devil-In-The-Godown"
Edward Mann
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
7
"Dynasty Of The Dead"
TBD
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
8
"Espionage Express"
TBD
TBD
()
9
"High Sea"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
()
10
"The Jade Trap"
TBD
TBD
()
11
"Jungle Dragon"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
()
12
"The Kaprielian Cipher"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
()
13
"Killer In The Kampong"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
()
14
"Kris Of Death"
Edward Mann
Robert C. Dennis
()
15
"Moon Flower"
TBD
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
16
"My Ship Has A Golden Keel"
TBD
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
17
"Pagoda In The Jungle"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
18
"The Phantom Sampan"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
()
19
"Port Of Thieves"
TBD
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
20
"Shanghai Clipper"
Robert Aldrich
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
21
"Straight Settlement"
Robert Aldrich
Story by : Robert C. Dennis Teleplay by : Lindsay Hardy
()
22
"The Tanaka Archive"
TBD
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
23
"The Wondrous Funeral Of Sergeant Ko"
TBD
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
24
"Wreath Of Poppies"
TBD
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
25
"The Year Of The Phoenix"
Arthur Pierson
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
26
"Zorana The Destroyer"
TBD
Robert C. Dennis
1952 (1952)
References
^McNeil, Alex (1996). Total Television: the Comprehensive Guide to Programming from 1948 to the Present (4th ed.). New York, New York: Penguin Books USA, Inc. p. 162. ISBN0-14-02-4916-8.
^Terrace, Vincent (2011). Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2010 (2nd ed.). Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 19. ISBN978-0-7864-6477-7.
^"film report"(PDF). Broadcasting. July 28, 1952. p. 79. Retrieved February 5, 2022.
^ abErickson, Hal (1989). Syndicated Television: The First Forty Years, 1947-1987'. McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 19–20. ISBN0-7864-1198-8.
^"film report"(PDF). Broadcasting. April 28, 1952. p. 76. Retrieved February 5, 2022.