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Happy Birthday, Wilms Herbert!

The actor born Victor Herbert Erpelding on this date in Chicago, Illinois in 1908 put his hobby of collecting rare, tropical birds to good use in his brief but prolific radio career. Wilms Herbert soon learned to mimic the sounds emanating from the occupants of his blossoming aviary, and in studying his fine-feathered friends while visiting zoos he added other animal “impressions” to his repertoire. “When a radio producer in Chicago needs a mad cockatoo, a pink elephant, an overworked and complaining horse, or an alligator noise,” noted Radio Life in December 1946, “his automatic choice for an authentic portrayal is Wilms Herbert.” Wilms could facetiously be called “the Mel Blanc of the daytime drama set”; for example, on the radio soap Tena and Tim, he not only played “Mr. Hutchinson” but gave voice to two parrots, “Mavoureen” and “Henry VIII.” (I’ll wager that Herbert didn’t get as many laughs as Mel, however.)

Wilms Herbert was a late bloomer when it came to radio acting. It’s not that he was a stranger to performing; Wilms developed a love for the craft while attending Lake View High School in his youth, with summers devoted to Chautauqua and Toby shows. In addition to honing his acting skills, Herbert perfected his singing and dancing. Wanderlust took Wilms to Hollywood in the 1930s, where he ran a dance studio and sang with both the Los Angeles Opera Company and the Civic Light Opera Company. For a time, Herbert wrote dance reviews for The Los Angeles Daily News.

Wilms Herbert eventually returned to Chicago (with a brief stopover in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he was a stage director for Milwaukee Opera) and worked in stage and opera productions. In 1942, he landed the part of “Keith Armour” on the “washboard weepie” Lonely Women, a role he would later reprise on Today’s Children. Wilms could also be heard on The Guiding Light (as Ted White and later Keith), Judy and Jane (as Jerry), and Ma Perkins (as Mr. Garrett). During his broadcasting days in the Windy City, Herbert narrated Tales of the Foreign Service, an offshoot of NBC’s University of the Air. Other Chicago-based series on which Wilms worked include Author’s PlayhouseThe Crime Files of FlammondFirst LineFreedom of OpportunityGrand HotelHymns of All ChurchesLights OutSmilin’ Ed’s Buster Brown GangThose WebstersWe Came This Way, and World’s Great Novels/World’s Greatest Novels.

Wilms Herbert would make a triumphant return to Tinsel Town in September of 1946 when he followed Today’s Children, which relocated its production to Hollywood. If Wilms thought he was busy in Chicago as a radio performer, he was positively swamped during his stint on the West Coast. Herbert was an early member of Norman Macdonnell’s “stock company,” working with the director-producer on such programs as The Adventures of Philip MarloweRomanceSuspense, and Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar. During the eight-week summer run of Escape in 1948, Wilms joined that elite coterie of hosts (which included William Conrad, Paul Frees, and Lou Krugman) who asked listeners: “Tired of the everyday grind…?”

From July 10 to September 18, 1948, Wilms Herbert played “Anthony J. Lyon,” the wily and parsimonious boss of the titular shamus (Jack Webb) on Jeff Regan, Investigator. Herbert also played numerous roles on that show during the Frank Graham years. Wilms’ best-remembered radio work was on Richard Diamond, Private Detective; he played Sergeant Otis Ludlum, a thick-as-a-plank uniformed cop who clearly had a relative looking out for him at City Hall. The actor doubled as Francis, devoted butler to Diamond’s socialite girlfriend Helen Asher. Francis had an uncanny knack for killing the romantic mood by walking in as Diamond and Helen were getting down to business, if you get what I mean. Richard Diamond, Private Detective constituted Herbert’s final radio performance (he passed away on March 5, 1951 at the age of 42…with his pre-recorded Diamond episode airing four days after) although he could still be heard on the program in the summer of 1953 (which were rebroadcasts from 1950 and 1951).

Before his passing, Wilms Herbert’s radio resume included appearances on The Adventures of Ellery Queen, The Adventures of Frank Race, Dark Venture, Favorite Story, Four Star Playhouse, Hollywood Star Playhouse, The Line Up, The Lux Radio Theatre, The Man Called X, A Man Named Jordan, Mr. President, My Home Town, The New Adventures of Nero Wolfe, Night Beat, Presenting Charles Boyer, Rocky Jordan, Screen Directors’ Playhouse, The Story of Doctor Kildare, Tales of the Texas Rangers, The Whistler, and Your Movietown Radio Theatre.

You want proof that Wilms Herbert was one of the busiest thespians in the aural medium? Let’s start with his signature work on Richard Diamond, Private Detective and the Radio Spirits sets Dead Men and Homicide Made Easy. Next on our audio menu: a fistful of The Adventures of Philip Marlowe collections (The Adventures of Philip Marlowe, Lonely Canyons, Night Tide, Sucker’s Road). Finally, check out our CD compendiums Escape: Peril, Great Radio Detectives, Great Radio Private Eyes, Jeff Regan, Investigator: Stand By For Mystery, The Line Up: Witness, The New Adventures of Nero Wolfe, Night Beat: Human Interest, Stop the Press!, The Story of Doctor Kildare, and Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar: Mysterious Matters.

In our digital downloads store, we’ve got even more collections featuring today’s natal anniversary celebrant—classic broadcasts of Christmas Radio Classics, Escape (Classics, Essentials, High Adventure, The Hunted and the Haunted, Journey Into Fear, To the High Seas), Jeff Regan, Investigator (The Lyon’s Eye), Night Beat (Lost Souls), and Richard Diamond, Private Detective (Mayhem is My Business, Shamus, Surplus Homicides, Trouble). Happy birthday, Wilms!

7 Comments

  1. Rex says:

    Nice history, I enjoy reading about about the radio actors and actresses.
    Thank you.

  2. Ben says:

    I believe he played Otis Loveloom not Ludlum.

  3. Jim Stokes says:

    Really enjoy this actor. I am guessing he might have also been “Eye-Gor,” the imp who laughs and jokes with Richard Rogue on ROGUES GALLERY when he goes unconsciousness from getting hit on the head.

    • A good guess, Jim…but that actor who played “Eugor” was Peter “It’s too piercing” Leeds.

      • Jim Stokes says:

        Thanks, Ivan. What was the reference to “It’s too piercing?” The only reference I have to that phrase would be Stan Frieberg’s satire record where a hippy musician says this. As long as I have you here and hope you are still with us here is: Who played the erudite theatrical sounding drunk in a bar in “Rogue’s Gallery?” I seem to recall that Richard Diamond also came to him for advice on tracing people. I think the drunk was Jocko. “I’m here to find someone.” Jocko: “I’ve been looking for someone all my life.” Hilarious.

        • Jim, it is a reference to the Stan Freberg recording…because the actor who played the “hippy musician” was Peter Leeds. (I use that reference because it’s a force of habit.)

          As to “erudite theatrical sounding drunk” — are you certain you have the right program? Because it sounds as if you’re describing Pat Novak…for Hire, which featured such an inebriate that answered to “Jocko Madigan.” (Jocko was played by actor Tudor Owen.)

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