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Nick Ransom

Created by Robert Leslie Bellem
Pseudonyms include Ellery Watson Calder, Harley L. Court, Walt Bruce, John Grange, Nelson Kent, Kenneth A. Nelson, Jerome Severs Perry & Harcourt Weems
(1902-1968)

What kind of P.I. gets knocked unconscious by a man with no legs and only one arm?

Hollywood stuntman turned private eye NICK RANSOM, that’s who!

Nick was one of Robert Leslie Bellem’s “other” eyes, although his official occupation, at least initially, wasn’t private detective at all. Nope, he was the owner and proprietor of Risks, Incorporated, an agency employing several daredevils and action junkies who contracted out for various jobs, from stunt work to furnishing “thrill footage” for various Hollywood studios.

Sure, he initially sported a rather cissyish plastic cigarette holder with silver filigree that a client once gave him, but Ransom (sometimes spelled “Ransome”) was no wimp–he also carried a roscoe under his arm (you never know when there’ll be a need for ka-chowing), and knew how to use it, even if he claimed he only used it on occasion to “impress potential clients.” And of course, he could always count on a little help from his two-fisted buddy, Ole Brunvig, of the LAPD homicide squad who just happens to be one mean cop.

Of course, Bellem is best known for Dan Turner, he of the sneezing roscoe. The Ransom stories might have been arguably more subdued (they would almost have to be) than the Turner stories, although they were plenty action-packed, and some of that ol’ Turner patter often pops up. With over 3000 pulp stories to his credit, it’s no surprise Bellem created a few non-Turner P.I.s. Others included Cliff Downey and Duke Pizzatello.

THE PLAY’S THE THING

Ransom had one thing that Dan Turner, as far as I know, never had: an off-Broadway adaptation. Ransom may have only appeared in a dozen or so short stories, mostly in Thrilling Detective magazine, but he resurfaced over fifty years later in a dramatic production by New York’s Old School Theatre, an Off-Off Broadway dramatic company, adapted from one of Bellem’s short stories, and starring Matt Wagner (pictured) as Nick. And they weren’t shy about tooting the production’s literary roots. Their blurb read:

“Pulp Theatre! From the pages of a 1949 ‘pulp’ detective magazine to the stage, set to live jazz music: meet Nick Ransom, handsome former Hollywood stuntman turned Private Detective, as he tries to solve a murder mystery chock full of guns, gams, bullets, bodies, scotch, scandal, naked truth (and naked women).”

EVIDENCE

UNDER OATH

SHORT STORIES

THE PLAY’S THE THING

Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith and Dale Stoyer.

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