Journey into Space: The Red Planet

Journey into Space: The Red Planet

The BBC Radio Sci-Fi Drama

Summary

The complete second series of this classic BBC Radio sci-fi drama epic.

Charles Chilton's classic radio sci-fi series Journey into Space thrilled listeners between 1953 and 1958, attracting almost eight million people to its gripping tale of the far future and the thrills of interstellar travel - the last radio programme in the UK to attract a bigger evening audience than television.

This, the second series, opens with Jet and the crew on board the flagship Discovery, leading a fleet of spaceships. Their mission: to explore Mars, the mysterious and - as they believe - uninhabited red planet...

Production Credits
Written and produced by Charles Chilton.
Music composed and orchestra conducted by Van Phillips.

Cast
Jet Morgan - Andrew Faulds
Lemmy Barnett - David Kossoff
Doc - Guy Kingsley-Poynter
Mitch - Bruce Beeby
Other parts by David Jacobs, Anthony Marriot and Madi Hedd.

First broadcast BBC Light Programme, 12 September 1954 - 17 January 1955.

©2006 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd (P)2006 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd

About the author

Charles Chilton

Charles Chilton was born in London in 1917. He was raised by his grandmother after his father was killed in the First World War and his mother died in the 1918 flu epidemic. He started work aged fourteen, for a company that made electrical signs, but left in 1932 and got a job in the BBC record library. From here, he worked his way up to becoming a full-time producer. After a few years presenting music programmes, Chilton joined the RAF when World War Two broke out, and was sent to Sri Lanka to run the forces' radio station. On his return, he produced some of Alistair Cooke's first broadcasts from America. Chilton himself then spent some time in the United States, writing and producing several series of American Western history. The most successful was Riders of the Range, which was first broadcast on the BBC Light Programme in 1949 and ran for six series. It was replaced by the show that would bring Chilton international recognition: Journey Into Space. The serial was commissioned by Head of Variety Michael Channing, and was initially planned to be twelve episodes. It ran for three series, was translated into 17 languages and attracted huge audiences: at one point, almost 8 million people were tuning in. Chilton was to go on to produce many more hit shows, including The Goon Show and Oh! What a Lovely War, which was adapted first as a stage musical and later as a film directed by Richard Attenborough. In 1976, Charles Chilton was presented with an MBE, and the following year he retired from the BBC. He died in 2013.
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