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The Shadow's best known alter ego is Lamont Cranston, a "wealthy young man-about-town". In the pulps, Cranston is a separate character, a rich playboy who travels the world while The Shadow uses his identity and resources in New York ( The Shadow Laughs , 1931).
The Lamont Cranston Band is an American blues band based in Hamel, Minnesota. [1] It was founded in 1969 by brothers Pat and Larry Hayes and continues today with Pat as the band's frontman. [ 1 ] The band is named after the alter ego of the pulp hero The Shadow .
Columbia copied the triple-role format for The Shadow, with the stalwart Lamont Cranston baffling criminals as The Shadow wearing a similar disguise and moving among them as their Asian confederate Lin Chang. Chapter titles. The serial is split into fifteen episodes. Source: [1] The Doomed City; The Shadow Attacks; The Shadow's Peril; In the ...
Alec Baldwin as Lamont Cranston / The Shadow, [5] a wealthy playboy and former Tibetan drug kingpin who operates as a vigilante. John Lone as Shiwan Khan, the last descendant of Genghis Khan. Penelope Ann Miller as Margo Lane, a socialite who befriends Cranston. Peter Boyle as Moses "Moe" Shrevnitz, a taxi cab driver, allied with the Shadow.
Lamont Cranston Dennis Watkins is an Australian playwright, producer and performer. Watkins used the stage name Lamont Cranston [ 1 ] who was also a character he played in some of his productions.
Lamont Cranston/ The Shadow Margo Lane Announcer 1: 26 8 18 1937–1938: Orson Welles: Agnes Moorehead: Ken Roberts: 1B: 26 0 26 1938: Margot Stevenson: 2: 26 1 25 1938–1939: William Johnstone: Agnes Moorehead: 3: 29 5 1 incomplete 23 1 incomplete 1939–1940: Marjorie Anderson: 4: 30 1 29 1940–1941: Jeanette Nolan: 5: 26 9 1 incomplete 16 ...
Margo is a friend and companion to Lamont Cranston, and an agent for his alter ego, The Shadow, in the wealthy set. Her first appearance was in 1937 in The Shadow radio drama. Her first appearance in a print story was in The Thunder King, a story in the June 15, 1941, issue of The Shadow Magazine.
The New York Times called The Shadow Returns "the first of three above-average Monogram features" but that the character Margo Lane, an intelligent and resourceful character on the radio series, was portrayed as a "blithering idiot" and that Margo came off "far stupider than the film's official comedy relief, Cranston's chauffeur Shrevvie".