One of my favorite TV series is a product of the Red Scare of the 1950s, I Led Three Lives, based on the book by Herbert A. Philbrick. The program aired for three seasons from 1953 to 1956 and starred Richard Carlson in the lead as a family man who worked for an advertising agency. After learning that Communist agents had infiltrated the local YMCA, he contacted the FBI. For seven years Philbrick served as a card-carrying member of the Communist Party, secretly leaking information to the Feds. He somehow balanced a family life, his nine-to-five job, and volunteering for projects with the Communist Party. Hence, he led three lives. The series is truly phenomenal and a byproduct of the 1950s which is truly dated and probably the reason why it has not aired on network television over the past few decades. A number of episodes have fallen into the public domain, suggesting the series is falling into orphaned stage.
The story gets a tad more amusing, however. Prior to the television program, from 1952 to 1954, Frederick Ziv produced a radio program titled I Was a Communist for the FBI, based on a Saturday Evening Post short story by Matt Cvetic. The radio program is equally as entertaining as the later TV series. But after two years, Cvetic turned out to be a nut case and was demanding his millions in royalties. There were royalties and Ziv was honest, but there was no millions. It was also at this time that ZIV was making the transition to television. Rather than revisit a new contract with Cvetic, Ziv contacted Herbert A. Philbrick to license the television rights from his novel, I Led Three Lives.
The television program was tremendously successful and turned out to be lucrative for star Richard Carlson. Ironic when you consider had Cvetic not been over-demanding, riches were just around the corner.
About a decade ago I wrote a book documenting the history of the television program and was pleased with the way it turned out. But like all authors, after the book was published I came into possession of a number of photographs that, today, I wish I had at the time the book went to press. Here are those photos.

















