1
Cloak & Dagger 50-10-22 (ep24) Windfall
28:30
2
Cloak & Dagger 50-10-15 (ep23) Wine of Freedom
29:30
3
Cloak & Dagger 50-10-06 (ep22) Delay on Route
29:30
4
Cloak & Dagger 50-09-29 (ep21) The Last Mission
29:30
5
Cloak & Dagger 50-09-22 (ep20) Operation Sellout
29:30
6
Cloak & Dagger 50-09-15 (ep19) Seeds of Doubt
29:30
7
Cloak & Dagger 50-09-08 (ep18) Over Ground Railroad
29:30
8
Cloak & Dagger 50-09-01 (ep17) War of Words
29:30
9
Cloak & Dagger 50-08-27 (ep16) The Black Radio
29:30
10
Cloak & Dagger 50-08-20 (ep15) Norwegian Incident
29:30
11
Cloak & Dagger 50-08-13 (ep14) The Roof of the World
29:30
12
Cloak & Dagger 50-08-06 (ep13) Recommendation from Rommel
29:30
13
Cloak & Dagger 50-07-30 (ep12) Swastika on the Windmill
29:30
14
Cloak & Dagger 50-07-23 (ep11) The Secret Box
29:30
Cloak & Dagger 50-07-09 (ep09) The Trap
29:30
16
Cloak & Dagger 50-07-02 (ep08) The Eyes of Buddha
29:30
17
Cloak & Dagger 50-06-25 (ep07) Direct Line to Bombers
29:30
18
Cloak & Dagger 50-06-18 (ep06) The Kachin Story
29:30
19
Cloak & Dagger 50-06-11 (ep05) The People in the Forest
28:00
20
Cloak & Dagger 50-06-04 (ep04) The Brenner Pass Story
29:30
21
Cloak & Dagger 50-05-28 (ep03) The Trojan Horse
29:30
22
Cloak & Dagger 50-05-07 (ep01) Frank Bakers Story
29:30

Cloak & Dagger 50-07-09 (ep09) The Trap

7 months ago
37

Cloak and Dagger opened over the NBC network on May 7, 1950. It had a short run through the Summer on Sundays, changing to Fridays after its Summer run. The last show aired October 22, 1950.

The series told fictional stories of OSS agents during World War II who took dangerous missions behind enemy lines, knowing they may never return alive.

The series was based on the 1946 book "Cloak and Dagger: The Secret Story of the OSS" by Corey Ford and Alastair MacBain. It was a tense half hour of patriots and traitors, of triumph, tragedy and failure. The stories did not always end in success -- sometimes, the hero/agent gave up his life. There were 22 episodes, broadcast in 1950.

The theme music was either identical or very similar to that used by Tales of the Texas Rangers.

Sherman Marks directed. The cast consisted of The Hungarian Giant, played by Raymond Edward Johnson, and Impy the Midget, played by Gilbert Mack.

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