The parallels to The Lone Ranger continued. The Green Hornet would ride in a sleek modern automobile, the '30s equivalent of "the great horse Silver." Like the Ranger, the Hornet would fight for the law but operate outside it and usually be mistaken by police for one of the criminals. And there would be a faithful sidekick: as the Lone Ranger had his Tonto {brave and stoic, man of a different race, with a simple name of two syllables, ending in o}, Britt Reid's Filipino valet, Kato, would be "the only living man to know him as the Green Hornet." Kato was a master chemist who created the gas guns and smokescreens that became part of the Green Hornet's arsenal. He was an expert in the secrets of Oriental combat, and he was blessed with keen intelligence. A college graduate, he could cook, care for a house, and drive with the skills of a racecar professional. The car too had a name: Black Beauty. It whirred distinctively as Reid and Kato went into action in the abandoned-looking building that was reached "through a secret panel in Britt Reid's bedroom … along a narrow passage built within the wall itself … down narrow, creaking steps that led around a corner" to the structure "on a little-used dead-end side street.
( John Dunning )
[ On the Air: The Encyclopedia ]
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