LizzieMaine
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Halloween's just around the corner, so why not share a few thoughts on your favorite scary radio moments?
There's a couple of thriller-type episodes that really stand out of me. The first is "The Hitch-Hiker," a "Suspense" program first heard in 1942, with Orson Welles as a man on a cross-country drive being driven insane by a mysterious apparation that keeps popping up at the side of the road. Now, to be honest, I have very mixed feelings about Welles -- I think in a lot of his radio work he tends to over-emote, acting as if every role he plays is King Lear. He rarely disappears into a character to the point where you forget it's *Orson Welles, AC-TOR* playing the part. But in this story he's quite restrained and quite convincing as an ordinary man in extraordinary circumstances.
My second favorite is a very creepy 1947 episode of "Escape," entitled "Evening Primrose." An adaptation of a John Collier short story, it revolves around a disaffected poet who decides to drop out of an oppressive society by moving into a department store -- sleeping in a hidden lair during the day and roaming the store at night to find inspiration for his writing. Unfortunately for him, there are others in the store who beat him to the idea. I really like the moody atmosphere in this one -- maybe because one of my "someday they'll all be sorry" embittered childhood fantasies was to do exactly what the fellow in the story does...
I heard both these programs in reruns over a Boston radio station back in the mid-70s, when I was just discovering radio drama -- and they've stuck with me ever since.
How about some others? What are your favorite spine-tinglers -- and *why* are they your favorites?
There's a couple of thriller-type episodes that really stand out of me. The first is "The Hitch-Hiker," a "Suspense" program first heard in 1942, with Orson Welles as a man on a cross-country drive being driven insane by a mysterious apparation that keeps popping up at the side of the road. Now, to be honest, I have very mixed feelings about Welles -- I think in a lot of his radio work he tends to over-emote, acting as if every role he plays is King Lear. He rarely disappears into a character to the point where you forget it's *Orson Welles, AC-TOR* playing the part. But in this story he's quite restrained and quite convincing as an ordinary man in extraordinary circumstances.
My second favorite is a very creepy 1947 episode of "Escape," entitled "Evening Primrose." An adaptation of a John Collier short story, it revolves around a disaffected poet who decides to drop out of an oppressive society by moving into a department store -- sleeping in a hidden lair during the day and roaming the store at night to find inspiration for his writing. Unfortunately for him, there are others in the store who beat him to the idea. I really like the moody atmosphere in this one -- maybe because one of my "someday they'll all be sorry" embittered childhood fantasies was to do exactly what the fellow in the story does...
I heard both these programs in reruns over a Boston radio station back in the mid-70s, when I was just discovering radio drama -- and they've stuck with me ever since.
How about some others? What are your favorite spine-tinglers -- and *why* are they your favorites?