Box 13 1948 Xx Xx (004) Actor's Alibi
# Box 13: "Actor's Alibi"
Picture this: a dimly lit dressing room backstage at a Broadway theater, where the smell of greasepaint mingles with cigarette smoke and desperation. Our hero DanHolliday receives an urgent summons to Box 13—that mysterious mailbox where desperate people deposit their unsolvable problems—only to find himself entangled in the murder of a theater mogul. The prime suspect? A matinee idol with a reputation as tarnished as his dressing room mirror is smeared. As Holliday peels back the layers of theatrical deception, lies compound upon lies, and the real killer remains hidden behind the brightest spotlight. With danger lurking in every shadow and time running out before the curtain falls on innocence, this episode crackles with the tension of a live performance where one wrong move means curtains—permanently.
*Box 13*, which aired from 1948 to 1949, captured audiences with its innovative premise: mysteries literally dropped into the lap of protagonist Dan Holliday, a newspaper reporter with an insatiable hunger for truth. Starring the versatile Alan Ladd, the show represented a golden age of syndicated radio drama, when independent producers could compete with network giants. This particular episode exemplifies what made the series special—tight plotting, crackling dialogue, and a protagonist who solved crimes through wit rather than brute force, all wrapped in the glamour and intrigue of post-war America's entertainment world.
If you're ready to step back into a time when entertainment meant gathering around the radio, when mysteries unfolded in real-time through nothing but voices and sound effects, settle in for "Actor's Alibi." It's a masterclass in dramatic storytelling from an era when radio was king, and every episode delivered genuine thrills.