Bimb 50 05 05 (033) The Thelma Harper Murder Case
# The Thelma Harper Murder Case
Picture this: it's a rain-slicked Manhattan night, and Detective Danny Halloran of the Broadway Squad is standing over the body of Thelma Harper, a nightclub hostess with secrets darker than the alley where she was found. As our hard-boiled detective works the crime scene, threading his way through the neon-lit underworld of Times Square, listeners are drawn into a labyrinth of false leads, duplicitous witnesses, and the kind of moral ambiguity that defined the post-war crime drama. With each interrogation room scene and each tense street-corner confrontation, the tension mounts—who among the parade of suspects had motive, means, and opportunity? The crisp dialogue snaps like a whip, the sound effects place you firmly on those dangerous Broadway streets, and the orchestra's jazzy undertones pulse with the very heartbeat of a city that never sleeps.
*Broadway Is My Beat* arrived in 1949 at precisely the right moment, when America was grappling with returning soldiers, urban corruption, and the seductive darkness of the postwar city. Built on authentic police procedures and the real sensibilities of New York's detective bureaus, the show struck a chord with millions of listeners who craved sophisticated, hard-edged drama in their living rooms. This episode exemplifies the series' hallmark: the combination of procedural authenticity with genuine human drama, where every suspect has a story and guilt is rarely simple.
Tune in to hear how Detective Halloran navigates the twisted trail of evidence and deception in "The Thelma Harper Murder Case"—a classic example of radio drama at its most compelling, where the city itself becomes a character and justice hangs in the balance.