Bimb 51 06 09 (066) The Earl Lawson Murder Case
# The Earl Lawson Murder Case
Picture this: a Manhattan penthouse shrouded in shadow, a society man found dead under impossible circumstances, and Detective Danny Halloran prowling the glittering underbelly of Broadway with nothing but his wits and a gut feeling that something doesn't add up. In "The Earl Lawson Murder Case," listeners are plunged into the kind of sophisticated crime drama that made *Broadway Is My Beat* appointment radio for millions of New Yorkers. The victim is a wealthy theater patron, the clues point in a dozen directions at once, and Halloran must navigate a world of chorus girls, producers, and society blackmailers to separate truth from misdirection. The tension crackles through the airwaves as our detective moves from the backstage dressing rooms to exclusive nightclubs, each scene more treacherous than the last.
What made *Broadway Is My Beat* essential listening was its authentic New York grit combined with genuine Broadway atmosphere—this wasn't some generic police procedural. The show captured the real texture of post-war Manhattan: the energy, the corruption, the dreams and desperation that collided nightly under the theater district's bright lights. Debuting in 1949, the program ran for five years on CBS, becoming a favorite for those who loved their crime stories with sophistication and style. Each episode, like this one from the early 1950s, featured snappy dialogue, atmospheric sound design, and the weathered competence of a detective who knew every angle of his beat.
Do yourself a favor and step back into the golden age of radio, when a good mystery and a talented cast were all you needed to captivate an audience. Tune in to "The Earl Lawson Murder Case" and discover why *Broadway Is My Beat* remains a shining jewel of classic crime radio—where every case tells a story, and every story has a killer.