Bimb 53 05 30 (167) The Ruth Shay Murder Case
# The Ruth Shay Murder Case
Picture it: a rain-slicked Manhattan street at midnight, the neon glow of marquees casting crimson shadows across wet pavement. Detective Danny Halloran is back on the case, and this time the victim is Ruth Shay—a name whispered in backstage dressing rooms from Times Square to the Bowery. Was she a chorus girl with dangerous secrets? A woman caught between two worlds of passion and deceit? As Halloran's footsteps echo through darkened theaters and jazz clubs, listeners will experience the crackling tension that made *Broadway Is My Beat* essential listening for millions. Every door opens onto new suspicions; every alibi crumbles under scrutiny. The Ruth Shay case is a masterclass in urban mystery—gritty, atmospheric, and utterly uncompromising.
What made this 1949-1954 CBS series a landmark of Golden Age radio was its unflinching portrait of New York itself as a character. Created by Ira Marion, *Broadway Is My Beat* didn't sentimentalize the Great White Way; instead, it peeled back the sequins and spotlight to reveal a city of moral complexity, where show business dreams intersected dangerously with crime. Actor Larry Thor's portrayal of Detective Halloran defined a new kind of radio hero—tough but intelligent, cynical yet principled. Each episode was meticulously researched and featuring jazz-inflected orchestration that put listeners directly onto the mean streets of 1940s Manhattan. The Ruth Shay episode exemplifies the series at its finest.
Tune in and let the sounds of the city wrap around you—the distant wail of sirens, the murmur of nightclub crowds, the crisp dialogue of a detective determined to find justice. *Broadway Is My Beat* awaits.