Love Me And Die
When the needle drops on "Love Me And Die," listeners are transported to a shadowy world where passion and peril become indistinguishable. A woman's desperate love becomes a weapon—or perhaps a curse—as she discovers that the man who has stolen her heart may be stealing far more. The episode unfolds with the deliberate, mounting tension that made CBS Radio Mystery Theater legendary: each scene a carefully placed piece of a puzzle that grows darker with every revelation. Voice actors bring authentic anguish to their roles as the drama builds toward a climax that will leave you questioning whether love itself can be a lethal poison. The sound design—creaking doors, whispered confessions, the sinister minor key of the musical cues—creates an atmosphere thick with foreboding that modern streaming services still struggle to replicate.
"Love Me And Die" represents the show at its peak during the mid-1970s, when creator Ester Phillips and her team had perfected the formula of psychological horror wrapped in intimate human drama. Unlike the campy monster stories or gimmicky twist endings that filled some programs, this episode belongs to that rare category of Radio Mystery Theater offerings that treated its audience as intelligent adults. The show itself was a remarkable achievement: 1,399 episodes broadcast over nine years, each one original, live-performed drama in an era when radio was supposedly dead. These weren't nostalgic recreations of Golden Age radio—this was quality dramatic programming made specifically for an audience that still valued the intimacy and imagination radio demanded.
Don't let this gem gather dust in the archives. "Love Me And Die" awaits—a masterclass in old-time radio that proves some stories are best told when you can't see what's lurking in the darkness.