The Ceasar Curse
Picture this: a moonless November night in 1944, and you're huddled beside your radio dial as the CBS announcer's voice cuts through the static like a knife. *The Caesar Curse* unfolds with the inevitability of a Greek tragedy—a prestigious New York museum curator receives a small bronze coin, innocuous at first glance, but cursed with an ancient Roman emperor's final breath. Within hours, a series of inexplicable deaths begins to plague those who've handled it. Each victim's demise grows more grotesque, more impossible to explain by rational means. As our protagonist desperately races through shadowy museum archives and fog-shrouded Manhattan streets, you'll hear the unmistakable creak of exhibition cases, the whisper of turning pages, and the ever-present reminder that some artifacts were meant to remain buried. The tension builds methodically—this isn't cheap scares, but genuine dread born from the collision between modern skepticism and ancient vengeance.
The Caesar Curse* represents everything that made CBS Radio Mystery Theater a phenomenon during its golden age. Running from 1974 to 1982, this anthology series revitalized old-time radio when television seemed to have claimed victory. Set in an imagined 1940s era (though broadcast decades later), each episode captured the sophisticated storytelling that made radio the dominant entertainment medium before the war. This particular episode exemplifies the show's trademark blend of historical atmosphere, psychological tension, and supernatural ambiguity—was the curse real, or merely the power of suggestion working upon guilty consciences?
Step into the darkness. Turn off your lights, adjust the dial, and let your imagination do the heavy lifting. *The Caesar Curse* awaits—a masterclass in how the unseen remains far more terrifying than anything a camera could capture.