The Eleventh Hour
As the clock tower strikes midnight on a fog-shrouded London street, a condemned man sits in his cell counting down the final moments before dawn—and execution. But when a mysterious visitor arrives with an impossible revelation, the prisoner discovers that everything he believes about his crime may be a carefully constructed lie. In "The Eleventh Hour," listeners are drawn into a labyrinthine tale of deception and hidden evidence, where time itself becomes both executioner and savior. E.G. Marshall's measured narration guides us through shadowy corridors and tense interrogation rooms as the truth unravels with each passing minute, building toward a climax that will leave you questioning the very nature of justice and innocence.
CBS Radio Mystery Theater brought sophisticated dramatic storytelling to American living rooms during a golden age when radio remained the primary source of entertainment and imagination. Airing from 1974 to 1982, the show harked back to the great mystery broadcasts of the 1930s and '40s, though this particular episode was actually crafted in the mid-to-late '70s with the kind of atmospheric precision that made the original era's productions legendary. The series became known for its ability to transport listeners into worlds of suspense and moral ambiguity, employing veteran actors, ingenious sound design, and scripts that often challenged listeners' assumptions about right and wrong. "The Eleventh Hour" exemplifies the show's mastery of psychological tension, proving that radio drama's power to terrify and fascinate never truly fades.
If you appreciate intricate mysteries that reward careful listening and believe that the best horror happens in the theater of the mind, this episode demands your attention. Tune in tonight and experience the golden age of mystery radio—where every creak of a door and distant bell toll carries weight, and the truth lurks just beyond understanding.