Gunsmoke 60 06 12 (427) Kitty Accused
# Gunsmoke: "Kitty Accused"
When Miss Kitty Russell finds herself at the center of a scandalous accusation in Dodge City, the very foundations of Marshal Dillon's world begin to crack. As whispers spread through the saloon and suspicion clouds the judgment of even the town's most trusted citizens, listeners will be drawn into a taut drama where reputation becomes currency and truth becomes a casualty. The episode crackles with tension as witnesses contradict one another, as circumstantial evidence piles up like tumbleweeds against the woman who runs the Long Branch, and as our stalwart marshal must navigate the treacherous waters between loyalty and justice. What unfolds is a masterclass in Old West morality—gritty, uncompromising, and deeply human.
*Gunsmoke* emerged from CBS radio in 1952 as something revolutionary: a western that treated its audience as intelligent adults capable of appreciating moral ambiguity and psychological depth rather than simple good-versus-evil shootouts. The show's early seasons, like this 1960 episode, showcase creator John Meston's brilliant writing at its finest—scripts that understood Dodge City as a community bound by competing loyalties and unspoken codes. William Conrad's gravelly narration and the incomparable ensemble cast, particularly the chemistry between Conrad's Matt Dillon and Georgia Ellis's Kitty, created a program that would dominate radio and later dominate television for over a decade. These episodes represent radio drama operating at its absolute peak.
Don't miss "Kitty Accused"—a masterwork of suspense that reminds us why *Gunsmoke* earned its place in broadcasting history. Tune in and experience radio the way it was meant to be heard.