Let George Do It 1946 05 14 Audition #3 The First Client (now George Valentine)
# Let George Do It - May 14, 1946: "The First Client"
Step into the rain-slicked streets of 1946 as George Valentine, a man of modest means and considerable cunning, opens his doors to his very first client. In this audition episode, you'll experience the crackling tension of a noir mystery that crackles with the promise of something wholly original. A desperate visitor arrives under cover of darkness with a problem that money can't solve and the police won't touch—and George, broke but bold, accepts the case that will launch a thousand adventures. Listen as the script unfolds with crisp dialogue and atmospheric sound design: the hiss of steam pipes, the distant wail of sirens, the ominous tick of a clock counting down to danger. This is detective fiction at its pulpiest and most intoxicating, where every shadow could hide a secret and every handshake might be your last.
*Let George Do It* emerged during a golden age of radio detective programming, but this show brought something fresh to the airwaves: an everyman hero without vast resources or official backing, relying instead on quick wit and quicker reflexes. The May 1946 audition episodes were crucial test runs for the Mutual Broadcasting System, proving that audiences were hungry for lean, fast-paced mysteries stripped of pretension. These experimental broadcasts gave birth to a character and formula that would captivate listeners for eight years, spawning hundreds of episodes and cementing the show's place in radio history as a masterclass in economy and suspense.
Tune in now to witness the genesis of a classic—the moment George Valentine takes his first case and changes his life forever. This is where the legend begins.