Let George Do It 1954 09 20 (419) The Coward (olan Soule)
# The Coward
When mild-mannered George Valentine receives a desperate phone call from a frightened woman in the dead of night, he finds himself drawn into a twisted case of blackmail, murder, and the dangerous psychology of fear itself. In "The Coward," our resourceful troubleshooter must navigate the shadowy streets and darker impulses of post-war America to uncover who is preying on a man's deepest shame. The episode crackles with tension as George peels back layers of deception, each clue leading deeper into a world where a moment's cowardice—real or imagined—can become a sentence of death. Olan Soule's masterful performance as George captures both the razor-sharp wit and the steel determination that made audiences tune in night after night, wondering what impossible case their hero would tackle next.
By 1954, *Let George Do It* had become an institution of American radio, a reliable source of intelligent, fast-paced detective fiction that eschewed the gratuitous violence of pulp serials while maintaining genuine suspense and moral complexity. The show's success lay in its formula of everyday people entangled in extraordinary circumstances, with George Valentine serving as the resourceful everyman who could outwit criminals through cunning rather than brute force. Radio's golden age was already dimming as television set its sights on American living rooms, yet *Let George Do It* persisted, delivering the kind of character-driven storytelling and atmospheric noir that would eventually make the program a beloved relic of the medium's greatest era.
Don your fedora and step into the fog-shrouded mystery of "The Coward"—where fear itself becomes the perfect murder weapon. Tune in and discover why audiences across America made George Valentine their trusted guide through the night.