Lgdi 48 07 19 (097) Cry Murder [aka A Deadman Who Was A Murderer]
# Let George Do It: Cry Murder
When George Valentine answers a frantic call from a woman's trembling voice, he finds himself drawn into a web of deception that reaches from the grimy streets into the parlors of the respectable dead. In "Cry Murder," our hard-boiled private investigator must untangle the mystery of a corpse with a guilty conscience—a deadman who may have been a murderer himself. As George navigates shadowy rooms and encounters suspects with motives as murky as a late-night speakeasy, listeners will be treated to the full noir experience: the tension-laden dialogue, the orchestral stabs of suspenseful music, and the unmistakable sound design that makes every creaking floorboard and distant gunshot feel dangerously real. Nothing is quite as it seems when the living are protecting secrets that even death couldn't keep buried.
"Let George Do It" stands as one of the great detective programs of radio's golden age, and this July 1948 episode exemplifies why the show captivated audiences throughout its Mutual Network run. With Bob Bailey's world-weary performance as George Valentine and the show's commitment to intricate plotting and genuine atmospheric tension, each episode delivered the kind of smart, cynical storytelling that defined late-1940s noir. The program thrived during an era when radio drama was reaching its artistic peak, crafting stories that felt like listening to a detective novel come alive in your living room.
Tune in now and discover why "Let George Do It" remains a cornerstone of classic detective radio. Whether you're a devoted fan of the golden age or new to the medium, this episode promises seventy-three minutes of pure noir atmosphere and compelling mystery. Press play, dim the lights, and let George handle the case—you won't want to miss what happens when cry of murder echoes through the night.