Mr. Keen, Tracer Of Lost Persons (1282) 1950 03 16 The Innocent Flirtation Murder Case
When a society woman vanishes under the most suspicious of circumstances, Mr. Keen and his trusted assistant Saturday find themselves navigating a treacherous landscape of jealousy, deception, and murderous intent. What begins as a simple missing persons case spirals into something far darker—a tangled web of romantic entanglements where a casual flirtation at a Manhattan cocktail party becomes the catalyst for cold-blooded murder. As Keen methodically pieces together conflicting testimonies and carefully concealed motives, the listener is drawn deeper into a world where appearance masks sinister reality, and where those closest to the victim harbor secrets worth killing for. The tension builds with each revelation, each interrogation revealing new layers of guilt and innocence, until the final denouement exposes the killer in a moment of stunning clarity.
Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons stood as one of radio's longest-running detective dramas, a program that proved audiences hungered for cerebral mysteries told with sophisticated urban flair. By 1950, when this episode aired, the show had already captivated listeners for over a decade with its meticulous attention to investigative procedure and psychological complexity. Unlike the explosive action of pulp detectives, Keen represented a more refined approach to crime—one rooted in observation, deduction, and understanding the human heart. The program's enduring appeal lay in its ability to transform the mundane work of tracing missing persons into gripping drama, elevating a procedural into genuine art.
Don your finest jacket, settle into your favorite chair, and prepare yourself for an afternoon or evening of sophisticated mystery. This classic 1950 episode showcases everything that made Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons essential listening: polished dialogue, genuine suspense, and a detective whose genius lies not in theatrics but in perception. Tune in and discover why audiences remained devoted to this masterpiece of radio drama for nearly two decades.