Mr. Keen, Tracer Of Lost Persons (1288) 1950 04 27 The Case Of The Woman Who Married A Murderer
When a desperate woman arrives at Mr. Keen's office with a terrible secret, the master tracer finds himself ensnared in one of radio's most chilling domestic mysteries. Our heroine has discovered that the man she pledged her life to—the man sleeping beside her each night—may be a cold-blooded killer. As orchestral tension swells and footsteps echo down shadowed corridors, listeners will be swept into a web of suspicion, fear, and the agonizing question: does she turn in the man she loves, or protect a murderer? Broadcast on this April evening in 1950, this episode crackles with the psychological intensity that made Mr. Keen the premier detective program of America's golden age.
For thirteen years, Mr. Keen had captivated millions with his methodical approach to the impossible cases that crossed his threshold. Unlike the wisecracking detectives of the airwaves, Keen was a patient, relentless pursuer of truth—a man who understood that behind every missing person lay a human tragedy. The show's resonance came from its grounding in authentic detective work and moral complexity; cases weren't solved by a lucky hunch but through dogged investigation and careful reasoning. By 1950, as television began its slow ascent, radio's detective dramas stood at their artistic peak, and Mr. Keen remained among the finest, proving that suspense needs no visual effects—only a masterful script and the listener's imagination.
Settle into your favorite chair, dim the lights, and let the unmistakable opening theme transport you back to mid-century America. This is the golden age of radio at its most compelling—a tale of love corrupted by violence and the terrible choices we face when justice conflicts with the heart.