Mr. Keen, Tracer Of Lost Persons (1420) 1952 11 07 The Case Of Murder And The Prize Winning Bull
As the November fog rolls thick across the airwaves on this chilling Friday evening in 1952, Mr. Keen himself faces an enigma that defies logic: a prize-winning bull worth thousands of dollars has vanished from a locked barn, and in its place lies a corpse. Was the animal stolen to cover a murder, or does something far more sinister connect the two disappearances? With only his keen mind, his trusty assistant Mike Clancy at his side, and the crackling urgency of the orchestra punctuating every revelation, Mr. Keen must untangle a web of rural greed, jealousy, and dark secrets to bring a killer to justice before the trail grows cold.
For fifteen years, Mr. Keen had been America's favorite private investigator, his program a Tuesday and Friday staple in living rooms across the nation since 1937. Unlike the hard-boiled detectives that would later dominate television, Mr. Keen represented something more refined—a thinking man's mystery, where careful deduction and dogged persistence trumped fisticuffs and gunplay. By 1952, as television began its creeping invasion into American entertainment, radio's golden age was entering its final chapter, yet shows like this demonstrated why millions still preferred the theater of the mind, where imagination could conjure scenes far more vivid than any screen.
This November broadcast captures the very essence of old-time radio's masterly craft—a complete story told in thirty minutes, with superb sound design and an ensemble cast that knew how to deliver genuine drama. Tune in to witness Mr. Keen at the height of his powers, solving the inexplicable with intelligence and integrity.