My Friend Irma 1948 02 02 (043) The Red Head
Picture this: it's a crisp February evening in 1948, and you've settled into your favorite chair with the radio crackling to life. Jane and Irma's modest apartment is about to explode into comedic chaos when a mysterious red-haired woman arrives on the scene—and wouldn't you know it, she's got Irma's schemes firing on all cylinders. What starts as an innocent encounter spirals into a tangle of misunderstandings, romantic entanglements, and laugh-out-loud dialogue that had America clutching their sides. Will Al get wise to the situation? Can Jane somehow salvage the evening? You won't want to miss a single quip as the plot thickens and the timing reaches perfection. This is classic radio comedy firing on all cylinders.
"My Friend Irma" arrived on CBS radio at precisely the right moment—when Americans were hungry for lighthearted entertainment that reflected the everyday chaos of urban apartment living. What made the show revolutionary was its focus on female friendship and female-driven humor, with Marie Wilson's Irma as the perpetually scatter-brained but lovable heart of the series. This episode, from the show's second season, captures the program at its peak popularity, before it would eventually transition to film and television. The writing is razor-sharp, the ensemble cast is perfectly calibrated, and the show remains a time capsule of post-war American humor and sensibilities.
If you've never experienced "My Friend Irma," this is your invitation to step through the static and into a world of genuine, unforced comedy. These aren't canned laughs or slapstick absurdities—this is smart, character-driven humor that proves the golden age of radio was golden for a reason. Tune in and discover why millions of listeners made this their must-hear appointment.