Quiet Please 471215 028 Little Fellow
# Quiet Please: "Little Fellow"
Settle into the darkness and prepare yourself for an encounter with the uncanny. In this chilling installment of *Quiet Please*, the familiar comforts of everyday life dissolve into something far more sinister. A seemingly innocent discovery—perhaps a mysterious figure glimpsed in peripheral vision, or an object that shouldn't exist in an ordinary home—becomes the catalyst for a descent into psychological terror. Morse Cody's measured narration guides you through mounting dread as the episode's protagonist realizes that something profoundly wrong has taken root in their world. The sound design is deliberately sparse: creaking floorboards, hushed voices, and pregnant silences that force your imagination to complete the horror. By the time the curtain falls on this tale, you'll understand why *Quiet Please* earned its reputation as radio's most unsettling anthology series.
What made *Quiet Please* essential listening during the post-war years was its refusal to rely on cheap theatrics. Unlike its pulpier competitors, the show trusted its audience's intelligence and capacity for existential dread. Each episode was a precisely crafted psychological journey rather than a parade of monsters and mayhem. Airing during a period when Americans were grappling with atomic-age anxiety and the psychological aftermath of global conflict, *Quiet Please* tapped into deeper, more sophisticated fears—the terror of the inexplicable, the invasion of normalcy, the suspicion that reality itself might be unreliable. Cody's calm, almost conversational delivery made these narratives all the more effective, like hearing a disturbing confession from a trusted friend.
This is essential listening for anyone who understands that true horror whispers rather than shouts. Tune in to "Little Fellow" and experience why *Quiet Please* remains unsurpassed in the pantheon of golden age radio drama.