Quiet Please 480119 033 Bakers Dozen
# Quiet Please: "Baker's Dozen" (1/19/1948)
Picture yourself in your living room on a winter evening, the radio crackling to life as host Ernest Chappell's measured voice draws you into the darkness. "Quiet Please" demands exactly that—silence, attention, your complete surrender to the shadows it casts across your imagination. Tonight's episode, "Baker's Dozen," plunges you into a tale of supernatural hunger and cursed commerce, where a baker's innocent transaction sets in motion something far more sinister than flour and yeast. What begins as a simple business deal unravels into mounting dread, where each revelation twists the knife deeper. The sound design—creaking floorboards, ominous whispers, the methodical ticking of time—creates an almost unbearable tension. By the episode's climax, you'll understand why audiences sat riveted to their sets, clutching their chairs in the dark.
Quiet Please stands as one of radio's finest achievement in psychological horror, predating the television age by years and proving that true terror lives in what you cannot see. Produced during the post-war era when Americans craved sophisticated entertainment, the show rejected the camp theatricality of earlier horror programs, instead offering taut, intelligent scripts that respected listener intelligence. Episodes like "Baker's Dozen" showcase writer Wyllis Cooper's mastery of atmosphere and mounting dread—stories that linger in the mind long after the final fade-out. The show's brief but brilliant run from 1947-1949 earned devoted listeners who still regard it as among the finest horror ever committed to audio.
Don't miss this chance to experience radio drama as it was meant to be heard—in the dark, alone, with nothing but your imagination filling the spaces between the words. "Baker's Dozen" waits for you. Turn off the lights, turn up the volume, and prepare yourself. Quiet, please.