Quiet Please 480223 038 Wear The Dead Mans Coat
# Quiet Please: "Wear the Dead Man's Coat"
Picture yourself in your living room on a winter evening, the amber glow of your radio set casting long shadows as Quiet Please begins its opening whisper: "We present for your consideration..." This episode invites you into a world of mounting dread where a seemingly innocent acquisition—a dead man's coat—becomes the vessel for something far more sinister. As our protagonist dons the garment, he begins to experience unsettling sensations, fragments of memory that aren't his own, and a creeping sense that he's not entirely alone in his own skin. The sound design unfolds like a nightmare made audible: the rustle of fabric, the quickening pulse of the orchestra, disembodied voices that seem to emanate from the coat itself. By the episode's conclusion, you'll be left questioning whether some purchases exact a price beyond what any price tag could measure.
Quiet Please, which aired during the golden age of radio from 1947-1949, represented the final frontier of sophisticated horror on American airwaves. Created by Wyllis Cooper, the show eschewed the camp sensationalism of other supernatural programs, instead crafting intimate psychological terrors that played upon the listener's own imagination. "Wear the Dead Man's Coat" exemplifies the show's mastery of existential unease—no monsters or mad scientists, just ordinary people confronted by the inexplicable in their everyday lives. These recordings survive as remarkable artifacts, proof that radio drama could achieve genuine sophistication and haunting artistry in its twilight years.
Tune in now and experience why radio audiences huddled close to their speakers seventy-five years ago, afraid to move during the final minutes of this tale. Quiet Please awaits—but heed its title.