Quiet Please 480301 039 Sketch For A Screenplay
# Quiet Please: Sketch for a Screenplay
In this unsettling March 1949 broadcast, *Quiet Please* invites you into the fevered mind of a struggling screenwriter whose grip on reality begins to slip like sand through trembling fingers. As our protagonist labors over his typewriter in the small hours of the morning, the line between his fictional creation and waking life grows disturbingly thin. What begins as a promising script soon develops a sinister life of its own, with characters and situations bleeding from the page into terrifying manifestations. The sound design that made *Quiet Please* legendary cuts to the bone here—every keystroke echoes with dread, every silence pregnant with menace. By the episode's conclusion, you'll question whether the writer has crafted his masterpiece or descended into madness. This is psychological horror at its finest, relying not on monsters or ghouls, but on the vulnerability of the human mind.
*Quiet Please* stands as one of radio's most sophisticated horror anthologies, eschewing the pulpy sensationalism of its contemporaries for something far more cerebral and chilling. Created by Wyllis Cooper, the show's 1947-1949 run demonstrated that the medium could deliver genuine sophistication and psychological depth. Where other programs relied on sound effects libraries and overwrought performances, *Quiet Please* built its atmosphere through intimate storytelling and the quiet certainty that something terrible was unfolding just beyond the listener's understanding. Episodes like "Sketch for a Screenplay" showcase why the show earned its devoted following among those seeking drama with substance.
If you've never experienced the mastery of *Quiet Please*, this episode offers the perfect entry point—a masterclass in building dread and a haunting meditation on creativity itself. Turn off the lights, adjust your radio dial, and prepare for something that will echo in your mind long after the final fade to black.