Suspense 430821 054 Sorry, Wrong Number (128 44) 27529 28m41s
# Suspense: Sorry, Wrong Number
Picture this: a woman lies in bed in the darkness, her telephone the only connection to the outside world—and to a terrifying secret she was never meant to hear. In "Sorry, Wrong Number," a simple case of crossed wires becomes a nightmare of mounting dread as Mrs. Stevenson, isolated and helpless, overhears fragments of a murder plot. The voices crackle through the static with ominous purpose. A time. A place. A victim. As she desperately tries to warn authorities and reach her husband, each call becomes more frantic, more futile. The tension builds relentlessly through the telephone lines themselves, transforming this intimate technology into an instrument of suspense. With only her voice and her growing panic to carry the drama, listeners are drawn into a claustrophobic web of fear where being an accidental witness becomes a death sentence. The 28-minute runtime races past like a ticking clock, leaving no escape.
This 1948 broadcast represents the golden age of radio drama at its absolute finest. *Suspense*, which aired for two decades on CBS, became legendary for its ability to paralyze listeners with psychological terror in their own living rooms. "Sorry, Wrong Number" exemplifies the show's mastery—complex plotting, stellar writing, and performances so vivid you forget you're hearing only voices. This particular episode has endured as perhaps the most celebrated in the series' history, demonstrating radio's unique power to transform the mundane into the horrifying.
If you've never experienced the primal thrill of classic radio suspense, this is the perfect entry point. Turn off the lights, settle in, and let your imagination do what it does best. In radio drama, the most terrifying monster is always the one you create in your own mind.