Suspense 440406 086 The Woman In Red (128 44) 28137 29m40s
# The Woman in Red
As the CBS orchestra swells with those unmistakable chords of dread, you'll find yourself drawn into the shadowy world of *Suspense*—where a chance encounter with a mysterious woman in crimson threatens to unravel a man's entire existence. In this 1944 episode, the familiar comfort of ordinary life shatters the moment our protagonist crosses paths with this enigmatic figure. What begins as intrigue becomes obsession, and obsession transforms into something far more sinister. The dialogue crackles with tension as the woman's true intentions reveal themselves, layer by layer, leaving you to wonder whether she's a femme fatale, a ghost, or something altogether more terrifying. With every tick of the clock, the noose tightens, and by the final moments, you'll be gripping your radio set in delicious horror.
*Suspense* remains one of the golden age of radio's most enduring achievements—a program that understood the raw power of suggestion and sound design to burrow into listeners' minds. Running from 1942 through 1962, the show pioneered the anthology format with meticulous craftsmanship, hiring top-tier writers and attracting Hollywood's finest actors to perform in stories that would later influence film noir and television's thriller traditions. "The Woman in Red" exemplifies the show's mastery: it relies not on monsters or mayhem, but on psychological penetration, on the creeping sense that danger walks in human form and speaks in persuasive tones.
If you've never experienced *Suspense*, this episode is a perfect entry point into a world where the darkest threats emerge from shadow and suggestion. Tune in and discover why audiences huddled around their radios seventy-five years ago, and why these tales still possess the power to unsettle. Some stories are timeless—and terror is one of them.