Suspense 460214 180 The Lucky Lady (80 44) 17838 29m54s Ec
# The Lucky Lady
Picture yourself huddled near your radio on a winter's evening, the world outside shrouded in darkness, when a woman's desperate plea crackles through your speaker. In "The Lucky Lady," a seemingly fortunate widow discovers that her greatest blessing may be her deadliest curse. As the plot unwinds with mounting dread, you'll find yourself questioning whether fortune favors the bold—or the doomed. The episode masterfully weaves together themes of greed, fate, and retribution, building tension through whispered conversations and ominous silences that CBS's sound engineers had perfected to an art form. What begins as a tale of good luck transforms into something far more sinister, as those around our heroine grow increasingly obsessed with the source of her improbable fortune.
This episode represents *Suspense* at the height of its powers—the show that ran for an astonishing twenty years and earned its reputation as the most consistently thrilling program on American radio. By the 1940s, *Suspense* had mastered the alchemy of turning everyday situations into nightmares, featuring some of radio's finest actors in tales adapted from literature, original scripts, and journalistic crime accounts. The program's signature musical stings and inventive sound design became synonymous with the golden age of radio drama, influencing everything that followed. "The Lucky Lady" exemplifies why critics and listeners alike considered *Suspense* essential listening—it understands that the most terrifying horrors often lurk beneath surfaces of normalcy.
Tune in now and experience why millions of listeners made *Suspense* an appointment with terror. In nearly thirty minutes, you'll be transported to another era, another world—one where luck is a dangerous commodity and every blessing carries a price.