Clock 47 05 25ep29 Angel With Two Faces
# The Clock: "Angel With Two Faces"
When the clock strikes midnight on this night in May of 1947, listeners are invited into a world where virtue and corruption wear the same beautiful face. "Angel With Two Faces" opens with the familiar tick-tock of *The Clock's* signature timepiece, that ever-present reminder that fate waits for no one. A woman of mystery—charming, elegant, seemingly pure of heart—weaves her way into the lives of unsuspecting men, each one convinced he's found redemption or love. But as the minutes unfold across the program's taut twenty-five minutes, the darkness beneath that angelic exterior becomes impossible to ignore. Is she predator or victim? Savior or destroyer? The answer, like all truth in the noir-soaked world of *The Clock*, proves far more complicated than anyone dares to imagine.
*The Clock* arrived on NBC at a moment when Americans hungered for stories that acknowledged the moral ambiguity lurking beneath their nation's postwar surface. Unlike the clear-cut heroes and villains of earlier radio mysteries, these episodes reflected a new cynicism—a recognition that evil might wear a smile and innocence might conceal corruption. Created and narrated by Everett Sloane, the program attracted some of broadcasting's finest writers and actors, transforming fifteen minutes into vessels for psychological complexity that rivaled any literary work of the era.
If you've never experienced *The Clock*, this episode offers the perfect entry point into the show's mesmerizing world. Tune in and let that familiar ticking carry you into shadow and suspicion—where nothing is quite what it seems, and time itself becomes an instrument of revelation.