Quiet, Please - The Thing on the Fourble Board
Somehow, despite all of their successes, neither Escape nor Suspense was able to claim that they had produced "the scariest episode" from the golden age of American radio. That distinction belongs to the series Quiet, Please for their episode, "The Thing on the Fourble Board." It is still considered the best in radio horror.
Quiet, Please was an unusual fantasy/horror radio show that ran from 1947 to 1949 on ABC. The series was known for its masterful use of silence and for its unique style of story presentation. Like Escape, the show never had a regular sponsor and Quiet, Please bounced around in different time slots for most of its duration. The series lasted for 109 episodes and then disappeared. For many years only 12 recordings were known to exist among collectors, but that changed in the 1980's when more than 80 "lost" episodes became available to the public.
"The Thing on the Fourble Board" is an episode that will haunt you every time you see an oil derrick. The script for this episode, as well as every other episode of Quiet, Please, is available at www.quietplease.org.
"The Thing on the Fouble Board" was written and directed by Wyllis Cooper and featured Ernest Chappell. This episode aired on August 9, 1948.
. Download qpls.1948.08.09_The_Thing_on_the_Fourbleboard.mp3
(Image of oil drilling rig from Wikimedia Commons)




If there is one thing that the two namesakes of this blog have in common it is "Three Skeleton Key," a classic horror tale about rats narrated by Vincent Price. First made famous by Escape, this radio-play was then broadcast two more times on Suspense after Escape went off the air. Based on a 1937 Esquire magazine short story by the French writer George Toudouze, the story was adapted for Escape in 1949 by James Poe.





