Lights Out: Valse Triste (1942) | Death’s Waltz Returns Radio
NBC Radio, 1942. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Valse Triste” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1942. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Valse Triste” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Cat Wife” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
There is a word that kills. Lights Out presents a linguistic horror — a story built around the specific, terrifying idea that language itself can be weaponized, that certain arrangements of sound carry consequences beyond their meaning. Originally broadcast September 14, 1943. The most dangerous thing you can do is say the wrong thing to…
The jeep came back from somewhere it should not have been. Lights Out sets its supernatural horror against the backdrop of World War II — a military vehicle that returns from the front carrying something other than soldiers. Originally broadcast May 4, 1943. Horror and wartime are natural partners in the Oboler universe. This recording…
NBC Radio, 1937. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “The Little People” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1937. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Sakhalin” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.