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      • Mr. Marriner is an owner of a wax museum. He lets a reporter named Raymond Houston stay the night at his waxworks in order to write a story. At night, the reporter sees the wax figure of a murdering barber named Bourdette. The statue comes to life and tells the reporter to get ready for a shave. In the morning, the reporter's body is discovered.
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  1. It was a place for remembering wrongdoers, murderers and the bad things that made them famous. The waxwork figures stood on small stands, with numbers it their feet. He knew some of the figures but not others. There stood Thurtell, the murderer of Weir. Over there was little Lefroy, a killer hungry for money.

  2. Sep 6, 2019 · A BBC Radio adaptation by Michael and Mollie Hardwick of the classic tale of the supernatural in which a journalist spends the night in a famous wax museum's gallery of murderers.

  3. When left alone at night in a waxwork museum full of dreadful figures with tainted pasts, a man faces the horror of discovering one of those figures has come to life. Or something of the kind. Terrorized by swift movements in the shadows, the reveal is slow.

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  4. Jul 28, 2021 · A freelance journalist wants to write an article about a night sleeping with the waxworks in Murderers' Den...but as the night draws on and the wax effigies of notorious murderers seem to...

    • 32 min
    • 4.5K
    • EnCrypted Horror - narrated by Jasper L'Estrange
  5. Oct 31, 2021 · "The Waxwork" is a classic work of horror fiction by Alfred McLelland Burrage, or A.M. Burrage. One of my all-time favorite horror stor... Thanks for listening!

  6. A modest journalist is forced to apply to the head of Marriner's Waxworks and ask to let him spend a night in this museum. There is a Murderers' Room. Many waxworks of the most terrific maniacs in the world are gathered there. It is terrifying to spend some time along in this room.

  7. miel.unlam.edu.ar › 901 › 7-The-Waxwork_2by Alfred Burrage

    The Waxwork by Alfred Burrage Raymond Hewson wanted to stay the night in the famous Marriner’s Waxworks, and write a newspaper feature about the Murderers’ Room. A new waswork, Dr Bourdette, had just been moved in, and earlier that day there had been some talk of a fire in the room. The night watchman brought the armchair for Hewson. He ...

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