Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Before his film career, Welles took America by storm with revolutionary work in radio please discuss it here.

Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Store Hadji » Wed Oct 07, 2009 8:08 pm

I added the complete version of "George Washington, America" to the museum page. It makes a nice companion to the Mercury Theatre on the Air's "Abraham Lincoln" and The Campbell Playhouse's "Things We Have."

It has an odd running time of 38 minutes and must have had a 45 minute slot and fallen short. It can't have run 8 minutes long. The only example I can think of for a Welles show running long is "Treasure Island;" at the 62 minute mark, Welles remarks upon there being some disturbance in the control booth - some suit from upstairs wondering why the hell the sustaining show hadn't signed off yet, probably.
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Glenn Anders » Thu Oct 08, 2009 2:21 am

Bravo, Terry!

I particularly enjoyed the episode illustrating "Shay's Rebellion," which contains the prescient line (paraphrased): "Citizens arise! We have been usurped by those who instigated mortgage foreclosures of our farms."

The more things change, the more they are the same, I suppose.

But it's interesting that Orson Welles, so early as 1941, was selecting this enduring prospect of incipient Capitalism's fly in the ointment for an American mass public audience.

But we never seem to listen, not even to geniuses. Thus, most of us since the death of Orson Welles, incidentally, have learned to rue this truth by watching much of our life savings diminished by financial false prophets.

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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby NoFake » Thu Oct 08, 2009 11:34 am

Indeed! Wonder what Welles would have thought of Michael Moore (particularly his latest, CAPITALISM: A LOVE STORY)?
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Store Hadji » Sun Nov 01, 2009 12:32 am

"Just because I don't get a laugh, you shouldn't try for one."

November's addition is another rarely-heard episode, this time from the Orson Welles Almanac series. Monty Woolley adds to hilarity, the Mercury all-star jazz band perform "Panama Rag," and Welles reads an assemblage of verses from 1st Corinthians.

OW Almanac - Monty Woolley (4-12-44)
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Magentarose67 » Sun Nov 01, 2009 10:22 am

What a wonderful collection! Store Hadji, thank you so much for your wonderful contributions to us Welles fans at the Museum of OW. It is indeed a treasure of goodies :)!
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Steve Kostelecky » Sun Nov 01, 2009 2:49 pm

Thanks Store Hadji. You are an invaluable resource and your work and generosity are much appreciated. (Which sounds suspiciously like a fortune cookie from Panda Express, but is meant sincerely.)
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Store Hadji » Sat Dec 05, 2009 4:48 am

Everyone continues to be very welcome, in word and in deed.

December's addition is part two of Escape, by John Galsworthy (best remembered as author of The Forsyte Saga.) Welles stars as Capt. Matt Denant, and my ears detect the presence of those great radio voices Eustace Wyatt, Agnes Moorehead and Edgar Barrier. Music is by Bernard Herrmann. I haven't found part one, but at least we get a synopsis of it and the conclusion of the story. Restoration consisted of removing the 60 Hz mains hum and its harmonics and equalization to reduce tape hiss.

It can be found towards the top of the museum page.
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Magentarose67 » Sat Dec 05, 2009 4:36 pm

Store Hadji wrote:Everyone continues to be very welcome, in word and in deed.

December's addition is part two of Escape, by John Galsworthy (best remembered as author of The Forsyte Saga.) Welles stars as Capt. Matt Denant, and my ears detect the presence of those great radio voices Eustace Wyatt, Agnes Moorehead and Edgar Barrier. Music is by Bernard Herrmann. I haven't found part one, but at least we get a synopsis of it and the conclusion of the story. Restoration consisted of removing the 60 Hz mains hum and its harmonics and equalization to reduce tape hiss.

It can be found towards the top of the museum page.



Yessss! More Orson for my I-Pod :mrgreen:!

Those are great :D! Thanks a ton for posting!
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Alan Brody » Tue Dec 15, 2009 10:46 am

That George Washington program is terrific. Would make a great companion piece to the Campbell show of Rabble in Arms, where Welles plays Benedict Arnold!

I like the Monty Wooley Almanac show too, but I do think the Almanac series was the weak link in Welles's radio career. It's almost painful to listen to Welles falling flat on his face so often with his attempted ad-libs, and that New Testament reading at the end goes on far too long, but there are a few good exchanges with Woolley. Anyone know whatever happened to that TV special Welles did of The Man Who Came to Dinner in the 70's? I wonder if we'll ever see it on video.
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Store Hadji » Sat Jan 09, 2010 2:31 am

This month's addition is a 1943 episode of Radio Reader's Digest, with Welles reading the wartime poem "High Flight."

I also found an upgrade of "We Hold These Truths" and new links for Welles' Shadow episodes (minus the several lost episodes which have gone on sale over the past year.)

Find them on the museum page.
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Re:shadow down??

Postby keats » Sat Jan 16, 2010 12:51 am

Is the Shadow set unavailable? I tried to listen to a few and got this message: Firefox can't find the server at tennesseebillsotr.com. It might be because I was making the connection from Asia. Thanks, and thanks for the amazing resource you provide.
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Magentarose67 » Wed Jan 27, 2010 11:37 am

Store Hadji, I was wondering if you know what it is wrong with the Museum of Orson Welles blog. It doesn't seem to be working :(...
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Store Hadji » Sat Jan 30, 2010 2:23 pm

February's addition, thanks to mteal, is an episode of Treasury Star Parade featuring the wartime poem "Ballad of Bataan." Welles' performance is a bit over-the-top and fairly racist, but that's understandable given that this was the one-year anniversary of the bombing of Pearl Harbor. I reduced the surface noise, but it's still a little crackly.

Ballad of Bataan (12-7-42)

The Shadow links look fine to me and the museum page is alive and well.
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby Steve Kostelecky » Sat Jan 30, 2010 2:33 pm

Can't begin to thank you enough, Store Hadji, for creating a comprehensive resource for OW's radio work. It is invaluable.
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Re: Monthly Featured Broadcasts

Postby RayKelly » Sat Jan 30, 2010 4:36 pm

Alan Brody wrote: Anyone know whatever happened to that TV special Welles did of The Man Who Came to Dinner in the 70's? I wonder if we'll ever see it on video.


Hallmark (Hall of Fame) owns it. I spoke with their marketing department last year and they have no plans at present to release some of their early classic programs on DVD. Dinner, shown in 1972, was their 101st program. They are past 230 now. Some Hallmark titles, beginning with Secret Garden in 1987, are available at their Hallmark Golden Crown card stores
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