The March of Time

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The March of Time

Postby Store Hadji » Wed Jul 04, 2007 5:51 pm

Here's the broadcast with Welles portraying Hitler, for those of you curious as to how accurate the News on the March pastiches from Kane and Fake were (though they were more a copy of the cinema newsreels than the radio version,) and who wonder what techniques or aesthetics Welles may have imported into his Mercury radio shows.

Where did I read that one of Welles' RKO proposals was a film of Mein Kampf, with Welles as Adolf? If that story is worth its sodium chloride, then maybe we now know what accent Welles would have used in the film.

http://www.box.net/shared/8xvxlrt6tf
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Postby Glenn Anders » Wed Jul 04, 2007 7:58 pm

Thanks, Hadji.

I've heard only four episodes of "The March of Time on the Air" since I used to listen with my father in the 1930's, and this one is easily the best in terms of audio quality.

I will leave it to others to judge how various techniques and content of the progams must have influenced Welles in Radio, Film, perhaps even on the Broadway Stage, but I think you've helped me make my case.

In terms of the specific content, it is quite amazing how far ahead of its day "The March of Time" was, and sadly, how little anything has changed, in some ways, as we look back toward the future.

Thank you again.

Does anyone else have any episodes of this program squirreled away?

Glenn Anders
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Postby Glenn Anders » Fri Jul 06, 2007 6:51 pm

Thank you, Hadji!

What a delight to hear Ted de Corsia (THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI, THE NAKED CITY), using his normal voice, to play General Hugh S. Johnson, or Agnes Moorehead as the doomed union leader's wife, or (I think) Everett Sloane as a Western Union exec blundering into singing "I Love You Truly" to an Englishman over a Trans-Atlantic wire!

And is that Welles playing an Alabama Senator?

Your selections also give a rough chronological timeline over ten years of the program's existence, suggesting how it grew in sweep and confidence.

As you may know, "The Black Legion," one of The March of Time's early subjects, was turned into "The White Legion" for The Shadow series during the period in which Welles played the title character.

Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you . . . .

Glenn
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Postby Store Hadji » Sat Jul 14, 2007 7:59 am

Here's another, the first-ever broadcast of the show, from 1931.

http://www.box.net/shared/2euymtjsmb
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Postby Glenn Anders » Sat Jul 14, 2007 4:15 pm

Another thank you, Hadji!

It is interesting to me that this first episode of "The March of Time" has the themes that run through CITIZEN KANE, and also exotic anecdotes from far places.

The show gives the impression, at a distance, that "Big Bill" Thompson, won the mayorality of Chicago in 1931, but a la the premature party in CITIZEN KANE, the celebration recreated was for Thompson's primary victory in late February of that year. The last Republican elected mayor of Chicago to the present, and supported through several terms by crime boss Al Capone, he was defeated a little over a month later by Democratic reformer Anthony Cermak, whom Thompson is depicted deriding in a cleaned up version of one of his campaign songs.

William Randolph Hearst appears as a supporting player (along with Louisana's Huey Long and New York's Jimmy Walker), congratulating Thompson by phone from California.

[Cermak died two years later in an alleged attempted assassination of President Franklin Rossevelt. It has been speculated since that the assassin was actually a patsy for a gangland hit team whose target was actually Cermak]

Then, we go to New York City for the end of the New York World, which Joseph Pulitzer's heirs went to court to ensure.

Then, we skip to a ship leaving for Devil's Island, which sounds like something out of JOURNEY INTO FEAR, and then on to a melodramatic episode involving King Carol of Rumania personally freeing torture victims in his prisons.

And of course, it takes very little distance for this type of recreation to turn into parody, even satire. CITIZEN KANE did exactly that with "News on the March."

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