Welles for Christmas

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Welles for Christmas

Postby NoFake » Mon Dec 21, 2009 8:54 am

To get us in the holiday spirit (which we could use a bit of here lately) Old Time Radio, or OTRCAT.com, has posted some of its favorite holiday shows. Of course, the first one is the Welles/Barrymore "Christmas Carol": http://otrcat.com/christmas-old-time-radio-shows.html

Maybe it's time we all sat back, laid down our arms, put aside our differences and skirmishes, and allowed ourselves to be transported back to a(n arguably --- and I know I'll get some argument :wink:) more innocent time: http://www.otrcat.com/christmas-carol-p-48543.html
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby Magentarose67 » Mon Dec 21, 2009 6:04 pm

Thanks for sharing, NoFake. I love Orson's version of A Christmas Carol....and the ending with Orson wishing everyone a Merry Christmas....very heartwarming :D!
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby Glenn Anders » Tue Dec 22, 2009 12:37 am

Thanks, NoFake: If not the first such, Orson Welles' Campbell Playhouse 1938 "A Christmas Carol" was the most influential production of Dickens' ghost story on Radio. It began a tradition which was continued for years, with Lionel Barrymore playing the prodigal skinflint.

I don't know if we were a better people back in 1938, probably not, unaware as we were, for instance, indeed often self-justifying in almost every act, of our racial bigotry and religious prejudices. But we had been through a Depression, which had brought many of us together, we had a narrow but important support for a bold New Deal program to modernize and make more democratic our nation, and we were uncertainly preparing to meet the great challenge of the 20th Century: The Collapse of Monarchies and Rise of Fascism. Orson Welles was aware of all these issues.

In any case, we wanted to believe that we were a better people, that by practicing tolerance and applying democratic ideals embodied in our Constitution, we could become a better Union. And we did that one family, one individual at a time, which is where the Dickens/Welles' "A Christmas Carol" came in, as we gathered around our radios at Christmas 1938.

A majority of Americans wanted to believe there was something else to life than what became known as The Bottom Line. They were perhaps in that belief misled, but we would not have become the most admired nation in the World by 1946, had we not believed that as a people.

Now, there are entire cyber-libraries devoted to the utilization of "A Christmas Carol," mostly to fuel an increasingly desperate frenzy to buy and sell distracting products -- the weary lament and confession Charles Foster Kane would make about his Anti-Capitalist waste of wealth "to buy things." Most of us have become big or little Charlie Kanes. The lambs have once more been shorn.

But we do have "A Christmas Carol."

Thanks again, NoFake.

Ten years ago today, I wrote my first "serious" post on the Internet.

Merry Christmas and Happy Hogmanay!

Glenn
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby NoFake » Tue Dec 22, 2009 8:30 am

And thank YOU, Glenn. That's the kind of reply I was hoping for, giving us a chance not only to at once appreciate and re-evaluate the performance and its time, but to compare and contrast it, for better and for worse, with our own.

Merry Christmas! (And happy anniversary! :))
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby RayKelly » Sat Nov 19, 2011 12:00 pm

Just north of Chicago, you can catch a stage adaptation of Orson Welles radio version of "A Christmas Carol" according to
http://triblocal.com/libertyville/calendar/2011/11/19/improv-playhouse-performs-a-christmas-carol-2/

Back before television, a holiday season tradition in America was listening to "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens as performed on radio by Lionel Barrymore and narrated by Orson Welles with the Mercury Theatre group. Few actors ever gave more meaning to the character of miserly Ebenezer Scrooge than Barrymore, who first took on the radio role in 1934. Now this heart-warming, historic broadcast will be re-enacted by the actors of Improv Playhouse in cooperation with The GreenStick Theater Company-Libertyville. Contact: IP Staff, 847-968-4529, Info@improvplayhouse.com http://www.improvplayhouse.com/
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby mteal » Wed Dec 14, 2011 9:37 am

Here's a website with THE PLOT TO OVERTHROW CHRISTMAS, starring Welles and Ray Collins, written by the late, great Norman Corwin. Also at the site is a digitized lp of Michel Legrand arrangements of Christmas music:

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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby NoFake » Sat Dec 24, 2011 10:35 am

Thank you, mteal! My audio tape :roll: was wearing out. Great stuff.

Merry Christmas!
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby mteal » Sat Dec 24, 2011 11:49 pm

Glad you enjoyed it, NoFake. Check out the Legrand too, if you get a chance, especially Side 1, which I think has some of the same spirit as the classic Vince Guaraldi score for A Charlie Brown Christmas.

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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby NoFake » Sun Dec 25, 2011 6:31 pm

A great collection of Wellesiana, mteal --- love the sketch; I have one he did decades later, though not of Santa --- but I can't find the Legrand at that link. Am I looking in the wrong place, or just not seeing it?
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby mteal » Sun Dec 25, 2011 7:20 pm

Actually, the Legrand is at the same site as the Plot to Overthrow Christmas, just below it. The sketch is from 1944 and says from Orson and Rita, but I blocked her out with some stars. I like those little sketches he did too, usually for friends and family at holiday time. They pop up on ebay occasionally, then most you don't see again unless you drag 'em to the desktop.
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby NoFake » Mon Dec 26, 2011 10:12 am

Ah! I see it now. It was in the link from a previous post. Thanks! I'll be sure to check it out.

(If I'd known I'd some day be able to "drag and drop" that sketch and plop it on my desktop, I wonder if I would have purchased it? No question: Nothing like having the real thing. My shelves are groaning with Wellesiana . . . :roll: )
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby mteal » Tue Dec 27, 2011 11:03 am

Mine too. But I am also glad I purchased things like the Jim Beam ad with Welles and his daughter Rebecca. Drag and Drop is nice since you can play with the images, but you're right, there's no substitute for the real thing, especially something like a personal sketch, which is usually one of a kind. I'll be leaving all the Christmas stuff up until January 2nd.
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby NoFake » Wed Dec 28, 2011 7:51 am

Well, the Welles/Corman "Christmas" is timeless. I recently saw Amy Freed's deliciously (and occasionally ridiculously) subversive "You, Nero" and couldn't help but think that both OW and NC would have loved it.
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby mteal » Sun Jan 01, 2012 4:56 am

Image

Well, the Welles/Corman "Christmas" is timeless


Yes, that will stay up. It actually already was up. I just provided a Christmasy link to it.
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Re: Welles for Christmas

Postby Glenn Anders » Sun Jan 01, 2012 6:22 am

Considering what was ahead in 1941 . . . considering what is ahead in 2011, all of which would have been avoidable in both cases, little Charlie Kane's reaction is most apt.

HAP-py new year, Wellsians!

Glenn
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