There has rarely ever been an artist more fulÂly in comÂmand of as many difÂferÂent art forms as Orson Welles durÂing his height — the late 1930s and earÂly 40s. He revÂoÂluÂtionÂized the stage, radio and cinÂeÂma before the age of 26 and became a houseÂhold name in the process.
Welles’s first brush with nationÂal fame came at the age of 20 when he staged an all-black proÂducÂtion of MacÂbeth in Harlem. The 1936 play was groundÂbreakÂing both for its strikÂing sets and its darÂling interÂpreÂtaÂtion that set Shakespeare’s bloody tragÂic in Haiti. But perÂhaps the most remarkÂable aspect of this proÂducÂtion was that it was done entireÂly with non-actors. Through sheer charisÂma and force of will, Welles coaxed and cajoled terÂrifÂic perÂforÂmances out of day laborÂers and facÂtoÂry workÂers.
Two years latÂer, in 1938, Welles endÂed up on the covÂer of TIME MagÂaÂzine for his stagÂing of Julius CaeÂsar. He set the play in conÂtemÂpoÂrary fasÂcist Italy. It was a bold choice that turned a 340 year-old play into a work of great politÂiÂcal urgency.
That same year, Welles also manÂaged to freak out the nation with his brilÂliant, wildÂly irreÂsponÂsiÂble adapÂtaÂtion of War of the Worlds. Welles staged the beloved sci-fi novÂel as if it were a news report. The broadÂcast capÂtured the draÂma and terÂror of an emergÂing calamiÂty all too well; it caused a pubÂlic panÂic.
Now you can lisÂten to that infaÂmous radio play along with 61 hours of othÂer radio plays, all creÂatÂed by Welles for his 1930s radio show, The MerÂcury TheÂatre on the Air. The SpoÂtiÂfy playlist, embedÂded below, includes A ChristÂmas CarÂol, Heart of DarkÂness and even a rehearsal for Julius CaeÂsar. Check it out. And if you need SpoÂtiÂfy’s free softÂware, downÂload it here.
Or if SpoÂtiÂfy isn’t your thing, you can lisÂten to anothÂer big colÂlecÂtion of Welles’s radio draÂmas below at archive.org. Start streamÂing that colÂlecÂtion here:
The notoÂriÂety of Welles’ radio work landÂed him one of the most genÂerÂous movie conÂtracts in HolÂlyÂwood stuÂdio hisÂtoÂry. This is douÂbly impresÂsive because, at this stage in his life, Welles had no idea how to actuÂalÂly make a film. The resultÂing movie was a barbed, thinÂly veiled film Ă clef of one of the most powÂerÂful men in AmerÂiÂca – William RanÂdolph Hearst. This proved to be a terÂriÂble career move; Hearst’s wrath derailed Welles’s career for years but it did proÂduce a pretÂty good movie – CitÂiÂzen Kane.
Via CriÂteÂriÂon
RelatÂed ConÂtent:
Orson Welles’ IconÂic War of the WorldsÂBroadÂcast (1938)
LisÂten to Eight InterÂviews of Orson Welles by FilmÂmakÂer Peter BogÂdanovich (1969–1972)
Watch Orson Welles’ The Stranger Free Online, Where 1940s Film Noir Meets Real HorÂrors of WWII
The Hearts of Age: Orson Welles’ SurÂreÂalÂist First Film (1934)
Orson Welles Explains Why IgnoÂrance Was His Major “Gift” to CitÂiÂzen Kane
Jonathan Crow is a Los AngeÂles-based writer and filmÂmakÂer whose work has appeared in Yahoo!, The HolÂlyÂwood Reporter, and othÂer pubÂliÂcaÂtions. You can folÂlow him at @jonccrow. And check out his blog VeepÂtoÂpus, feaÂturÂing lots of picÂtures of vice presÂiÂdents with octoÂpusÂes on their heads. The VeepÂtoÂpus store is here.











