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Orson Welles radio credits

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Orson Welles, arms upraised, directing a rehearsal of CBS Radio's The Mercury Theatre on the Air (1938)

This is a comprehensive listing of the radio programs made by Orson Welles. Welles was often uncredited for his work, particularly in the years 1934–1937, and he apparently kept no record of his broadcasts.[1]: 77 

Radio is what I love most of all. The wonderful excitement of what could happen in live radio, when everything that could go wrong did go wrong. I was making a couple of thousand a week, scampering in ambulances from studio to studio, and committing much of what I made to support the Mercury. I wouldn't want to return to those frenetic 20-hour working day years, but I miss them because they are so irredeemably gone.

— Orson Welles to friend and mentor Roger Hill, February 22, 1983[2]: 53 

1934

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
1934 CBS 30 min. The American School of the Air [a] [b] [3]: 331 [4]: 30–31  Yes

1935

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
March 22 CBS 30 min. The March of Time Welles's series debut[c] [3]: 332–333 [5]: 70–71 [6]: 580 [7]: 86 [8]: 47  Yes
July 14 –
September 22
CBS 60 min. America's Hour [d] [9]: 30  Yes
August 26 CBS 15 min. The March of Time [e] [3]: 334 [9]: 434  Yes
December 13 CBS 15 min. Chopin [f] [10] Yes
1935 CBS 30 min. Cavalcade of America [g] [2]: 105 [9]: 141  Yes

1936

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 20–
July 18
CBS 15 min. Musical Reveries [h] [3]: 280, 333 [11]: 303  Yes
March 13 CBS 15 min. The March of Time [12] Yes Yes
March 22 CBS 30 min. Terror by Night "The Bells"[i] [9]: 656  Yes
May 11 CBS 15 min. The March of Time [12] Yes Yes
May 13 CBS 15 min. The March of Time [12] Yes Yes
May 14 CBS 15 min. The March of Time [12] Yes Yes
May 20 CBS 15 min. The March of Time [12] Yes Yes
May 27 CBS 15 min. The March of Time [12] Yes Yes
July 18 CBS 30 min. Columbia Workshop Series debut[j][13]: 107 [14] Yes Yes
September 6 Mutual 60 min. The Wonder Show [k][15][16]: 23, 224  Yes
September 13 Mutual 60 min. The Wonder Show [l][16]: 23, 224  Yes
September 19 CBS 30 min. Columbia Workshop "Hamlet", Part 1[m] [3]: 333 [17] Yes Yes Yes
September 20 Mutual 60 min. The Wonder Show [n][16]: 23, 224  Yes
September 27 Mutual 60 min. The Wonder Show [o][16]: 23, 224  Yes
October 4 Mutual 60 min. The Wonder Show [p][16]: 23, 224 [18] Yes
October 11 Mutual 60 min. The Wonder Show [q][16]: 23, 224  Yes
November 14 CBS 30 min. Columbia Workshop "Hamlet", Part 2[r][3]: 333 [17] Yes Yes Yes
1936 Red 30 min. Peter Absolute [s][19]: 26, 33 [20][21]: 22  Yes

1937

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
February 28 CBS 30 min. Columbia Workshop "Macbeth"[9]: 171  Yes
April 11 CBS 30 min. Columbia Workshop "The Fall of the City"[t] [22] Yes Yes
July 23 Mutual 30 min. Les Misérables Chapter 1: "The Bishop"[u] [3]: 338 [21]: 15 [23] Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 30 Mutual 30 min. Les Misérables Chapter 2: "Javert"[v] [3]: 338 [21]: 16 [23] Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 6 Mutual 30 min. Les Misérables Chapter 3: "The Trial"[w] [3]: 338 [21]: 17 [23] Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 13 Mutual 30 min. Les Misérables Chapter 4: "Cosette"[x] [3]: 338 [21]: 17 [23] Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 15 CBS 30 min. Columbia Workshop "Escape", Part 1[y] [3]: 338  Yes
August 20 Mutual 30 min. Les Misérables Chapter 5: "The Grave"[z] [3]: 338 [21]: 18 [23] Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 22 CBS 30 min. Columbia Workshop "Escape", Part 2[3]: 338  Yes Yes
August 27 Mutual 30 min. Les Misérables Chapter 6: "The Barricade"[aa] [3]: 338 [21]: 19 [23] Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 30 CBS 30 min. Columbia's Shakespeare[9]: 644  "Twelfth Night"[ab] [24] Yes Yes Yes
September 3 Mutual 30 min. Les Misérables Chapter 7: "The Final Episode"[ac] [3]: 330 [21]: 20 [23] Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 26 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "Death House Rescue"[ad] [9]: 607 [25]: 94–111 [26][27] Yes Yes
October 3 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Red Macaw"[25]: 84  Yes
October 10 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "Danger in the Dark"[25]: 84  Yes
October 17 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "Murder by the Dead"[25]: 84 [27] Yes Yes
October 24 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Temple Bells of Neban"[ae] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
October 28 Blue 30 min. The March of Time Welles as Lord Chancellor for George VI[8]: 48  Yes Yes
October 31 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Three Ghosts"[af] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
November 7 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "Death Rides the Skyway"[25]: 84  Yes
November 14 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "Terror Island"[25]: 84  Yes
November 18 Blue 30 min. The March of Time Welles as Haile Selassie[8]: 48 [28] Yes Yes
November 21 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Ruby of Modoc"[25]: 84  Yes Yes
November 25 Blue 30 min. The March of Time Welles as amnesiac French soldier[8]: 48  Yes Yes
November 28 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "Circle of Death"[ag] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
December 5 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The House of Greed"[25]: 84  Yes
December 12 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Death Triangle"[ah] [25]: 84 [26] Yes Yes
December 19 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "Cold Death"[25]: 84  Yes
December 26 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Voice of Death"[25]: 84  Yes Yes
1937 CBS 30 min. Living Dramas of the Bible [ai] [16]: 25 [21]: 22 [29] Yes
1937 Blue 30 min. Roses and Drums [aj] [9]: 588 [16]: 25 [21]: 22  Yes
1937 Mutual Parted on Her Bridal Tour [ak] [16]: 25 [21]: 22 [30] Yes

1938

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 2 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Goddess of Death" Yes
January 2 Blue 60 min. The Magic Key [al] [31] Yes Yes
January 6 Blue 30 min. The March of Time Welles as Paul Muni, Fredric March, Spencer Tracy and Cecil B. DeMille[8]: 48  Yes Yes
January 9 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The League of Terror"[am] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
January 13 Blue 30 min. The March of Time [32] Yes Yes
January 16 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "Sabotage"[an] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
January 20 Blue 30 min. The March of Time [8]: 48  Yes Yes
January 23 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Society of the Living Dead"[ao] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
January 27 Blue 30 min. The March of Time [8]: 48  Yes Yes
January 30 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Poison Death"[ap] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
February 3 Blue 30 min. The March of Time [8]: 48 [33] Yes Yes
February 6 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Phantom Voice"[aq] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
February 10 Blue 30 min. The March of Time [8]: 48 [33] Yes Yes
February 13 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The House of Horror"[ar] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
February 20 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "Hounds in the Hills"[as] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
February 27 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Plot Murder"[at] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
March 3 Blue 30 min. The March of Time Welles as Austrian government agent[8]: 48  Yes Yes
March 6 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Bride of Death"[au] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
March 10 Blue 30 min. The March of Time Welles as Fiorello LaGuardia[8]: 48  Yes Yes
March 13 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The Silent Avenger"[av] [25]: 84 [26][27] Yes Yes
March 17 Blue 30 min. The March of Time Welles as Sigmund Freud[8]: 48  Yes Yes
March 20 Mutual 30 min. The Shadow "The White Legion"[aw] [25]: 112–113 [27] Yes Yes
March 24 Blue 30 min. The March of Time Welles as Leopold Stokowski[34] Yes Yes
March 27 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Hypnotized Audience"[ax] [9]: 607 [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
April 3 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "Death from the Deep"[ay] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
April 10 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Firebug"[az] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
April 17 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Blind Beggar Dies"[ba] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
April 24 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "Power of the Mind"[bb] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
May 1 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The White God"[bc] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
May 8 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "Aboard the Steamship Amazon"[bd] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
May 15 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "Murders in Wax"[be] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
May 22 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Message from the Hills"[bf] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
May 29 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Creeper"[bg][25]: 84  [26][27][35] Yes Yes
June 5 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Tenor with the Broken Voice"[bh] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
June 12 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "Murder On Approval"[bi] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
June 19 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Tomb of Terror"[bj] [25]: 84 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
June 26 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Old People"[bk] [26][35] Yes Yes
July 3 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Voice of the Trumpet"[bl] [26][35] Yes Yes
July 10 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "He Died at Twelve"[bm] [26][35] Yes Yes
July 11 CBS 60 min. First Person Singular "Dracula"[bn] [1]: 84 [8]: 50 [36] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 17 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Reincarnation of Michael"[bo] [26][35] Yes Yes
July 18 CBS 60 min. First Person Singular "Treasure Island"[bp] [1]: 86 [8]: 50 [37] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 24 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Mark of the Bat"[bq] [26][35] Yes Yes
July 25 CBS 60 min. First Person Singular "A Tale of Two Cities"[br] [1]: 87 [8]: 51 [38] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 31 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "Revenge on the Shadow"[bs] [26][35] Yes Yes
August 1 CBS 60 min. First Person Singular "The Thirty-Nine Steps"[bt] [1]: 88 [3]: 344 [39] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 7 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Mine Hunters"[bu] [26][35] Yes Yes
August 8 CBS 60 min. First Person Singular "I'm a Fool", "The Open Window", "My Little Boy"[bv] [1]: 88 [3]: 345 [40] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 14 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Hospital Murders"[bw] [26][35] Yes Yes
August 15 CBS 60 min. First Person Singular "Abraham Lincoln"[bx] [1]: 89 [3]: 345 [41] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 21 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Caverns of Death"[by] [25]: 854 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
August 22 CBS 60 min. First Person Singular "The Affairs of Anatol"[bz] [1]: 89 [3]: 345  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 28 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "Death Under the Chapel"[ca] [25]: 854 [26][27][35] Yes Yes
August 29 CBS 60 min. First Person Singular "The Count of Monte Cristo"[cb] [1]: 89 [8]: 51 [42] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 4 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "Black Buddha"[cc] [26][35] Yes Yes
September 5 CBS 60 min. First Person Singular "The Man Who Was Thursday"[cd] [1]: 90 [8]: 51 [43] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 11 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "Julius Caesar"[ce] [1]: 90 [8]: 51 [44] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 11 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "The Witch Drums of Salem"[cf] [26][35] Yes Yes
September 18 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "Jane Eyre"[cg] [1]: 91  Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 18 Synd 30 min. The Shadow "Professor X"[ch] [26][35] Yes Yes
September 25 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "Sherlock Holmes"[ci] [8]: 51 [45] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 2 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "Oliver Twist"[cj] [3]: 346  Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 9 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "Hell on Ice"[ck] [3]: 346 [46][47] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 16 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "Seventeen"[cl] [8]: 52 [48] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 23 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "Around the World in Eighty Days"[cm] [8]: 52 [49] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 30 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "The War of the Worlds"[cn] [46][50][51] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 6 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "Heart of Darkness", "Life With Father"[co] [8]: 52 [52] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 13 CBS 30 min. The Silver Theatre "Stars in Their Courses", Part 1[cp] [53][54] Yes Yes
November 13 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "A Passenger to Bali"[cq] [3]: 347 [55] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 20 CBS 30 min. The Silver Theatre "Stars in Their Courses", Part 2[cr] [53][54] Yes Yes
November 20 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "The Pickwick Papers"[cs] [3]: 347  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 27 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "Clarence"[ct] [3]: 347  Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 4 CBS 60 min. The Mercury Theatre on the Air "The Bridge of San Luis Rey"[cu] [3]: 347  Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 9 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Rebecca"[cv] [8]: 53 [56][57][58]: 67 [59] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 16 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Call It a Day"[cw] [3]: 347  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 23 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "A Christmas Carol"[cx] [8]: 53 [56][57][60] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 30 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "A Farewell to Arms"[cy] [3]: 347  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

1939

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 6 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Counsellor-at-Law"[cz] [1]: 98 [3]: 349 [56][61] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 13 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Mutiny on the Bounty"[da] [1]: 98 [3]: 349 [56][57] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 20 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Chicken Wagon Family"[db] [3]: 349  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 22 Mutual
CBS
NBC
60 min. The March of Dimes [dc] [62] Yes
January 27 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "I Lost My Girlish Laughter"[dd] [8]: 53 [56][63][64] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 3 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Arrowsmith"[de] [3]: 350 [8]: 54 [56][65] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 10 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Green Goddess"[df] [3]: 350 [8]: 54 [56][66] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 17 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Burlesque"[dg] [3]: 350 [56] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 24 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "State Fair"[dh] [1]: 101  [3]: 350  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 2 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Royal Regiment"[di] [3]: 351  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 10 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Glass Key"[dj] [3]: 351 [56][67] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 17 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Beau Geste"[dk] [3]: 351 [8]: 54 [56][68] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 24 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Twentieth Century"[dl] [8]: 54 [56][69] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 31 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Show Boat"[dm] [3]: 351 [8]: 54 [56][57] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 7 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Les Misérables"[dn] [3]: 352  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 14 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Patriot"[do] [3]: 352 [56][57] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 21 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Private Lives"[dp] [8]: 55 [56][70] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 28 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Black Daniel"[dq] [3]: 352  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 5 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Wickford Point"[dr] [3]: 352 [56][71] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 12 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Our Town"[ds] [3]: 352 [8]: 55  [56][72] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 19 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Bad Man"[dt] [8]: 55 [56][73] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 26 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "American Cavalcade"[du] [8]: 56 [56][74] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 2 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Victoria Regina"[dv] [8]: 53 [56][75] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 4 CBS 30 min. Knickerbocker Playhouse "Business Before Pleasure"[dw] [76][77][78] Yes
July 1 Mutual 60 min. The American Forum of the Air [dx] [79][80] Yes
July 2 CBS 30 min. Knickerbocker Playhouse "Fleurette"[dy] [76][77] Yes
September 10 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Peter Ibbetson[dz] [8]: 56 [56][81] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 17 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Ah, Wilderness!'"[ea] [3]: 354 [56][82] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 24 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "What Every Woman Knows"[eb] [8]: 56 [56][83] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 28 CBS 60 min. Columbia Workshop "The Fall of the City"[ec] [5]: 225  Yes
October 1 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Count of Monte Cristo"[ed] [3]: 354 [8]: 56 [56][84] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 8 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Algiers"[ee] [3]: 354 [8]: 56  [56][85] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 15 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Escape"[ef] [3]: 354 [8]: 57 [56][86] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 22 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Liliom"[eg] [8]: 58 [56][87] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 29 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Magnificent Ambersons"[eh] [3]: 354 [8]: 58 [56][88] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 5 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Hurricane"[ei] [3]: 355 [8]: 58 [56][89] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 8 NBC 60 min. Town Hall Tonight [ej] [3]: 355  Yes Yes
November 12 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Murder of Roger Ackroyd"[ek] [3]: 355 [8]: 59 [56][90] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 19 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Garden of Allah"[el] [8]: 59 [56][91] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 26 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Dodsworth"[em] [8]: 59 [56][92]: 242 [93] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 3 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Lost Horizon"[en] [8]: 59 [56][57] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 10 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Vanessa'"[eo] [8]: 59 [56][57] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 17 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "There's Always a Woman"[ep] [3]: 356 [8]: 59 [56][57] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 24 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "A Christmas Carol"[eq] [3]: 355 [8]: 60  [56][57] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 31 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Come and Get It"[er] [3]: 356  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

1940

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 7 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Vanity Fair"[es] [3]: 357 [8]: 60  [56][92]: 242 [94] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 14 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Theodora Goes Wild"[et] [3]: 358 [8]: 60 [56][95] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 21 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "The Citadel"[eu] [3]: 358 [8]: 60  [56][96] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 28 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "It Happened One Night"[ev] [3]: 358 [56][97] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 4 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Broome Stages"[ew] [3]: 358 [8]: 61 [56][98] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 11 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town"[ex] [8]: 61 [56][99] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 18 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Dinner at Eight"[ey] [3]: 359 [8]: 61 [56][100] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 25 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Only Angels Have Wings"[ez] [8]: 62 [56][101] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 3 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Rabble in Arms"[fa] [3]: 359 [8]: 62 [56][102] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 10 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Craig's Wife"[fb] [3]: 359 [8]: 62 [56][57] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 17 NBC 30 min. The Jell-O Program Starring Jack Benny [fc] [8]: 67 [103] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 17 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Huckleberry Finn"[fd] [3]: 359 [56][92]: 242 [104] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 24 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "June Moon"[fe] [8]: 62 [56][105] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 31 CBS 60 min. The Campbell Playhouse "Jane Eyre"[ff] [5]: 221–226 [8]: 62 [56][106] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 3 Mutual 70 min. This is Radio [fg] [5]: 259 [107] Yes Yes
October 28 KTSA 30 min. Interview Wells and Welles[fh] [3]: 361 [108] Yes Yes
December 19 NBC 30 min. The Rudy Vallee Sealtest Show [fi] [109] Yes Yes

1941

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 16 NBC 30 min. The Rudy Vallee Sealtest Show [fj] [109] Yes Yes
February 22 WNEW 60 min. George Washington, American [fk] [3]: 362 [110][111] Yes Yes
March 15 Blue 30 min. Duffy's Tavern [fl] [112] Yes
March 30 CBS 30 min. The Silver Theatre "One Step Ahead"[fm] [8]: 67 [113] Yes Yes
April 6 CBS 30 min. The Free Company "His Honor, the Mayor"[fn] [3]: 362–363 [114] Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 17 NBC 30 min. The Rudy Vallee Sealtest Show [fo] [8]: 67  Yes Yes
May 8 NBC 30 min. The Rudy Vallee Sealtest Show [fp] [109] Yes Yes
May 28 15 min. Citizen Kane Interview Welles and Dorothy Comingore at the Hollywood premiere[1]: 115 [115] Yes Yes
September 1 CBS 30 min. Forecast "Jubilee"[fq] [116] Yes Yes
September 15 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "Sredni Vashtar", "Hidalgo", "An Irishman and a Jew"[fr] [3]: 366 [117]: 447 [118] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 22 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "The Right Side", "The Sexes", "The Golden Honeymoon"[fs] [3]: 366  Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 29 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "The Interlopers", "I'm a Fool"[ft] [3]: 367 [119] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 6 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "The Black Pearl"[fu] [3]: 367 [120] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 13 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "If In Years to Come"[fv] [3]: 367 [121] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 18 CBS 45 min. A Night of Stars [fw] [122][123] Yes
October 20 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "Romance", "The Prisoner of Assiout"[fx] [3]: 367  Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 3 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "Wild Oranges"[fy] [3]: 367 [124] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 10 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "That's Why I Left You", "The Maysville Minstrel"[fz] [3]: 367 [125] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 17 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "The Hitch-Hiker"[ga] [3]: 367  Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 24 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "A Farewell to Arms"[gb] [3]: 367  Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 1 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "Something's Going to Happen to Henry", "Wilbur Brown, Habitat: Brooklyn"[gc] [3]: 368 [126] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 7 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "Symptoms of Being 35", "Leaves of Grass"[gd] [3]: 368 [127] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 7 CBS 30 min. The Gulf Screen Guild Theatre "Between Americans"[ge] [128][129] Yes Yes
December 15 Red 30 min. The Cavalcade of America "The Great Man Votes"[gf] [130][131][132] Yes Yes
December 15 CBS
Red
Blue
Mutual
60 min. We Hold These Truths Dramatic celebration of the Bill of Rights on its 150th anniversary[gg] [3]: 368 [133][134][135] Yes Yes
December 22 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "The Happy Prince"[gh] [3]: 368 [136] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 29 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "There are Frenchmen and Frenchmen"[gi] [3]: 368 [137] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

1942

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 5 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "The Garden of Allah"[gj] [3]: 369 [138] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 12 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "The Apple Tree"[gk] [3]: 369 [139] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 19 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "My Little Boy"[gl] [3]: 369 [140] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 25 CBS 30 min. Red Cross Program [gm] [1]: 118 [3]: 369 [141] Yes Yes
January 26 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "The Happy Hypocrite"[gn] [3]: 369 [142] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 2 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Show "Between Americans"[go] [3]: 369 [53][129][143] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 14 Blue 15 min. Pan American Day Broadcast from Brazil[144]: 366 [145] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 18 Blue 30 min. President Vargas's Birthday Broadcast from Brazil[144]: 366 [146] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 29 Blue 120 min. I Pledge America [gp] [147][148][149][150][151][152][153] Yes Yes
September 2 CBS 30 min. Suspense "The Hitch-Hiker"[gq] [154] Yes Yes
September 3 CBS 30 min. Stage Door Canteen [gr] [155] Yes
September 11 Blue 15 min. Men, Machines and Victory [gs] [3]: 372 [11]: 263  Yes
September 18 NBC 30 min. Information Please [gt] [8]: 62 [156] Yes Yes
September 25 CBS 30 min. The Philip Morris Playhouse "Crime Without Passion"[gu] [3]: 373  Yes
September 28 Red 30 min. The Cavalcade of America "Juarez: Thunder from the Mountains"[gv] [130][131][157] Yes Yes
October 2 CBS 30 min. Russian-American Festival "Peter and the Wolf"[gw] [3]: 371 [158] Yes
October 5 NBC 30 min. The Cavalcade of America "Passage to More Than India"[3]: 373  Yes
October 11 CBS 30 min. The Radio Reader's Digest [gx] [1]: 121 [159] Yes
October 12 Red 30 min. The Cavalcade of America "Admiral of the Ocean Sea"[gy] [1]: 121 [3]: 373 [160]: 2–15 [130][131][161] Yes Yes Yes
October 13 CBS 30 min. Annual United Fund Appeal "Hospitals in Wartime"[gz] [3]: 373  Yes
October 15 CBS 30 min. Stage Door Canteen [ha] [155] Yes
October 16 CBS 30 min. The Philip Morris Playhouse "The Hitch-Hiker"[hb] [3]: 373 [162] Yes
October 18 CBS 30 min. The Texaco Star Theatre [hc] [1]: 122 [3]: 373 [163][164] Yes Yes
October 25 CBC 30 min. Nazi Eyes on Canada "Alameda"[hd] [129][165] Yes Yes
October 26 Red 30 min. The Cavalcade of America "In the Best Tradition"[he] [130][131] Yes Yes
November 9 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "Flying Fortress"[hf] [3]: 374 [8]: 64 [166] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 15 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "Brazil"[hg] [3]: 374 [167][168][169][170] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 16 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "Air Transport Command"[hh] [3]: 374 [171] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 22 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "The Andes"[hi] [3]: 374 [172][173] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 23 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "The Navigator"[hj] [3]: 374 [174] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 29 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "The Islands"[hk] [3]: 374 [175][176] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 30 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited Wind, Sand and Stars[hl] [3]: 375 [177] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 4 AFRS 30 min. Mail Call [hm] [178] Yes
December 6 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "Alphabet A to C"[hn] [3]: 375 [179] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 7 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "Ballad of Bataan"[ho] [3]: 375  Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 13 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "Alphabet C to S"[hp] [3]: 375 [180] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 14 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "War Workers"[hq] [3]: 375 [181] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 20 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "Slavery—Abednego"[hr] [3]: 375 [182] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 21 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "Gremlins" [hs] [3]: 375 [183] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 24 CBS 30 min. Stage Door Canteen [ht] [155] Yes
December 27 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "The Bad-Will Ambassador"[hu] [3]: 375 [184] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 28 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "Pan American Airlines"[hv] [3]: 375 [185] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
1942 15 min. Go with your Red Cross [hw] [8]: 64 [186][187] Yes Yes
1942 Synd 15 min. Treasury Star Parade "The Chetniks"[hx] [3]: 372 [9]: 681 [188][189] Yes Yes
1942 Synd 15 min. Treasury Star Parade "The Ballad of Bataan"[hy] [189] Yes Yes
1942 Synd 15 min. Treasury Star Parade "An American in Action", "Prayer for Americans"[hz] [189] Yes Yes

1943

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 3 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "Ritmos de las Americas"[ia] [3]: 375 [167][190] Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 4 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "Anti-Submarine Patrol"[ib] [3]: 376 [191] Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 10 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "Mexico"[ic] [3]: 376 [192] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 11 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "Finger in the Wind"[id] [3]: 376 [193] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 17 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "Feed the World"[ie] [3]: 376 [194] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 18 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "Letter to Mother"[if] [3]: 376 [195] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 24 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "Ritmos de las Americas"[ig] [196][197][198] Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 25 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "Mrs. James and the Pot of Tea"[ih] [1]: 128 [3]: 376 [53][199][200][201] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 31 CBS 30 min. Hello Americans "Bolivar's Idea"[ii] [3]: 376 [202] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 1 CBS 15 min. Ceiling Unlimited "The Future"[3]: 376 [203] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 12 AFRS 30 min. Mail Call [ij] [178] Yes
March 14 NBC 30 min. The Jack Benny Program [ik] [5]: 368 [204][205][206] Yes Yes
March 21 NBC 30 min. The Jack Benny Program [il] [205][207][208] Yes Yes
March 28 NBC 30 min. The Jack Benny Program [im] [205][209][210] Yes Yes
April 4 CBS 15 min. Radio Reader's Digest [in] [211] Yes
April 4 NBC 30 min. The Jack Benny Program [io] [205][212] Yes Yes
April 11 NBC 30 min. The Jack Benny Program [ip] [205][213] Yes Yes
September 3 CBS 15 min. Reading Out Loud [iq] [1]: 129 [214] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 7 KMPC 11 min. Interview [ir] [1]: 129 [3]: 378 [215] Yes Yes
September 23 CBS 30 min. Suspense "The Most Dangerous Game"[is] [154] Yes Yes
September 28 NBC 30 min. The Pepsodent Show Starring Bob Hope [it] [216][217] Yes Yes
September 30 CBS 30 min. Suspense "The Lost Special"[iu] [154] Yes Yes
October 7 CBS 30 min. Suspense "Philomel Cottage"[iv] [154] Yes Yes
October 12 Blue 30 min. Duffy's Tavern [iw] [3]: 379  Yes Yes
October 19 CBS 30 min. Suspense "Lazarus Walks"[ix] [154] Yes Yes
October 31 CBS 15 min. Radio Reader's Digest [iy] [211] Yes
November 12 CBS 30 min. The Philip Morris Playhouse "Shadow of a Doubt"[218] Yes
November 14 CBS 90 min. The New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra [iz] [3]: 379 [219][220] Yes Yes
November 14 CBS 30 min. We, the People [ja] [3]: 379  Yes
November 19 CBS 30 min. Stage Door Canteen [jb] [155] Yes
November 21 CBS 90 min. The New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra [jc] [3]: 379  Yes Yes
November 21 CBS 30 min. Take It or Leave It [jd] [3]: 378  Yes
November 27 CBS 30 min. Inner Sanctum Mysteries [je] [3]: 379  Yes
November 28 CBS 90 min. The New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra [jf] [3]: 379  Yes Yes
December 19 CBS 30 min. The Fred Allen Show [jg] [221] Yes Yes
December 21 AFRS 30 min. Command Performance "Broadway Edition"[jh] [129][222] Yes Yes
December 26 CBS 30 min. The Fred Allen Show [ji] [221] Yes Yes

1944

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 26 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jj] [3]: 381 [223][224] Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 2 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jk] [3]: 381 [225] Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 9 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jl] [3]: 381 [226] Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 16 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jm] [3]: 381 [227] Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 23 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jn] [3]: 381 [223][228] Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 1 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jo] [3]: 381 [223][229] Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 8 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jp] [3]: 381 [223][230] Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 15 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jq] [3]: 381 [223][231] Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 22 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jr] [3]: 381 [223][232] Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 29 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [js] [3]: 381 [223][233] Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 2 NBC 30 min. The Charlie McCarthy Show [3]: 382 [9]: 226  Yes
April 5 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jt] [223][234] Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 12 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [ju] [3]: 382 [223][235][236] Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 13 CBS 30 min. Suspense "The Marvelous Barastro"[jv] [154][237] Yes Yes
April 19 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jw] [3]: 382 [5]: 370–371 [238]: 9–10  Yes Yes Yes
April 26 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jx] [3]: 382 [238]: 11–12  Yes Yes Yes
April 27 CBS 30 min. U.S. Treasury Show "Three of a Kind"[jy] [1]: 132 [3]: 382  Yes
May 3 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [jz] [3]: 382 [231] Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 4 CBS 30 min. Suspense "The Dark Tower"[ka] [154] Yes Yes
May 10 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [kb] [3]: 383  Yes Yes Yes
May 11 CBS 30 min. The Dinah Shore Program [kc] [239] Yes Yes
May 17 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [kd] [3]: 383 [223][240] Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 18 CBS 30 min. Suspense "Donovan's Brain", Part 1[ke] [154] Yes Yes
May 20 CBS 60 min. American Eloquence [kf] [241]: 214, 334 [3]: 383 [5]: 371–373 [242] Yes Yes
May 24 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [kg] [3]: 383 [243] Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 25 CBS 30 min. Suspense "Donovan's Brain", Part 2[kh] [154] Yes Yes
May 28 NBC 30 min. The Charlie McCarthy Show [3]: 382  Yes
May 31 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [ki] [3]: 384 [244] Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 5 CBS 60 min. Lux Radio Theatre "Jane Eyre"[kj] [3]: 384 [245] Yes Yes
June 7 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [kk] [3]: 384 [246] Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 12 CBS
Blue
Red
Mutual
60 min. The Fifth War Loan Drive [kl] [1]: 133–134 [5]: 371–373 [242][247][248] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 14 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [km] [3]: 384 [223][249] Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 14 CBS 60 min. The Fifth War Loan Drive [kn] [3]: 384  Yes Yes
June 19 CBS 30 min. The Fifth War Loan Drive [ko] [1]: 133–134 [3]: 384 [129][250] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 21 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [kp] [3]: 384 [251] Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 28 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [kq] [3]: 385 [252][253] Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 5 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [kr] [3]: 385 [254] Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 12 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [ks] [3]: 385 [223][255] Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 19 CBS 30 min. The Orson Welles Almanac [kt] [3]: 385 [200][223][256] Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 13 NBC 30 min. The Gracie Fields Show [ku] [257][258] Yes Yes
September 11 CBS 60 min. Lux Radio Theatre "Break of Hearts"[kv] [1]: 135 [245] Yes Yes
September 23 CBS 30 min. Inner Sanctum Mysteries "The Dream"[kw] [3]: 386 [117]: 452  Yes
October 2 NBC Let Yourself Go [kx] [3]: 386  Yes
October 6 Now is the Time: A Soliloquy for Election Year [ky] [3]: 386 [8]: 66 [117]: 452  Yes Yes
October 8 Blue 60 min. Philco Radio Hall of Fame [117]: 452  Yes
October 11 CBS Labor Party Broadcast [kz] [3]: 386  Yes
October 11 WSUN Blue
WSTP Mutual
Democratic Campaign Rally [la] [259] Yes
October 13 NBC 5 min. Advertisement for the Democratic National Committee [260] Yes Yes
October 15 CBS 60 min. The Kate Smith Show "The Dark Hours"[lb] [3]: 386 [117]: 452  Yes Yes
October 18 Blue 60 min. The New York Herald Tribune Forum "False Issues and the American Presidency"[lc] [1]: 135 [3]: 386 [261][262][263] Yes Yes
October 27 CBS 10 min. Welles for Roosevelt [3]: 386 [264]: 294  Yes
October 29 NBC 30 min. The Charlie McCarthy Show [3]: 382 [265] Yes Yes
October 30 Mutual Welles for Roosevelt [3]: 386  Yes
November 1 NBC 30 min. Special Broadcast for the Democratic National Committee [ld] [3]: 386 [53][266][267] Yes Yes
November 5 NBC 30 min. The Charlie McCarthy Show [3]: 382 [268] Yes Yes
November 6 CBS
Blue
Red
Mutual
60 min. Democratic National Committee Program Norman Corwin's election-eve program[le] [3]: 387 [9]: 166–167 [264]: 294 [270][271] Yes Yes
November 21 CBS 30 min. This Is My Best "Around the World in Eighty Days"[lf] [272][273] Yes Yes
November 26 Blue 30 min. Stop or Go [lg] [274] Yes Yes
December 10 NBC 30 min. The University of Chicago Round Table [3]: 387 [9]: 690 [53] Yes Yes
December 15 AFRS 30 min. G.I. Journal [129][275] Yes Yes
December 19 CBS 30 min. This Is My Best "The Plot to Overthrow Christmas"[lh] [3]: 387 [272][273] Yes Yes
December 24 Blue 60 min. Philco Radio Hall of Fame "The Happy Prince"[li] [3]: 387 [276] Yes Yes
December 25 AFRS 30 min. AFRS Presents "The Happy Prince"[lj] [3]: 388  Yes Yes
December 30 AFRS 30 min. Command Performance [lk] [277] Yes

1945

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 28 CBS 60 min. The Kate Smith Show [3]: 389  Yes
January 29–30 NYC radio 30 min. The Suspect Transcribed dramatization promoting the film[ll] [278] Yes
March 13 CBS 30 min. This Is My Best "Heart of Darkness"[lm] [1]: 136–137 [272][273] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 20 CBS 30 min. This Is My Best "Miss Dilly Says No"[ln] [3]: 389 [272][279] Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 26 CBS 60 min. Lux Radio Theatre "A Tale of Two Cities"[lo] [3]: 389 [245][280] Yes Yes
March 27 CBS 30 min. This Is My Best "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs"[lp] [3]: 389 [281] Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 3 CBS 30 min. This Is My Best "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz"[lq] [3]: 390 [282] Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 10 CBS 30 min. This Is My Best "The Master of Ballantrae"[lr] [3]: 390 [283] Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 12 Blue Memorial tribute to FDR Special broadcast on the evening of Franklin D. Roosevelt's death [ls] [284][285] Yes Yes
April 13 CBS Eulogy for FDR Special broadcast on the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt[lt] [3]: 390 [117]: 242  Yes Yes
April 17 CBS 30 min. This Is My Best "I Will Not Go Back"[lu] [3]: 390 [272][286] Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 24 CBS 30 min. This Is My Best "Anything Can Happen"[lv] [287][288] Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 25 Blue 30 min. Significance of the UN Conference on International Organization Dramatic program by Ben Hecht presented on opening day[lw] [290] Yes
April 29 Blue 30 min. Orson Welles Peace Conference Forum [lx] [289][291][292] Yes
May 6 Blue 30 min. Orson Welles Peace Conference Forum [289][293] Yes
May 7 V-E Day Program [ly] [3]: 390  Yes
May 13 Blue 30 min. Orson Welles Peace Conference Forum [289][294] Yes
May 17 AFRS 30 min. Command Performance "The Mercury Wonder Show"[lz][222] Yes Yes
May 20 Blue 30 min. Orson Welles Peace Conference Forum [289][295] Yes
May 27 Blue 30 min. Orson Welles Peace Conference Forum [289][296] Yes
June 3 Blue 30 min. Orson Welles Peace Conference Forum [289][297] Yes
June 10 Blue 30 min. Orson Welles Peace Conference Forum [ma] [289][299] Yes
July 17 NBC 30 min. French Press: The Liberation of Paris [mb] [1]: 140 [129] Yes Yes
July 24 CBS 30 min. Columbia Presents Corwin "New York: A Tapestry for Radio"[mc] [300] Yes Yes
July 26 AFRS 30 min. Command Performance [md] [222] Yes Yes
August 9 Blue 30 min. America's Town Meeting of the Air "What Does the British Election Mean to Us?"[me] [1]: 140 [3]: 391  Yes Yes
August 14 CBS 15 min. Columbia Presents Corwin "Fourteen August"[mf] [1]: 140 [9]: 167  Yes Yes
August 14 AFRS 30 min. Command Performance [mg] [3]: 391  Yes
August 15 AFRS 90 min. Command Performance "Victory Extra"[mh] [222] Yes Yes
August 19 CBS 30 min. Columbia Presents Corwin "God and Uranium"[mi] [1]: 140 [9]: 167  Yes Yes
September 16 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [mj] [1]: 140 [301] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 18 AFRS 30 min. Tribute to FDR Rebroadcast of Welles's tribute to Franklin D. Roosevelt [mk] [302] Yes Yes Yes
September 23 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [ml] [1]: 141 [303][304] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 29 Pool 150 min. The Victory Chest Extra [mm] [305][306] Yes Yes
September 30 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 141 [307] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 7 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 141 [308] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 14 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 141 [309] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 21 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 141 [310] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 21 CBS 30 min. Request Performance [mn] [311] Yes Yes
October 28 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 141 [312] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 4 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [mo] [1]: 141 [144]: 366 [313] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 11 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [mp] [1]: 141 [314] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 18 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 141 [315] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
November 25 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 141 [316] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 2 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 141 [317] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 9 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [mq] [1]: 142 [303][318][319][320] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 16 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [321] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 16 ABC 30 min. World Christmas Festival "The Nativity According to St. Luke"[322] Yes
December 23 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [323] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
December 30 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [324][325] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
1945 Mutual 30 min. Exploring the Unknown "The Battle Never Ends"[mr] [3]: 388  Yes

1946

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
January 6 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [326] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 13 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [327] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 16 ABC 60 min. Esquire's 1946 All-American Jazz Band Concert [ms] [328][329] Yes Yes
January 20 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [330] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
January 27 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [331] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 3 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [332] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 10 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [333] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 17 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [334] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
February 24 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [335] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 1 CBS 30 min. The Danny Kaye Show [mt] [336] Yes Yes
March 3 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [337] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 3 NBC 30 min. The Fred Allen Show Parody of Les Misérables [mu] [338] Yes Yes
March 10 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [53] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 15 CBS 60 min. The Kate Smith Show [3]: 394  Yes
March 17 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [339] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 20 CBS 30 min. The Adventures of Ellery Queen "The Adventure of the Man Who Waited"[mv] [3]: 394 [9]: 9 [340] Yes
March 24 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 142 [341] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
March 31 CBS 30 min. The Radio Reader's Digest "Back for Christmas"[1]: 143 [342] Yes Yes
March 31 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [324][343] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 7 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [324][344] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 14 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [324][345] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 16 CBS 30 min. Inner Sanctum Mysteries "The Lonely Hearts Killer"[346] Yes
April 21 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [324][347] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
April 28 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 143 [348] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 5 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 143 [349] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 12 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [mw] [1]: 143 [350] Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 19 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 143 [351] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
May 26 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 143 [352] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 2 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 143 [353] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 7 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "Around the World in Eighty Days"[mx] [8]: 66 [354] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 9 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 143 [355] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 10 NBC 45 min. Mary Margaret McBride Interview[356] Yes
June 14 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "The Count of Monte Cristo"[my] [8]: 66 [357] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 16 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 143 [358] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 21 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "The Hitch-Hiker"[mz] [3]: 396 [359] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 23 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [na] [1]: 143 [303][360][361] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 28 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "Jane Eyre"[nb] [3]: 396 [362] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
June 30 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [nc] [3]: 397 [364] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 5 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "A Passenger to Bali"[nd] [3]: 397 [365] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 7 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [ne] [1]: 144 [366] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 12 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "The Search for Henri Le Fevre"[nf] [3]: 397 [367] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 14 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 144 [368] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 19 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "Life With Adam"[ng] [3]: 397 [369] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 21 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [nh] [1]: 144 [303][370] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 26 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "The Moat Farm Murder"[ni] [3]: 398 [371] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
July 28 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries First episode about the Isaac Woodard case [nj] [1]: 144 [264]: 329–331 [303][360][372][373] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 2 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "The Golden Honeymoon"[nk] [3]: 398 [374] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 4 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries Second episode about the Isaac Woodard case[1]: 145 [264]: 329–331 [375] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 9 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "Hell on Ice"[nl] [3]: 398 [359] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 11 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries Third episode about the Isaac Woodard case[1]: 145 [264]: 329–331 [376] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 16 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "Abednego the Slave"[nm] [3]: 399 [377][378] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 18 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries Fourth episode about the Isaac Woodard case[1]: 145 [264]: 329–3314 [379] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 23 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "I'm a Fool" / "The Tell-Tale Heart"[nn] [3]: 399 [380] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 25 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries Fifth and last episode about the Isaac Woodard case[no] [1]: 145 [381] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
August 30 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "Moby Dick"[np] [3]: 399 [382] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 1 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [nq] [1]: 146 [264]: 331 [383] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 6 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "The Apple Tree"[nr] [3]: 399 [377] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 8 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 146 [384] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 13 CBS 30 min. The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air "King Lear"[ns] [3]: 399 [8]: 67 [377] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 15 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 146 [385] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 22 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 146 [386] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
September 29 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries [1]: 146 [387] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
October 6 ABC 15 min. Orson Welles Commentaries Last show of the series[1]: 146 [388]
Last of Welles's own radio shows[3]: 401 
Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

1947

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
May 29 AFRS 60 min. Command Performance "Anniversary Program" [nt] [1]: 146 [222] Yes Yes

1948

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
October 13 AFRS 30 min. Mail Call Assembled program [nu] [1]: 22 [3]: 402 [178][389][390] Yes Yes

1950

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
October 15 WNBC 60 min. This Is the U.N.: Its Actual Voices [nv] [391] Yes Yes

1951–1952

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Art is Long and Lime is Fleeting" [nw] [1]: 146 [9]: 663  Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Blackmail is a Nasty Word"
(also known as "Givrolet")[3]: 408 [392][393][394]
Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Blue Bride"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Blue Caribou"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Bohemian Star"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Casino Royale"[3]: 408 [395] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Cherchez la Gem"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Clay Pigeon"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Dark Enchantress"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Dead Candidate" (also known as
"Buzzo Gospel")[nx] [3]: 408 [392][396][397]
Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Double Double Trouble" (also known as
"Double Double Cross")[392][393][398]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Earl on Troubled Waters"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Elusive Vermeer"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Every Frame Has a Silver Lining"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Faith, Lime and Charity"[392][393][399] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Five-Thousand Pengoes and a Kiss"[393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Fool's Gold"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Golden Fleece"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Greek Meets Greek"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Hard Way"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Harry Lime Joins the Circus"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Honeymoon"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Horse Play"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Hyacinth Patrol"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "In Pursuit of a Ghost"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "It's a Knockout"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "It's in the Bag"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Little One"[3]: 408  Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Love Affair"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Man of Mystery"[ny] [5][392]: 462 [394] Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Mexican Hat Trick"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Murder on the Riviera"
(also known as "Cigarettes")[392][393][394]
Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "New York, 1942" (also known as "Hand of Glory")[3]: 408  Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "A Night in a Harem"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "An Old Moorish Custom"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Operation Music Box"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Painted Smile"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Paris is Not the Same"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Pearls of Bohemia"[3]: 408 [392][400] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Pleasure Before Business"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Professor Regrets"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Rogue's Holiday"[3][392]: 408  Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Secret of Making Gold"[3]: 408 [401] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "See Naples and Live"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Suzie's Cue"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "The Third Woman"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Three Farthings for Your Thoughts"[3]: 408  Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "A Ticket to Tangier"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Too Many Crooks"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Turnabout is Fair Play"[392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Two Is Company"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Violets Sweet Violets"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Vive la Chance"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Voodoo"[3]: 408 [392][393] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Adventures of Harry Lime "Work of Art"[3]: 408 [392] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Bathtub"[nz] [1]: 146 [3]: 409 [11]: 45 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Bedsheet" (also known as
"The Spotted Bedsheet")[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Blue .22" (also known as
"The 22 Caliber Pistol")[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Brass Button"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Brickbat"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Canvas Bag"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Canvas Shopping Bag"
(also known as "The Shopping Bag")[402][403]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Car Tyre"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Chain" (also known as
"A Piece of Iron Chain")[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Champagne Glass"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "A Dictionary"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "Four Small Bottles"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Gladstone Bag"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "Glass Shards"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Hammer"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Hammerhead"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Jack Handle"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "A Jar of Acid"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Key"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Khaki Handkerchief"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "Kilroy Was Here"
(also known as "The Notes")[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "A Lady's Shoe"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Leather Bag"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Letter"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Mallet"
(also known as "The Wooden Mallet",
"The Old Wooden Mallet")[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "Mandolin Strings"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "Meat Juice"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Open End Wrench"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "A Pair of Spectacles"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Pink Powder Puff"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Prescription"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Raincoat"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Receipt"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Sashcord"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Scarf"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Service Card"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Sheath Knife"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Shilling"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Silencer"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Sleeveless, Unstitched Baby Jacket"
(also known as "The Wool Jacket")[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Small White Boxes"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Straight Razor"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Tan Shoe"[1]: 149 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Telegram"[1]: 150 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Tin of Weed Killer"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The .32 Calibre Bullet" (also known as
"The Centre-Fire Bullet")[1]: 150 [3]: 409 [403]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Trunk"[402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "Twin Messengers of Death"
(also known as "Two Bullets'")[402][403]
Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "The Walking Stick"[1]: 150 [3]: 409 [402][403] Yes Yes
1951–1952 Synd 30 min. The Black Museum "A Woman's Pigskin Glove"[402][403] Yes Yes

1952

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
September 2 BBC Portrait of Robert Flaherty [oa] [3]: 411 [404]: 19  Yes Yes

1953

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
April BBC 60 min. Song of Myself [ob] [3]: 412  Yes Yes
October 4 Synd 30 min. Theatre Royale "The Queen of Spades"[oc] [3]: 412 [405][406] Yes Yes

1954

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
December 21 BBC 30 min. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes "The Final Problem"[od] [3]: 410 [407][408] Yes Yes

1956

[edit]
Date Network Length Series Details Surviving recording Involvement
Actor Director Producer Writer
October 17 Synd 60 min. Tomorrow [oe] [409][410] Yes Yes
November 13 NBC 60 min. Biography in Sound "They Knew Alexander Woollcott"[of] [411][412][413] Yes Yes

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Welles is introduced to director Knowles Entrikin by Paul Stewart, and is given his first job on radio.
  2. ^ Educational program broadcast every weekday afternoon, required listening in many U.S. classrooms. Cast: Ray Collins, Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Parker Fennelly, Betty Garde, Mitzi Gould, Chester Stratton, other actors in the New York radio pool.
  3. ^ Paul Stewart sees Welles's lead performance in Archibald MacLeish's play Panic and recommends him to director Homer Fickett. Welles auditions for and wins a place in The March of Time repertory company. In his debut appearance, Welles performs a scene from Panic for a news report on the March 14–16 stage production; for another report he voices all five Dionne quintuplets. Cast: Westbrook Van Voorhis (announcer), Bill Adams (FDR), Agnes Moorehead (Eleanor Roosevelt), Maurice Tarplin (Churchill), Dwight Weist (Hitler), Peter Donald (Chamberlain), Ted de Corsia (Mussolini), Orson Welles, Ray Collins, Arnold Moss, Paul Stewart, Will Geer, Alice Frost, Martin Gabel, Jeanette Nolan, others. Museum of Broadcasting: "Welles contributed to the series intermittently from 1935 to 1938 … Little written documentation exists".
  4. ^ Patriotic documentary drama created by William S. Paley. Cast: Orson Welles, Ray Collins, Joseph Cotten, Betty Garde, Agnes Moorehead, Howard Barlow (music), Dwight Cooke (producer), Max Wylie (producer).
  5. ^ Welles becomes a regular member of the prestigious company of actors when the series becomes a daily program.
  6. ^ Dramatization of the life of Frédéric Chopin, with readings by Welles and music by Alexander Semmler. Sponsored by the National Tuberculosis Association Christmas seal campaign.
  7. ^ Dramatizations of American history. Cast: John McIntire, Jeanette Nolan, Agnes Moorehead, Kenny Delmar, Edwin Jerome, Ray Collins, Orson Welles, Karl Swenson, Ted Jewett, Jack Smart, Paul Stewart, Bill Johnstone, Frank Readick, Raymond Edward Johnson, Ted de Corsia, Everett Sloane, Luis Van Rooten. Welles: "After the show DuPont complained that I injected political commentary about Rockefeller, and they were right. I had made their wonderful old gentleman seem like Scrooge."
  8. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (poetry), Ken Wood's Orchestra and Stuart Churchill, tenor (music). Broadcast four days a week (Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday). Paid $50 for each broadcast, Welles is discharged when, exhausted beyond endurance, he delivers an Elizabeth Barrett Browning sonnet in double-talk.
  9. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Ray Collins, Martha Scott, Earle McGill (director).
  10. ^ Two one-act plays: A Comedy of Danger by Richard Hughes, and The Finger of God by Percival Wilde. Directed by Myron Sattler. Cast: Orson Welles, Eustace Wyatt, Arnold Moss.
  11. ^ Orson Welles (The Great McCoy, narration) succeeds Jack Smart, who begins his career in Hollywood films. Broadcast from New York.
  12. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (The Great McCoy, narration). Broadcast from Chicago.
  13. ^ Cast: Alexander Scourby, Edgerton Paul, George Gaul, Hiram Sherman, Orson Welles (host), Rosamond Pinchot, Sydney Smith, Irving Reis (director), Bernard Herrmann (music).
  14. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (The Great McCoy, narration). Broadcast from Chicago.
  15. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (The Great McCoy, narration). Broadcast from Chicago.
  16. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (The Great McCoy, narration). Broadcast from the Chicago Civic Opera House.
  17. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (The Great McCoy, narration). Broadcast from Chicago.
  18. ^ Cast: Edgerton Paul, Edwin Jerome (narrator), George Duthie, Hiram Sherman, Irving Reis (writer), Joseph Cotten, Laura Hale, Miss Frank Hall, Orson Welles (host), Santos Ortega, Shirley Oliver, Sydney Smith, Virginia Welles, Whitford Kane, Irving Reis (director), Bernard Herrmann (music).
  19. ^ Weekly dramatic serial produced by the Radio Division of the Federal Theatre Project, broadcast Sunday afternoons February 23 – September 16. The Racine Journal-Times: "Life on the Erie Canal in the days when 'the canal' was young … The story of the canal through the adventures of a boy, who runs away from a county home to wild excitement with a gentleman gambler who is killed in a saloon fight, and then with a strolling actor, one Augustus Crabtree, tragedian". Cast: Arthur Anderson (Peter Absolute), Ray Collins (Augustus Crabtree), Julian Noa, Jeanette Nolan, Orson Welles (Rex Dakolar), David Howard (writer), Tom Hutchinson (director), Bill Meeder (organist).
  20. ^ Cast: House Jameson (Voice of Studio Director), Orson Welles (Voice of Announcer), Adelaide Klein (Voice of Dead Woman), Carleton G. Young (Voice of 1st Messenger), Burgess Meredith (Voice of Orator), Dwight Weist (Voice of 2nd Messenger), others; Bernard Herrmann (music), Irving Reis (director).
  21. ^ Adapted by Welles from the Victor Hugo novel. Cast: Orson Welles (Jean Valjean), Alan Devitt (Judge), Agnes Moorehead (Old Woman, Madame Magloire), Frank Readick (Bishop of Digne), others.
  22. ^ Cast: Hiram Sherman (Letter Deliverer, Factory Official, Idler who torments Fantine), Betty Garde (Favourite), Alice Frost (Fantine), Agnes Moorehead (Marguerite), Ray Collins (Traveling Dentist, Fauchelevent), Martin Gabel (Inspector Javert), Orson Welles (Jean Valjean [Monsieur Madeleine]).
  23. ^ Cast: William Johnstone (Bishop of Digne, Prosecutor), Hiram Sherman (Man who announces Javert, Judicial Clerk), Orson Welles (Jean Valjean [Monsieur Madeleine], Champmathieu), Martin Gabel (Inspector Javert), Alice Frost (Fantine), Adelaide Klein (Nun), Ray Collins (Judge), others; Milton Katims, musical director.
  24. ^ Cast: William Johnstone (Judge, Second Inn Customer), Orson Welles (Jean Valjean), Martin Gabel (Inspector Javert), Ray Collins (Thenardier), Agnes Moorehead (Madame Thenardier) Hiram Sherman (First Inn Customer), Estelle Levy (Cosette).
  25. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (Captain Matt Denant), others.
  26. ^ Cast: William Johnstone (Police Officer, Marius Pontmercy), Everett Sloane (Police Lieutenant, Gyribier the Gravedigger), Ray Collins (Fauchelevent), Orson Welles (Jean Valjean), Estelle Levy (Cosette at age eight), Peggy Allen (Prioress), Hiram Sherman (Priest at the Grave), Virginia Welles (Older Cosette), Martin Gabel (Inspector Javert).
  27. ^ Cast: Martin Gabel (Inspector Javert), Orson Welles (Jean Valjean), Virginia Welles (Cosette), Ray Collins (Police Officer, First Policeman), William Johnstone (Marius Pontmercy), Hiram Sherman (First Revolutionary, Second Policeman), others.
  28. ^ Cast: Tallulah Bankhead, Cedric Hardwicke, Orson Welles, Mark Smith, Estelle Winwood, Robert Strauss, Helen Menken, Burford Hampden, John Griggs, Ray Collins, Niles Welch, Sydney Smith, Conway Tearle (narrator); music by Victor Bey.
  29. ^ Cast: William Johnstone (Marius Pontmercy, Prosecutor), Orson Welles (Jean Valjean, Prisoner accused of being Jean Valjean), Ray Collins (Judge who sentences Valjean, Judge at Arras), Hiram Sherman ("Guilty!", Police Officer, Third Judge), Frank Readick (Bishop of Digne).
  30. ^ By Edward Hale Bierstadt. Cast: Orson Welles (Lamont Cranston/The Shadow), Agnes Moorehead (Margot Lane), William Johnstone, Jeanette Nolan, Ray Collins (triples), Paul Stewart (Paul Gordon), Elia Kazan, Everett Sloane (quadruples), Paul Huber (commercial spokesman), Frank Readick (opening and closing voice), Arthur Whiteside (announcer), Clark Andrews (producer); Martin Gabel, Bourne Ruthrauff (directors).
  31. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Arthur Whiteside (announcer).
  32. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Arthur Whiteside (announcer).
  33. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Arthur Whiteside (announcer).
  34. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  35. ^ Produced by the Radio Division of the Federal Theatre Project
  36. ^ Historical drama series produced by the Radio Division of the Federal Theatre Project
  37. ^ Dramatization of Miss Middleton's Lover by Laura Jean Libbey, produced by the Radio Division of the Federal Theatre Project
  38. ^ Cast: Orson Welles and Martin Gabel (performing the quarrel scene from Julius Caesar), Kirsten Flagstad with Edwin McArthur (piano), Milton Cross (host), NBC Symphony Orchestra, Frank Black (conductor), Ben Grauer (announcer).
  39. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead.
  40. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead.
  41. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  42. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  43. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  44. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  45. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Everett Sloane, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  46. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  47. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Ray Collins, Margot Stevenson, Jeanette Nolan, Arthur Vinton, Everett Sloane, Paul Stewart, Thomas Coffin Cook, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  48. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  49. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Carl Frank (William Devens), Ned Wever (Alton Parker), Peggy Allenby (Helen Parker), Alan Devitt (Hartney Clays), Dwight Weist (Commissioner Weston, Detective Dixon), Kenneth Delmar (Jason), Paul Stewart (Red Collins), Paul Huber (Lawrence), Everett Sloane (Defense Attorney), Bennett Kilpack (Judge Rusko), Ken Roberts (announcer), John Barclay. After the closing commercial the announcer credits Orson Welles of the Mercury Theatre as performing the role of The Shadow; Welles speaks briefly before the live studio audience and thanks listeners; Agnes Moorehead suggests listeners phone sponsor Blue Coal and say how much they have enjoyed the series.
  50. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson (Margot Lane), Ken Roberts (announcer). Summer series transcribed for syndicated broadcast.
  51. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  52. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  53. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  54. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  55. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer), Rosa Rio (organ), Frank Readick (opening and closing laughter), William Johnstone (triples), Dwight Weist, Arthur Vinton (doubles), Alan Devitt (doubles).
  56. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  57. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  58. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson (Margo Lane), Ken Roberts (announcer).
  59. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  60. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer, performer playing a tenor), John McGovern, Rosa Rio (organist), William Johnstone (triples), Ray Collins, Paul Stewart (doubles), Jeanette Nolan, Kenny Delmar (doubles), Dwight Weist (announcer, performer).
  61. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  62. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer), Edwin Jerome (doubles), Arthur Vinton, Alan Devitt (triples), Paul Stewart (doubles), Kenny Delmar (doubles), Rosa Rio (organist).
  63. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Dwight Weist, Everett Sloane, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  64. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson (Margo Lane), Dwight Weist, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  65. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Alan Reed, Alan Devitt (doubles, announcer), Sheldon Reynolds, Ray Collins, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  66. ^ Adapted from the novel by Bram Stoker. Cast: Orson Welles (Dr. John Seward, Count Dracula), Elizabeth Fuller (Lucy Westenra). George Coulouris (Jonathan Harker), Agnes Moorehead (Mina Harker), Martin Gabel (Dr. Van Helsing), Ray Collins (Russian Captain), Karl Swenson (Mate). Premier episode of the series that after nine episodes became known as The Mercury Theatre on the Air.
  67. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  68. ^ Adapted from the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson. Cast: Orson Welles (adult Jim Hawkins, Long John Silver), Arthur Anderson (Jim Hawkins), George Coulouris (Captain Smollett), Ray Collins (Ben Gunn), Agnes Moorehead (Mrs. Hawkins), Eustace Wyatt (Squire Trelawney), Alfred Shirley (Blind Pew); with William Alland, Stephen Fox, Richard Wilson.
  69. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Alan Devitt, Kenny Delmar, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  70. ^ Adapted from the novel by Charles Dickens. Cast: Orson Welles (Dr. Alexandre Manette, Sydney Carton), Mary Taylor (Lucie Manette), Eustace Wyatt (Clerk), Edgar Barrier (Charles Darnay), Maratin Gabel (Mr. Jarvis Lorry), Frank Readick (Ernest Defarge), Betty Gard (Madame Defarge), Erskine Sanford (the President), Ray Collins (Prosecutor).
  71. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ray Collins, Paul Stewart, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  72. ^ Adapted from the novel by John Buchan. Cast: Orson Welles (Richard Hannay, Marmaduke Jopley), others.
  73. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  74. ^ Adaptations of three short stories. Orson Welles, Edgar Barrier and William Alland perform "I'm a Fool" by Sherwood Anderson. Ray Collins, Brenda Forbes and Virginia Welles (as Anna Stafford) perform "The Open Window" by Saki. Betty Garde, Kingsley Colton, Estelle Levy and Orson Welles perform "My Little Boy" by Carl Ewald.
  75. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer), Alan Devitt, Arthur Vinton, Dwight Weist.
  76. ^ Adapted from the play by John Drinkwater, supplemented by excerpts from Lincoln's speeches and letters. Cast: Orson Welles (Abraham Lincoln), Ray Collins (Grant), Edward Jerome (General Lee) George Coulouris (Hook), Joseph Cotten (Seward), Carl Frank (Scott), Karl Swenson (Hay), William Alland (Dennis) and Agnes Moorehead (Mrs. Lincoln).
  77. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  78. ^ Adapted from the play by Arthur Schnitzler. Cast: Orson Welles, Alice Frost, Arlene Francis, Helen Lewis, Ray Collins.
  79. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  80. ^ Adapted from the novel by Alexandre Dumas. Cast: Orson Welles (Edmond Dantès), Ray Collins (Abbé Faria), George Coulouris (Monsieur Morrel), Edgar Barrier (de Villefort), Eustace Wyatt (Caderousse), Paul Stewart (Paul Dantés) Sidney Smith (Mondego), Richard Wilson (the Officer), Virginia Welles, as Anna Stafford (Mercédès), William Alland (Merchant).
  81. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer), Alan Reed, Alan Devitt.
  82. ^ Adapted from the novel by G. K. Chesterton. Cast: Orson Welles (Gabriel Syme), Eustace Wyatt (President Sunday), Ray Collins (the Professor), George Coulouis (Mr. Lucian Gregory), Edgar Barrier (the Marquis), Paul Stewart (Gogol), Joseph Cotten (Dr. Bull), Erskine Sanford (Secretary), Aland Devitt (Witherspoon), Virginia Welles, as Anna Stafford (Rosamond).
  83. ^ The series First Person Singular continues under a new name, beginning with the Mercury Theatre's stage triumph. Cast: H. V. Kaltenborn (Commentator), Orson Welles (Brutus), Martin Gabel (Cassius), George Coulouris (Antony), Joseph Holland (Caesar); music by Marc Blitzstein.
  84. ^ Adaptation of the play by William Shakespeare. Cast: Orson Welles, Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer), Paul Stewart, Juano Hernández.
  85. ^ Adapted from the novel by Charlotte Brontë. Music by Bernard Herrmann. Welles used the disc to prepare the 1943 film in which he starred, and the acetate original was irreparably damaged.
  86. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (last performance as The Shadow), Margot Stevenson, Ken Roberts (announcer).
  87. ^ Adapted from the play by William Gillette. Cast: Orson Welles (Sherlock Holmes), Ray Collins (Dr. Watson), Mary Taylor (Alice Faulkner), Brenda Forbes (Madge Larrabee), Edgar Barrier (James Larrabee), Morgan Farley (Inspector Forman), Richard Wilson (Jim Craigin), Eustace Wyatt (Professor Moriarty).
  88. ^ Adapted from the novel by Charles Dickens. Cast: Orson Welles (Oliver Twist, Fagin), others.
  89. ^ Adapted from the book by Edward Ellsberg. Cast: Orson Welles, Al Swenson, Bud Collyer, Dan Seymour (announcer), Frank Readick, Howard Smith, Joseph Cotten, Ray Collins, Thelma Schnee, William Alland, Bernard Herrmann (composer, conductor), Davidson Taylor (production supervisor).
  90. ^ Adaptation of the novel by Booth Tarkington. Cast: Orson Welles (William Sylvanus Baxter), Betty Garde (Mrs. Baxter), Ray Collins (Mr. Parcher), Mary Wickes (Mrs. Parcher), Joseph Cotten (Genesis), Ruth Ford (Lola Pratt, the Baby Talk Girl), Marilyn Erskine (Jane), Elliott Reid (Cousin George), Pattee Chapmen (Rannie), Morgan Farley (Joe Bullitt).
  91. ^ Adapted from the novel by Jules Verne. Cast: Orson Welles (Phineas Fogg), Ray Collins (Mr. Fix), Edgar Barrier (Passepartout), Eustace Wyatt (Ralph), Frank Readick (Stuart), Arlene Francis (Princess Aouda), Stefan Schnabel (Parsee), Al Swenson (the Captain), William Alland (the Officer).
  92. ^ Adaptation of the novel by H. G. Wells. Cast: Orson Welles (host, Professor Richard Pierson), Dan Seymour (announcer), Paul Stewart (associate producer, adaptor, performer: Studio announcer, Third Studio Announcer), Frank Readick (Reporter Carl Phillips, Radio operator 2X2L), Kenny Delmar (Policeman at farm, Captain Lansing, Secretary of the Interior, Bayonne radio operator), Ray Collins (Farmer Wilmuth, Harry McDonald the radio VP, Rooftop radio announcer), Carl Frank (Second studio announcer, Fascist stranger), Richard Wilson (Brig. General Montgomery Smith, Officer 22nd Field Artillery, Langham Field), William Alland (Meridian room announcer, Field artillery gunner), Stefan Schnabel (Field artillery observer), William Herz (Newark radio operator, Radio operator 8X3R), Howard Smith (Bomber Lt. Voght), Bernard Herrmann (composer, conductor), John Houseman (producer, adaptor, script editor), Howard E. Koch (adaptor), Davidson Taylor (production supervisor), Ora Nichols (sound effects), Ray Kremer (sound effects), Jim Rogan (sound effects), John Dietz (sound engineer)/
  93. ^ Adaptation of the novella Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, with the following cast: Orson Welles (Author, Ernest Kurtz), Ray Collins (Marlow), Alfred Shirley (Accountant), George Coulouris (Assistant Manager), Edgar Barrier (Second Manager), William Alland (Agent), Virginia Welles, as Anna Stafford (Kurtz's Intended Bride), Frank Readick (Tchiatosov). Adaptation of the play Life With Father by Clarence Day, with the following cast: Orson Welles (Father), Mildred Natwick (Mother), Mary Wickes (Employment Office Manager), Alice Frost (Margaret), Arthur Anderson (young Clarence Day).
  94. ^ Adapted from a story by I. A. R. Wylie. Cast: Orson Welles (host), Helen Hayes, Carleton Young, Morgan Farley.
  95. ^ Adapted for radio by Ellis St. Joseph, from his own short novel. Cast: Orson Welles (Reverend Dr. Ralph Walkes), George Coulouris (Capt. English), Frank Readick (Mr. Stagg), Eustace Wyatt (Mr. Wrangle), Ray Collins (Van Matsys), Alfred Shirley (Mr. Chisholm).
  96. ^ Adapted from a story by I. A. R. Wylie. Cast: Orson Welles (host), Helen Hayes, Carleton Young, Morgan Farley.
  97. ^ Adapted from the novel by Charles Dickens. Cast: Orson Welles (Sergeant Buzzfuzz, Mr. Jingle), Ray Collins (Samuel Pickwick), Alfred Shirley (Augustus Snodgrass), Frank Readick, Elliott Reid, Edgar Barrier, Eustace Wyatt, Brenda Forbes, others.
  98. ^ Adapted from the novel by Booth Tarkington. Cast: Orson Welles (Clarence), others.
  99. ^ Adapted from the novel by Thornton Wilder.
  100. ^ Adapted from the novel by Daphne du Maurier, its first adaptation for any medium. Cast: Orson Welles (Max de Winter), Margaret Sullavan (Mrs. de Winter), Mildred Natwick (Mrs. Danvers), Ray Collins (Frank Crawley), George Coulouris (Captain Searle), Frank Readick (the Idiot), Alfred Shirley (Frith), Eustace Wyatt (Coroner), Agnes Moorehead (Mrs. Van Hopper). Followed by an interview with Daphne du Maurier, speaking from London. Herrmann's score is the basis of his score for the 1943 film Jane Eyre. Sponsored continuation of The Mercury Theatre on the Air.
  101. ^ Adapted from the play by Dodie Smith. Cast: Orson Welles (Roger Hilton), Beatrice Lillie (Dorothy Hilton), Jane Wyatt (Catherine Hilton).
  102. ^ Adapted from the story by Charles Dickens. Cast: Orson Welles (Ebenezer Scrooge), Hiram Sherman (Bob Cratchit), Brenda Forbes (Mrs. Cratchit), Arthur Anderson (Ghost of Christmas Past), Eustace Wyatt (Ghost of Christmas Present), Frank Readick (Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come), Alfred Shirley (Marley's Ghost), Joseph Cotten (Scrooge's nephew Fred), Virginia Welles, as Anna Stafford (Belle), Kingsley Colton (Tiny Tim), George Spelldon (Mr. Fezziwig), Alice Frost (Charwoman), Ernest Chappell (Announcer).
  103. ^ Adapted from the novel by Ernest Hemingway. Cast: Orson Welles (Frederick Henry), Katharine Hepburn (Catherine).
  104. ^ Adapted from the play by Elmer Rice. Cast: Orson Welles (George Simon), Gertrude Berg (Mrs. Simon), Aline MacMahon (Regina Gordon), Ray Collins, Arlene Francis, Joseph Cotten, Erskine Sloane, Frank Readick, Edgar Barrier, Stephen Roberts, William Alland, others. Remarks by legal advisor Sam Leibowitz.
  105. ^ Adapted from the novel by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall. Cast: Orson Welles (Captain Bligh), Carl Frank (Roger Byam), Joseph Cotten (Fletcher Christian), Ray Collins (Thomas Birkitt), Frank Readick (John Fryer), Myron McCormick (James Morrison), Edgar Barrier (William Purcell), Richard Wilson (Matthew Thompson), William Alland (Mr. Samuel), Memo Holt (Tehani). Welles introduces Dorothy Hall, an amateur radio operator from Queens, Long Island, New York, who helped the 214 residents of Pitcairn Island in July 1938 after false reports of a typhoid epidemic closed the harbor and left them without food and medical supplies.
  106. ^ Adapted from the novel by Barry Benefield. Cast: Orson Welles (Frank Fippany), Burgess Meredith, Ray Collins (Hibbard), Frank Readick, Joseph Cotten, Agnes Moorehead, Everett Sloane, William Alland, Richard Wilson, others.
  107. ^ Kickoff of the second annual fundraising drive for the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis in the week preceding President Franklin D. Roosevelt's birthday. Broadcast coast-to-coast from Hollywood and New York. Cast: Eddie Cantor (host), Goodman Ace, Fred Allen, Amos and Andy, Jack Benny, Major Edward Bowes, Burns and Allen, Bing Crosby, Cecil B. DeMille, Deanna Durbin, Nelson Eddy, Jimmie Fidler, Jascha Haifetz, George Jessel, H. V. Kaltenborn, Andre Kostelanetz, Jeanette MacDonald, Joe Penner, Tyrone Power, Robert Ripley, Edward G. Robinson, Lanny Ross, Gladys Swarthout, Rudy Vallee, Orson Welles, many others.
  108. ^ Adapted from the novel by Jane Allen, pseudonym of Silvia Schulman, former secretary to David O. Selznick, and her friend Jane Shore. Selznick made strenuous efforts to prevent this broadcast. Cast: Orson Welles (Sidney Brandt), George S. Kaufman (John Tussler), Ilka Chase (Madge Lawrence), Tamara Geva (Sarya Tarn), Edgar Barrier (Bruce Anders), Everett Sloane (Roy), Myron McCormick (Leland Hayward), Ray Collins (Faye), Frank Readick (Palmer), Agnes Moorehead (Frances Smith), Joseph Cotten (Riley), William Alland (Assistant Director). The cast interviews Jane Allen.
  109. ^ Adapted from the novel by Sinclair Lewis. Cast: Orson Welles (Martin Arrowsmith), Helen Hayes (Leora Arrowsmith), Ray Collins (Professor Gottlieb), Frank Readick (Sondelius), Al Swenson (Henry Novak), Effie Palmer (Mrs. Tozer), Everett Sloane (Mr. Tozer), Carl Frank (Dr. Stoups), Frank Readick, Paul Stewart, others.
  110. ^ Adapted from the play by William Archer. Cast: Orson Welles (the Rajah), Madeleine Carroll (Lucilla Crespin), Robert Speaight (Major Crespin), Ray Collins (Dr. Traherne), Everett Sloane, Alfred Shirley, Eustace Wyatt, Edgar Barrier, others.
  111. ^ Adapted from the play by Arthur Hopkins and George Manker Watters. Cast: Orson Welles (Skid), Sam Levene (Lefty), Alice Frost, Arlene Francis, Ray Collins, Everett Sloane, Gus Schilling, others. Arthur Hopkins is interviewed.
  112. ^ Adapted from the novel by Philip Duffield Stong. Cast: Burgess Meredith, Orson Welles (Pat), Ray Collins, Everett Sloane, Effie Palmer, Alice Frost, Howard Teichmann, others. Interview with Philip Stong and comics Amos 'n' Andy (Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll).
  113. ^ Adapted from the novel by Gilbert Frankau. Cast: Orson Welles (Tom Rockingham), Mary Astor (Camilla Wethered), Ray Collins, Alfred Shirley, Everett Sloane, Eustace Wyatt, Howard Teichmann, others. Gilbert Frankau is interviewed.
  114. ^ Adapted from the novel by Dashiell Hammett. Cast: Orson Welles (Paul Madvig), Paul Stewart (Ned Beaumont), Ray Collins (Shad O'Rory) Myron McCormick (Senator Henry), Effie Palmer (Mrs. Madvig), Elspeth Eric (Opal), Elizabeth Morgan (Telephone Operator), Everett Sloane (Farr), Howard Smith (Jeff), Laura Baxter (Janet Henry), Edgar Barrier (Rusty). Interview with Warden Lewis E. Lawes of Sing Sing.
  115. ^ Adapted from the novel by P. C. Wren. Cast: Orson Welles (Beau Geste), Laurence Olivier (John Geste), Noah Beery (Sergeant Lajaune), Naomi Campbell (Isobel), Isabel Elson (Lady Brandon), Ray Collins, Eustace Wyatt, Howard Teichmann, Stefan Schnabel, others. Interview with J. Alphonse de Redenet, French Legionnaire.
  116. ^ Adapted from the play by Charles Bruce Millholland. Cast: Orson Welles (Oscar Jaffe), Elissa Landi (Lily Garland), Sam Levene (Owen O'Malley), Ray Collins (Oliver Webb), Gus Schilling (Max Jacobs), Howard Teichmann (Train Dispatcher), Edgar Kent (Clark), Everett Sloane and Teddy Bergman (the Two Players). Interview with Broadway press agent Richard Maney.
  117. ^ Adapted from the novel by Edna Ferber. Cast: Orson Welles (Captain Andy Hawks), Edna Ferber (Parthy Ann Hawks), Margaret Sullavan (Magnolia), Helen Morgan (Julie), William Johnstone (Gaylord Ravenal), Ray Collins (Windy), Grace Cotten (Kim), Everett Sloane (Schultzy), William Johnstone, Carl Frank, others. Interview with Edna Ferber.
  118. ^ Adapted from the novel by Victor Hugo. Cast: Orson Welles (Javert), Walter Huston (Jean Valjean), Ray Collins, Everett Sloane, Edgar Barrier, Alice Frost, William Alland, Richard Wilson, others.
  119. ^ Adapted from the novel by Pearl S. Buck. Cast: Orson Welles (I-wan), Anna May Wong (Peony), Ray Collins, Elliott Reid, Everett Sloane, Edgar Barrier, Howard Teichmann, others. Interview with Pearl S. Buck.
  120. ^ Adapted from the play by Noël Coward. Cast: Orson Welles (Elyot Chase), Gertrude Lawrence (Amanda Prynne), Naomi Campbell (Sibyl Chase), Robert Speaight (Victor Prynne), Edgar Barrier (Hotel Manager). Interview with Gertrude Lawrence.
  121. ^ A retelling of Stephen Vincent Benét's The Devil and Daniel Webster, by Honoré Morrow. Cast: Orson Welles (Daniel Webster), Joan Bennett (Carolyn LeRoy), Ray Collins, Everett Sloane, William Alland, others.
  122. ^ Adapted from the novel by John P. Marquand. Cast: Orson Welles (Jim Calder), Linda Watkins (Bella), Helen Craig (Pat), Agnes Moorehead (Aunt Sarah, Clothilde), Everett Sloane (Syd), Paul Stewart (Berg), Carl Frank (Joe Stowe), Ray Collins (Grandfather). John P. Marquand is interviewed.
  123. ^ Adapted from the play by Thornton Wilder. Cast: Orson Welles (Stage Manager), Patricia Newton, Agnes Moorehead, Effie Palmer, John Craven, Ray Collins, Everett Sloane, Parker Fennelly, Elliott Reid, others.
  124. ^ Adapted from the play by Porter Emerson Browne. Cast: Orson Welles (Pancho Lopez), Ida Lupino (Lucia Pell), Frank Readick (Gilbert Phebbs), Ray Collins (Uncle Phipps), William Alland (Morgan Pell), Diana Stevens (Dot), Everett Sloane (Louie), Edward Jerome (Pedro). Ida Lupino is interviewed.
  125. ^ "The Things We Have", about the great dream of American liberty, by Orson Welles. Cast: Orson Welles (James Scott, Professor Shurtz, O'Shaughnessy, The Limey, John Brown), Cornelia Otis Skinner (Mary Scott, Frau Shurtz, Lady Townsend, Polish woman, Susan B. Anthony); with Ray Collins, Frank Readick, Everett Sloane, Agnes Moorehead, Howard Smith, Kenneth Delmar, Kingsley Colton, William Harrigan. Cornelia Otis Skinner is interviewed.
  126. ^ Adapted from the play by Laurence Housman. Cast: Orson Welles (Prince Albert), Helen Hayes (Queen Victoria); with Eustace Wyatt, Ray Collins, Brenda Forbes, Agnes Moorehead, Alfred Shirley, Virginia Welles (as Anna Stafford). Interview with Helen Hayes.
  127. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (Theodore Kennedy, replacing John Barrymore), Elliott Lewis (host).
  128. ^ Public affairs panel discussion on the fate of the Federal Theatre Project, featuring Sen. Lewis B. Schwellenbach, Sen. Arthur Capper, four members of the U.S. House of Representatives, and Orson Welles. Welles stated, "We feel in the theatre that our very life's blood is the Federal Theatre. … We believe that we depend upon the Federal Theatre not only for new mediums but a new audience." Welles told Congressional opponents, "You are legislating against one of the most important things that ever happened in a Democratic government."
  129. ^ Adapted from the poem by Robert W. Service. Cast: Orson Welles (Bruce Yorke), Elliott Lewis (host).
  130. ^ Adapted from the novel by George du Maurier. Cast: Orson Welles (Peter Ibbetson), Helen Hayes (Mary, Duchess of Towers), John Emery (Colonel Ibbetson), Agnes Moorehead (Mrs. Deane), Vera Allen (Madame Seraskier), Everett Sloane (Crockett), Eustace Wyatt (Warden), Ray Collins (Governor), George Coulouris (Chaplain), Edgar Barrier (Judge), Richard Wilson (Turnkey), Kingsley Colton (Peter as a child), Betty Philson (Mary as a child).
  131. ^ Adapted from the play by Eugene O'Neill. Cast: Orson Welles (Richard Miller), Ray Collins (Nat Miller), Arlene Francis (Muriel McComber),[8]: 56  Agnes Moorehead, Everett Sloane, Joseph Cotten, Frank Readick, Paul Stewart, Richard Wilson, Howard Teichmann, Eda Heinmann. Interview with George Jean Nathan.
  132. ^ Adapted from the play by J. M. Barrie. Cast: Orson Welles (John Shand), Helen Hayes (Maggie Wylie), Alred Shirley (Alick Sylie), Everett Sloane (David Wylie), Agnes Moorehead (Countess), Naomi Campbell (Lady Sybil), Eustace Wyatt (Mr. Venables), Ray Collins (Willy Cameron).
  133. ^ Original radio play by Archibald MacLeish. Cast: Orson Welles, Burgess Meredith and 500 USC students at the Los Angeles Colosseum. Frank Brady: "Even though he was contractually free to do so (he could make three non-Campbell appearances) the sponsors became angry, claiming he was doing too much."
  134. ^ Adapted from the novel by Alexandre Dumas. Cast: Orson Welles (Edmond Dantés, the Count), Everett Sloane (Abbé Faria), Richard Wilson (a Jailer), Agnes Moorehead (Mercédès), George Coulouris, Edgar Barrier, Frank Readick, Ray Collins.
  135. ^ Adapted from the screenplay by John Howard Lawson and James M. Cain. Cast: Orson Welles (Pepe Le Moko), Paulette Goddard (Gabby), Ray Collins, Edgar Barrier, Benny Rubin Gus Schilling, Everett Sloane, William Alland, Richard Wilson, Bea Benaderet. Paulette Goddard is interviewed.
  136. ^ Adapted from the play by John Galsworthy. Cast: Orson Welles (Matt Denant), Wendy Barrie (Lady in the hotel), Ray Collins (Murdered cop, Forgiving Judge, Unforgiving Farmer), Jack Smart (another Cop, Farmhand), Edgar Barrier (Priest and Cabbie), Bea Benaderet (Girl in park, Woman at picnic), Harriet Kay (Maid), Mabel Albertson (Bessie), Benny Rubin (Man at picnic), William Alland, Richard Wilson.
  137. ^ Adapted from the play by Ferenc Molnár. Cast: Orson Welles (Liliom), Helen Hayes (Julie), Agnes Moorehead (Mrs. Muskat), Joan Tetzell (Marie), Frank Readick (Ficsur), Bill Adams (Sheriff), Joseph Cotten (the Cashier), Betty Feldson (Louise).
  138. ^ Adapted from the novel by Booth Tarkington. Cast: Orson Welles (George Amberson Minafer), Walter Huston (Eugene Morgan), Nan Sunderland (Isabel Amberson), Ray Collins (Fred Amberson), Eric Burtis (Young George Minafer), Marion Burns (Lucy Morgan), Everett Sloane (Archie Malloch Smith), Richard Wilson (Reverend Malloch Smith), Bea Benaderet (Mrs. Foster), William Alland (Neighbor), Elliott Reid. Interview with Walter Huston and Nan Sunderlund, Mrs. Walter Huston.
  139. ^ Adapted from the novel by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall. Cast: Orson Welles (Eugene de Laage), Mary Astor (Germaine de Laage), Ray Collins (Father Paul), Everett Sloane (Captain Nagle), Edgar Barrier (Terangi), Bea Benaderet (Marani), Eric Burgess (Mako), George Coulouris, William Alland, Richard Wilson, others.
  140. ^ Later known as The Fred Allen Show. One of the first of many guest appearances Welles makes on comedy-variety programs.
  141. ^ Adapted from the novel by Agatha Christie. First of several episodes scripted by Herman J. Mankiewicz. Cast: Orson Welles (Hercule Poirot, Dr. James Sheppard), Edna May Oliver (Caroline Sheppard), Alan Napier (Roger Ackroyd), Brenda Forbes (Mrs. Ackroyd), George Coulouris (Inspector Hempstead), Ray Collins (Mr. Raymond), Everett Sloane (Parker, the butler). Interview with Edna May Oliver.
  142. ^ Adapted from the novel by Robert Hichens. Cast: Orson Welles (Boris Androvsky), Madeleine Carroll (Domini Enfilden), Everett Sloane (Count Anteoni), George Coulouris (Father Roubier), Ray Collins (Lt. de Trevignac).
  143. ^ Adapted by Herman J. Mankiewicz from the novel by Sinclair Lewis and the play by Sidney Howard. Cast: Orson Welles (Sam Dodsworth), Fay Bainter (Fran Dodsworth), Nan Sunderland (Edith Cortright), Dennis Green (Major Lockert), Edgar Barrier (Kurt von Obersdorf), Ray Collins (Tubby), Natasha Latische (Mme. de Penalbe), Brenda Forbes (the Baroness). Fay Bainter and Nan Sunderland reprise the roles they created in the original Broadway production.
  144. ^ Adapted from the novel by James Hilton. Cast: Orson Welles (Father Perrault/High Lama), Sigrid Gurie (Chinese Woman).
  145. ^ Adapted from the novel by Hugh Walpole. Cast: Orson Welles (Benjie), Helen Hayes (Vanessa, Judith), Alfred Shirley (Adam), Eustace Wyatt (Uncle Will), Kingsley Colton (Benjie's son).
  146. ^ Adapted from the screenplay by Gladys Lehman. Last episode scripted by John Houseman, who leaves the Mercury Theatre after an argument with Welles.
    Cast: Orson Welles (Bill Reardon), Marie Wilson (Sally Reardon), Ray Collins (Nicky Shane), Everett Sloane (Grigson, the butler), Edgar Barrier (Jerry Marlow), Mary Taylor (Lola Fraser), Georgia Backus (Ann Calhoun), Frank Readick (the D.A.), Richard Wilson (Walter Fraser).
  147. ^ Adaptation of the novella by Charles Dickens. Cast: Orson Welles (Narrator), Lionel Barrymore (Ebenezer Scrooge), Everett Sloane, Frank Readick, Erskine Sanford, George Coulouris, Ray Collins, Georgia Backus, Bea Benaderet, Edgar Barrier, Richard Wilson, others.
  148. ^ Adaptation of the novel by Edna Ferber. Cast: Everett Sloane (Narrator), Orson Welles (Barney), Frances Dee (Lotta), Frank Readick, Ray Collins, Edgar Barrier, Georgia Backus, William Alland, others.
  149. ^ Adapted by Herman J. Mankiewicz from the novel by William Makepeace Thackeray. Cast: Orson Welles (the Marquis), Helen Hayes (Becky Sharp), John Hoysradt (Rawdon Crawley), Agnes Moorehead (Miss Crawley), Naomi Campbell (Amelia Sedley), Betty Garde, Eustace Wyatt, Joseph Holland, Edgar Kent, others.
  150. ^ Adaptation of an original story by Mary Eunice McCarthy and screenplay by Sidney Buchman. Cast: Orson Welles (Michael Grant), Loretta Young (Theodora Lynn), Ray Collins (Jed Waterbury), Everett Sloane (Father Grant), Clara Blandick (Aunt Rebecca), Frank Readick (Arthur Stevenson), Mary Taylor (Mrs. Stevenson), Georgia Backus (Mrs. Michael Grant), William Alland, Richard Wilson, others.
  151. ^ Adapted from the novel by A. J. Cronin. Cast: Orson Welles (Andrew Manson), Geraldine Fitzgerald (Christine), Everett Sloane (Dr. Ivory), Mary Taylor (Mrs. Laurence), Ray Collins (the Rector), Edgar Barrier (Dr. Freedman), George Coulouris (Dr. Denny), Georgia Backus (Mrs. Higgins), Robert Coote (Dr. Fred Hampton), William Alland, Richard Wilson, others.
  152. ^ Adapted from the short story by Samuel Hopkins Adams and motion picture screenplay by Robert Riskin. Cast: Orson Welles (Mr. Andrews), William Powell (Peter Grant), Miriam Hopkins (Ellie Andrews), Everett Sloane, Ray Collins, Richard Wilson, William Alland, others.
  153. ^ Adapted from the novel by Clemence Dane. Cast: Orson Welles (Harry Broome, Edmond Broome), Helen Hayes (Donna Broome), John Hoysradt (Steven Broome), Agnes Moorehead, Eustace Syatt, Everett Sloane, William Alland, Richard Wilson, others.
  154. ^ Adapted from the story "Opera Hat" by Clarence Budington Kelland and the motion picture screenplay by Robert Riskin. Cast: Orson Welles (Longfellow Deeds), Gertrude Lawrence (Brenda Bennett), Everett Sloane (John Cedar), Paul Stewart (Cornelius Cobb), Frank Readick (the Judge), Edgar Barrier (Mr. Buddington), Agnes Moorehead (a Pixilated Lady), Jane Hauston (a Pixilated Lady), Ernest Chappell (Bailiff), Edwin C. Hill (Ernest Chappell), with Richard Wilson, Howard Teichmann and Joseph Cotten as a number of people.
  155. ^ Adapted from the play by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber. Cast: Orson Welles (Dan Packard, Larry Renault), Marjorie Rambeau (Carlotta Vance), Hedda Hopper (Millicent Jordan), Lucille Ball (Kitty Packard), Charles Trowbridge (Oliver Jordan), Clara Blandick (Hattie Loomis), Mary Taylor (Paula Jordan), Edgar Barrier (Dr. Talbot), Benny Rubin (Max, the agent), George Coulouris, Richard Wilson, others.
  156. ^ Adapted from the story by Howard Hawks and screenplay by Jules Furthman. Cast: Orson Welles (Geoff Carter), Joan Blondell (Bonnie Lee), Regis Toomey (the Kid), Edmond McDonald (Les Peters), Edgar Barrier (Ashton Stevens), George Coulouris (Dutchy), William Alland (Joe Souther), Richard Baer (Tex), Richard Wilson (Pete).
  157. ^ Adapted from the novel by Kenneth Roberts. Cast: Orson Welles (Benedict Arnold), Frances Dee (Ellen Phipps), George Coulouris (Captain Peter Merrill), Robert Warwick (Captain Nason), Richard Baer (Huck), Edward Donahue (Guy), Richard Wilson (Scott Flick), Georgia Backus (Madame), William Alland, others.
  158. ^ Adapted from the play by George Kelly. Cast: Orson Welles (Walter Craig), Ann Harding (Harriet Craig), Janet Beecher (Miss Austen), Mary Taylor (Ethel Landreth), Regis Toomey (Billy Birkmire), Clara Blandick (Mrs. Harold), Bea Benaderet (Mazie), Richard Baer (Policeman), George Coulouris, Richard Wilson, others.
  159. ^ Cast: Jack Benny, Don Wilson, Phil Harris, Dennis Day, Orson Welles (himself, coaching Benny's acting).
  160. ^ Adapted by Herman J. Mankiewicz from the novel by Mark Twain. Cast: Orson Welles (Narrator, Dauphin, Huckleberry Finn), Jackie Cooper (Huckleberry Finn), Walter Catlett (Duke), Clarence Muse (Jim), Erskine Sanford, Georgia Backus, William Alland, Richard Wilson, others.
  161. ^ Adapted from the play by Ring Lardner and George S. Kaufman. Cast: Orson Welles (Candy Butcher on train), Jack Benny (Fred Stevens), Benny Rubin (Maxie Schwartz), Gus Schilling (Paul Sears), Bea Benaderet (Lucille Sears), Lee Patrick (Eileen), Virginia Gordon (Edna Baker).
  162. ^ Adapted from the novel by Charlotte Brontë. Cast: Orson Welles (Mr. Rochester), Madeleine Carroll (Jane Eyre), Cecilia Loftus (Mrs. Fairfax), Robert Coote (Mr. Brocklehurst), Serita Whooton (Young Jane), George Coulouris (the Innkeeper), Edgar Barrier (the Priest). After 20 shows, Campbell began exercising more creative control over The Campbell Playhouse. Campbell had complete control over story selection, and frequently clashed with Welles over story and casting. Amiable classics were chosen over many of Welles's story suggestions, including Of Human Hearts. As his contract with Campbell came to an end, Welles determined not to sign on for another season. After this broadcast—a reprise of Jane Eyre, after Welles's suggestion of Alice Adams was not accepted—Welles and Campbell parted amicably.
  163. ^ Welles made his live contribution between takes while shooting Citizen Kane. Recreation of the history of radio, presented by the New York World's Fair and the Golden Gate International Exposition on the eve of the National Association of Broadcasters meeting in San Francisco. Arthur E. Baird (Professor Quiz), Earle Graser (The Lone Ranger), Orson Welles, Morton Downey, Hedda Hopper, Gene Autry, Kay Kyser, F. Chase Taylor, Olive Palmer, Gertrude Berg, Edward Bowes, H. V. Kaltenborn, Ray Perkins, Guy Lombardo, Graham McNamee, Jessica Dragonette, Tommy Riggs, Kate Smith, Paul Whiteman.
  164. ^ Charles Shaw's interview program broadcast from San Antonio includes a 7.5-minute discussion between H. G. Wells and Orson Welles (their only meeting) regarding "The War of the Worlds", the effect of war on the arts, and the imminent filming of Citizen Kane.
  165. ^ Welles and John Barrymore perform a scene from Julius Caesar and in a skit titled "The Life of John Barrymore". Cast: Rudy Vallee, Orson Welles, John Barrymore, Art Balinger (announcer).
  166. ^ Cast: Rudy Vallee, Orson Welles, John Barrymore, Susan Miller, Lurene Tuttle, Ed Gardner (director).
  167. ^ Observance of George Washington's 209th birthday. Cast: Orson Welles (George Washington, others).
  168. ^ Welles makes a guest appearance.
  169. ^ Written by John La Touche. Cast: Orson Welles, Lurene Tuttle, Mary Shipp, Joseph Kearns, Conrad Nagel (host), True Eames Boardman (adaptor), Felix Mills (music director).
  170. ^ One in a series of original radio plays about American civil liberties. Cast: James Boyd (host), Orson Welles (narrator), Ray Collins (Bill Knaggs), Agnes Moorehead (Mary Knaggs), Paul Stewart, Erskine Sanford, Richard Wilson, Betty Garde, Alice Frost, Everett Sloane.
  171. ^ Cast: Rudy Vallee, Orson Welles, Dorothy Lamour.
  172. ^ Cast: Rudy Vallee, Orson Welles, John Barrymore.
  173. ^ Welles introduces this pilot for an all-star Negro variety show. Cast: Ethel Waters, Duke Ellington, The Hall Johnson Choir, Hamtree Harrington, Flournoy Miller, The Juanita Hall Choir, Wonderful Smith, Georgette Harvey, Juano Hernández (narrator).
  174. ^ "Ladies and gentlemen, we started off the first show of this series for Lady Esther with Saki's eeriest little legend, 'Sredni Vashtar'." Starring Blanche Yurka (Mrs. De Ropp); Conrad Binyon (Conradin), Brenda Forbes (Matilda). "Almanac", segment celebrating famous birthdays and interesting events, marks the Cry of Dolores and the beginning of Mexico's fight for independence from Spain. "Hidalgo", original play, with Dolores del Río and Pedro de Cordoba (Miguel Hidalgo). Meade Lux Lewis plays boogie-woogie. "An Irishman and a Jew" by Geoffrey Household, with Osa Massen (Berta). Welles banters throughout with Jiminy Cricket (Cliff Edwards).
  175. ^ Elliott Lewis (Faust) and Ray Collins (Devil) present "The Right Side". Betty Field and Richard Carlson perform "The Sexes" by Dorothy Parker. "Murder in the Bank" with Ruth Gordon. "The Golden Honeymoon" by Ring Lardner, with Ruth Gordon (Mother) and Orson Welles (Father). "Almanac" and banter with Jiminy Cricket.
  176. ^ Original radio play with Elliott Lewis (narrator), Ray Collins and Orson Welles. "Almanac" and banter with Jiminy Cricket. Welles reads the "Song of Solomon". Welles and Nancy Gates, in her radio debut, conclude the show with an adaptation of Sherwood Anderson's 1922 short story.
  177. ^ Debut radio play by Norman Foster. Cast: Orson Welles, Edgar Barrier, Ray Collins, Dorothy Comingore, Joseph Cotten, Erskine Sanford, Paul Stewart. "Almanac" notes it is the birthday of Edgar Allan Poe; Welles reads "Annabel Lee".
  178. ^ Story by Earl Reed Silvers, with Orson Welles, Marsha Hunt and Agnes Moorehead. "Almanac", including a brief skit set in Noah Webster's library, with Lucille Ball, Joseph Cotten and Marsha Hunt. Four poems by Dorothy Parker, read by Lucille Ball.
  179. ^ Dedication of the new 50,000-watt transmitter at New York's WABC radio, with greetings from New York, Hollywood and London. Cast: Orson Welles, Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, Alexander Woollcott (speaking from London), Bob Burns, Ed Gardner, Kate Smith, Howard Barlow and his orchestra, Andre Kostelanetz and his orchestra.
  180. ^ Adaptations of two short stories, the first by Ellis Parker Butler, with Joseph Cotten (narrator), Tim Holt, Anne Baxter, Agnes Moorehead, Ray Collins; the second by Grant Allen, with Orson Welles, Everett Sloane, Ray Collins, Erskine Sanford, Edgar Barrier, Marlo Dwyer. Welles reads a sonnet by Shakespeare.
  181. ^ Adapted from the novella by Joseph Hergesheimer, filmed in 1924; with Frances Dee (Millie), Ray Collins (Father), Paul Stewart (Halvard), Gale Gordon (Nicholas), Orson Welles (John Woolfolk).
  182. ^ Two stories, the first a romance written for the program by John Nesbitt, with Ray Collins (narrator), Orson Welles and Agnes Moorehead; and the second by Ring Lardner, with Stuart Erwin, June Collyer, Joseph Cotten and Ray Collins. Welles closes with "Almanac", marking the birthday of Oliver Goldsmith.
  183. ^ Premiere of the radio play by Lucille Fletcher. Cast: Orson Welles.
  184. ^ Adaptation of the novel by Ernest Hemingway. Cast: Ginger Rogers (Catherine), Orson Welles (Frederick Henry).
  185. ^ Adaptations of two short stories, the first by Wilma Shore and Louis Solomon, with Janet Gaynor, Joseph Cotten, Ray Collins, Glenn Anders; the second by Arthur Stander, with Orson Welles, Ray Collins, Glenn Anders.
  186. ^ Abbreviated program. Joseph Cotten presents a "little divertisement" by Ring Lardner. Welles reads selected poetry by Walt Whitman.
  187. ^ Written by Norman Corwin. Cast: Orson Welles, Roger Pryor (host), Bud Hiestand (announcer), Oscar Bradley (music), Frank Tours (music assistant).
  188. ^ Broadcast from Hollywood. Cast: Orson Welles, Ray Collins, Bud Hiestand (announcer), Gayne Whitman (narrator), Peter Lyon (adaptor), Homer Fickett (producer, director), Robert Armbruster (composer, conductor).
  189. ^ Closing remarks by President Franklin D. Roosevelt from Washington, D.C. Winner of the Peabody Award for Outstanding Entertainment in Drama. Cast: Lionel Barrymore, Orson Welles (narrator), Edward Arnold, Walter Brennan, Bob Burns, Dane Clark, Walter Huston, Elliott Lewis, Marjorie Main, Edward G. Robinson, James Stewart (narrator), Rudy Vallee, Leopold Stokowski conducting the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, Norman Corwin (director, producer, writer), Bernard Herrmann (music).
  190. ^ Story by Oscar Wilde, with Orson Welles, Ray Collins, Agnes Moorehead, Joseph Cotten, Edgar Barrier, Erskine Sanford, Gus Schilling, Tim Holt. Welles reads Luke, chapter 2 (The Nativity) and a Christmas poem by G. K. Chesterton.
  191. ^ Adapted by Joseph Cotten from the story by Richard Connell. Cast: Rita Hayworth, Orson Welles, Lurene Tuttle, Joseph Cotten. First meeting of Welles and Hayworth.
  192. ^ Adapted from the novel by Robert Hichens. Guest stars: Merle Oberon, Cedric Hardwicke.
  193. ^ By John Galsworthy. Cast: Orson Welles (Frank), Geraldine Fitzgerald (Megan), Ray Collins (Phil).
  194. ^ By Carl Ewald. Cast: Dix Davis, Orson Welles, Ruth Warrick, Ray Collins, Barbara Jean Wong.
  195. ^ Cast: Alexander Woollcott, Ethel Barrymore, Orson Welles. Welles reads the poem American Laughter by Kenneth Robinson.
  196. ^ By Max Beerbohm. Cast: Orson Welles (narrator), John Barrymore, Maureen O'Sullivan, Agnes Moorehead, Eustace Wyatt, Everett Sloane.
  197. ^ By Norman Corwin. Welles concludes the series with a statement: "Tomorrow night the Mercury Theatre starts for South America. The reason, put more or less officially, is that I've been asked by the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs to do a motion picture especially for Americans in all the Americas, a movie which, in its particular way, might strengthen the good relations now binding the continents of the Western Hemisphere."
  198. ^ In his first radio project since returning from South America, Welles produces and emcees the first two hours of a seven-hour coast-to-coast War Bond drive broadcast that nets more than $10 million. Cast: Orson Welles (emcee), 21 dance bands and a score of stage and screen and radio stars including Amos 'n' Andy, Dr. Frank Black and His Symphony Orchestra, Fanny Brice, Bob Burns, Jane Cowl, Nelson Eddy, Duke Ellington and His Orchestra, Jane Froman, Edward G. Robinson, Lanny Ross, Carl Sandburg, Dinah Shore, Red Skelton and Meredith Willson. Presented in cooperation with the United States Department of the Treasury, Western Union (which wired bond subscriptions free of charge) and the American Women's Voluntary Services.
  199. ^ Radio play by Lucille Fletcher. Cast: Orson Welles, William Spier (producer, director), Bernard Herrmann (composer, conductor).
  200. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Irene Dunne.
  201. ^ Series presented by the National Safety Council. Cast: Orson Welles (narrator).
  202. ^ First of several appearances Welles makes as guest panelist on this show in which difficult, specialized questions are submitted by listeners. Museum of Broadcasting: "Welles not only answered every question perfectly but he corrected the host." Cast: Clifton Fadiman (host), Milton Cross (announcer), Basil Ruysdael (announcer), John F. Kieran, Franklin P. Adams, Christopher Morley, Orson Welles, L. A. "Speed" Riggs (tobacco auctioneer).
  203. ^ By Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. Cast: Orson Welles.
  204. ^ Adapted by Arthur Miller from the book by Nina Brown Baker. Historical drama about the life of Benito Juárez. Cast: Orson Welles (narrator, performer), Bud Collyer (announcer), Ted Jewett (doubles), Stefan Schnabel (doubles), Karl Swenson (triples), Alfred Shirley (doubles), Arlene Francis, Frank Readick, Kenny Delmar (doubles), Paul Stewart (doubles), Edwin Jerome (triples), Homer Fickett (producer, director), Donald Voorhees (composer, conductor).
  205. ^ By Sergei Prokofiev. Welles narrates the performance by the Columbia Concert Orchestra, directed by Bernard Herrmann (last of the series).
  206. ^ Welles reads the sonnet "High Flight" by John Gillespie Magee Jr.,and performs "The Man Who Killed Lincoln" by Philip Van Doren Stern.
  207. ^ Adapted by Orson Welles, Norris Houghton and Robert Meltzer from the book by Samuel Eliot Morison. Entertaining and factual look at the legend of Christopher Columbus. Cast: Orson Welles, Bud Collyer (announcer), Sarah Fussell, Karl Swenson (doubles), Stefan Schnabel (doubles), Everett Sloane (doubles), Frank Readick (triples), Ted Jewett (doubles), Kenny Delmar, Ian Martin, Edwin Jerome, Homer Fickett (producer, director), Arden Cornwell (composer), Donald Voorhees (conductor). Welles begins the broadcast with the words, "Hello Americans", the title chosen for his future radio series. Translated into Spanish and Portuguese and rebroadcast to Latin America by the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. Radio play (retitled Columbus Day) published in Radio Drama in Action (Farrar & Rinehart 1945) edited by Erik Barnouw.
  208. ^ Radio play narrated by Orson Welles.
  209. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Anna Neagle, Ethel Merman.
  210. ^ Radio play by Lucille Fletcher. Cast: Orson Welles.
  211. ^ Rebroadcast on Armed Forces Radio Service. Guest star Welles in a parody of Les Misérables. Cast: Fred Allen (host), Portland Hoffa, Kenny Delmar, Alan Reed, Benay Venuta, Arthur Godfrey (announcer), Victor Knight (director).
  212. ^ Welles narrates an alternative history dramatization of the consequences of a Nazi takeover of a small Canadian town.
  213. ^ Celebration of the early years of the U.S. Navy, by Peter Lyon. Cast: Orson Welles, Admiral William Blandy (remote from Minneapolis), Bud Collyer (announcer), Homer Fickett (producer, director), Arden Cornwell (composer), Donald Voorhees (conductor).
  214. ^ Patriotic series glorifying the aviation industry and dramatizing its role in World War II. Museum of Broadcasting: "Welles wrote, produced, and narrated this show, and his work was considered a prime contribution to the war effort." Script by Ranald MacDougall and Norman Rosten. Cast: Orson Welles, Everett Sloane, Ray Collins; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  215. ^ "Broadcasting from Brazil … by dramatic license." First in a series of variety shows introducing listeners to the peoples and cultures of South and Central America, created with the OCIAA to promote inter-American understanding during World War II. Script by Robert Meltzer, music by Lucien Moraweck. Cast: Orson Welles, Carmen Miranda, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra. The story of the samba, including lessons on technique and instrumentation. Discussion of Brazil's unique ethnic mix, products and natural resources, and the importance of conserving the Amazon jungle. Welles joins Miranda in singing Ary Barroso's samba, "No Tabuleiro da Baiana".
  216. ^ A conversation between three elderly veterans traces the history of cargo transportation. Cast: Orson Welles; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  217. ^ The geography and history of the Andes mountain region. Cast: Orson Welles, Edmond O'Brien (Bolivar), Agnes Moorehead, Ray Collins, Elliott Reid, Barbara Jean Wong, Pedro de Cordoba, Hans Conried (Pizarro), Alan Reed, others. Musical compositions by Justin Elie ("A Night in the Andes") and Antônio Carlos Gomes ("Il Guarnye"). Poetry by Norman Rosten.
  218. ^ By Orson Welles and Milton Geiger. Cast: Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Ray Collins, Agnes Moorehead, Elliott Reid; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  219. ^ The history of Haiti, focusing on Toussaint Louverture, the reign of Henri Christophe, and the influence of Napoleon. Cast: Ray Collins, Hans Conried, Elliott Reid, the Haitian Chorus.
  220. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Burgess Meredith; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  221. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Groucho Marx, Gene Autry, Bela Lugosi.
  222. ^ Welles begins the alphabet of the Antillean islands. Guest singer: Miguelito Valdés.
  223. ^ By Norman Rosten. Cast: Orson Welles; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  224. ^ Welles continues the ABCs of the Caribbean.
  225. ^ Script by Hans Conreid. Cast: Orson Welles; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  226. ^ Welles concludes his alphabet of the Islands, beginning with S—slavery—and the story of Abednego the slave. Written by Orson Welles and John Tucker Battle. Cast: Orson Welles (Sir Barnaby Finch), Elliott Reid (Abednego), Norman Field (Toussaint Louverture), Gerald Mohr (Henri Christophe).
  227. ^ Written by Lucille Fletcher. Cast: Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Agnes Moorehead, Lou Merrill; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  228. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Madeleine Carroll, Helen Hayes, Joan Fontaine, Lucy Monroe, Al Jolson, Marion Hutton.
  229. ^ Fable about Christmas in the Americas, by Richard Brooks. Cast: Norman Field (Mr. Piexoto, the Brazilian), Elliott Reid (American Airlines representative), Pedro de Cordoba (fat man in Mexico), John Tucker Battle (the Cuban), Hans Conried (the Señor), Orson Welles (Martin Stone).
  230. ^ Written by Milton Geiger. Cast: Orson Welles; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  231. ^ Patriotic fundraising appeal. Cast: Orson Welles.
  232. ^ Program #101, written by Violet Atkins. Cast: Vincent Price, Orson Welles, David Broekman and the Treasury Orchestra and Chorus. These patriotic dramas were produced by the U.S. Treasury Department to promote sales of War Bonds, transcribed in New York and Hollywood beginning April 1942 and syndicated on more than 800 stations through 1944. Welles returned to the U.S. from South America August 22, 1942, and began doing guest appearances on radio.
  233. ^ Program #114, written by Norman Rosten. Cast: Vincent Price, Orson Welles, David Broekman and the Treasury Orchestra and Chorus.
  234. ^ Program #115. Cast: Vincent Price, Dinah Shore, Helen Hayes, Orson Welles, Larry Elliott (announcer), David Broekman and the Treasury Orchestra and Chorus.
  235. ^ Music for the people of two continents. Welles is unable to appear due to illness. Cast: Tito Guízar (host), Dick Joy (announcer), Miguelito Valdés, Sir Lancelot, Lud Gluskin and his Orchestra.
  236. ^ Cast: Edward G. Robinson substitutes for Welles; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  237. ^ Stories of Montezuma, Hidalgo, Morelos, Juárez and Zapata.
  238. ^ The pilot, written by Myron Dutton. Cast: Orson Welles; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  239. ^ Script by Milton Geiger. Cast: Frank Readick (narrator), Eddie Jerome (Gaucho), Orson Welles (Famine), Carl Swenson, Joseph Cotten, Jack Moss, Louis Solomon.
  240. ^ Written by John Steinbeck. Cast: Betty Garde (Mother), Orson Welles; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  241. ^ Rhythms of the Americas. Welles is unable to appear due to illness, but is back at work the following day on his penultimate episode of Ceiling Unlimited. Cast: Truman Bradley (host), Diana Gayle, Miguelito Valdés, Carlos Ramírez, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra.
  242. ^ Written by John Tucker Battle. Episode concludes with "Flyer Come Home with Your Wings" by John Steinbeck. Cast: Orson Welles; music by Bernard Herrmann.
  243. ^ Inter-American democracy and why it is essential in the war. Incorporates excerpts of Milton Geiger's poem to human civilization, "I Will Not Go Back" (later the centerpiece of the April 1945 broadcast of This Is My Best dedicated to the late President Franklin Roosevelt). Cast: Orson Welles, Ray Collins.
  244. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Shirley Ross, Hanley Stafford.
  245. ^ Welles stands in as host of radio's most popular show when Jack Benny contracts pneumonia after a tour of military camps. Cast: Mary Livingston, Dennis Day, Eddie "Rochester" Anderson, Phil Harris, Don Wilson.
  246. ^ Welles is substitute host during Benny's illness.
  247. ^ Welles is substitute host during Benny's illness.
  248. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Wendy Barrie, Monty Wooley.
  249. ^ Welles is substitute host during Benny's illness.
  250. ^ Welles is Benny's first guest when he returns.
  251. ^ Welles reads and discusses John Donne's "The Sun Rising" and "No Man Is an Island" and excerpts from the biography of George Jessel. Listeners are invited to write the network to determine if this minimalist program should continue.
  252. ^ At intermission during The Mercury Wonder Show, audience members and cast are interviewed, including Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth (married earlier that day), Marlene Dietrich and Joseph Cotten. Welles remarks that The Mercury Wonder Show has been performed for approximately 48,000 members of the U.S. armed forces.
  253. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Keenan Wynn, Joseph Kearns (Man in Black), William Spier (producer, director), Lucien Moraweck (composer), Bernard Herrmann (conductor).
  254. ^ Broadcast from the U.S. Naval Air Station at Terminal Island, California. Cast: Bob Hope, Frances Langford, Stan Kenton and His Orchestra, Jerry Colonna, Barbara Jo Allen. Guest star Welles plays a mystic fortuneteller.
  255. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Joseph Kearns (Man in Black), William Spier (producer, director), Howard Duff (announcer, Armed Forces Radio Service rebroadcast), Lucien Moraweck (composer), Bernard Herrmann (conductor)/
  256. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Geraldine Fitzgerald, William Spier (producer, director), Lucien Moraweck (composer), Wilbur Hatch (conductor).
  257. ^ Welles makes a guest appearance. Cast: Ed Gardner, Shirley Booth, Charlie Cantor.
  258. ^ By J. M. Speed. Cast: Orson Welles, Hans Conreid, Joseph Kearns (Man in Black), Howard Duff (announcer, Armed Forces Radio Service rebroadcast), William Spier (producer, director).
  259. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Brian Aherne.
  260. ^ Leonard Bernstein replaces conductor Bruno Walter, who is ill, thereby making his conducting debut. Intermission feature: "The American Scriptures" by Carl Van Doren and Orson Welles (from Chicago, telling the story of Nathan Hale).
  261. ^ Welles makes a guest appearance.
  262. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Ilka Chase, Gregory Ratoff, Connee Boswell.
  263. ^ Artur Rodziński(conductor), Orson Welles (speaker).
  264. ^ Welles makes a guest appearance on this quiz show later called The $64,000 Question.
  265. ^ Welles makes the first of many guest appearances on this horror anthology series.
  266. ^ Artur Rodziński (conductor), Orson Welles (speaker).
  267. ^ Welles makes a guest appearance.
  268. ^ Orson Welles reads "High Flight".
  269. ^ Welles makes a guest appearance.
  270. ^ Debut of Welles's variety series broadcast live in California and Arizona. Guest: Groucho Marx. Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra play "I Know That You Know"; Martha Stewart sings "Bésame Mucho". Orson Welles reads some of Thomas Paine's thoughts on liberty. Cast: Orson Welles, Arthur Q. Bryan, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra, Ray Collins, Agnes Moorehead.
  271. ^ Guest: Lionel Barrymore. Skit, "The Kiddies' Corner". Swing music and a birthday tribute to Victor Herbert by Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra. Barrymore reads from the writings of George Washington.
  272. ^ Guest: Ann Sothern. "Abraham Lincoln's Prairie Years," adapted from the Carl Sandburg biography.
  273. ^ Guest: Robert Benchley. Lecture, "The History of Eskimo Love," by Robert Benchley. Poem, "Colloquy for the States" by Archibald MacLeish.
  274. ^ Guest: Hedda Hopper. The Nat King Cole Trio performs "Hit that Jive, Jack". Welles reads from The Sword in the Stone by T. H. White. Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Hans Conreid, John McIntire, John Brown, Walter Tetley, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra.
  275. ^ Guest: Victor Moore. Sacre du Printemps (from Small Beer) by Ludwig Bemelmans. The Nat King Cole Trio performs "Solid Potato Salad". Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Hans Conreid, John McIntire, John Brown, Walter Tetley, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra.
  276. ^ Guest: Lucille Ball. Ella Mae Morse sings "Shoo Shoo Baby". Welles reads "No Man Is an Island" by John Donne. Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Jack Mather, Hans Conried, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra.
  277. ^ Guest: Charles Laughton. Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra play "I'll Get By". Skit: "The Private Life of Charles Laughton". "High Society" performed by Kid Ory (trombone), Mutt Carey (trumpet), Jimmie Noone (clarinet), Buster Wilson (piano), Bud Scott (guitar), Ed Garland (bass) and Zutty Singleton (drums). Tent scene from William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, with Charles Laughton (Cassius) and Orson Welles (Brutus). Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, John McIntire (announcer), Hans Conried, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra.
  278. ^ Guest: Betty Hutton. Welles reads the poem "Ballad of Bataan" by Norman Rosten. Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, John McIntire, Hans Conried, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra.
  279. ^ Guest: Mary Boland. Skit: Parody of Lady in the Dark. "Muskrat Ramble" performed by the All Star Jazz Group—Kid Ory (trombone), Jimmie Noone (clarinet), Mutt Carey (trumpet), Buster Wilson (piano), Bud Scott (guitar), Ed Garland (bass) and Zutty Singleton (drums). Marking the birthday of Edmond Rostand, an adaptation of Cyrano de Bergerac written by Ben Hecht. Cast: Orson Welles, Hans Conreid, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra.
  280. ^ Guest: Dennis Day. "That's a Plenty" performed by the All Star Jazz Group—Kid Ory (trombone), Jimmie Noone (clarinet), Mutt Carey (trumpet), Buster Wilson (piano), Bud Scott (guitar), Ed Garland (bass) and Zutty Singleton (drums). Dennis Day sings "Bésame Mucho". Orson Welles reads the speech, "Oh what a rogue and peasant slave", from Hamlet.
  281. ^ Guest: Monty Woolley. Skit, "The Life of Monty Wooley". "Panama" performed by the All Star Jazz Group—Jimmie Noone (clarinet), Kid Ory (trombone), Mutt Carey (trumpet), Bud Scott (guitar), Ed Garland (bass), Buster Wilson (piano) and Zutty Singleton (drums). Welles reads from Paul's First Epistle to the Corinthians. Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Hans Conreid, John Brown, Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra, John McIntire, Billy Gilbert.
  282. ^ Written by Ben Hecht. Cast: Orson Welles (dual role), William Spier (producer, director, host), Joseph Kearns (Man in Black), Lucien Moraweck (composer), Lud Gluskin (conductor).
  283. ^ Guest: George Jessel. As the All Star Jazz Group plays "Sweet Lorraine" in the background, Welles speaks extemporaneously for three minutes about clarinetist Jimmie Noone, who died that morning at age 48. "Blues for Jimmie" performed by the All Star Jazz Group—Kid Ory (trombone), Ed Garland (bass), Zutty Singleton (drums), Wade Whaley (substitute clarinet), Buster Wilson (piano) and Bud Scott (guitar). Welles recites Psalm 23.
  284. ^ Guest: Carole Landis. Welles reads the scene from the last act of Macbeth. "Sugar Foot Stomp" performed by the All Star Jazz Group.
  285. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Bert Lahr, Reginald Gardiner, Shirley Mitchell.
  286. ^ "This is The Mercury Wonder Show … and we pitched our tents tonight at the Naval Air Station at Terminal Island". Guest: Lucille Ball. Aurora Miranda sings "No Tabuleiro da Baiana", with Welles joining her briefly in duet. Welles reads the honor speech from Henry V. "Savoy Blues" performed by the All Star Jazz Group—Kid Ory (trombone), Mutt Carey (trumpet), Barney Bigard (clarinet), Buster Wilson (piano), Bud Scott (guitar), Ed Garland (bass) and Zutty Singleton (drums).
  287. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (several roles), Hans Conreid, Verna Felton, John McIntire, Jeanette Nolan, Joseph Kearns (Man in Black), William Spier (producer, director, adaptor, editor), Lucien Moraweck (composer), Lud Gluskin (conductor).
  288. ^ Broadcast from the U.S. Army Air Force Redistribution Center in Santa Monica, California. Guests: Jimmy Durante, Aurora Miranda. "Woodrow Wilson".
  289. ^ "The Orson Welles Movement for Realism in Radio". Cast: Dinah Shore, Orson Welles, Bea Benederet, Arthur Q. Bryan, Robert Emmett Dolan and His Orchestra, The Joseph Lilley Chorus, Tobe Reed (announcer).
  290. ^ Guest: Ann Sothern. Skit, "Ann Sothern for President", with Welles first as her campaign manager (duet, "Sittin' on the Fence") and, after commercial, as Orson Sothern, First Gentleman of the land in 1964. "Weary Blues" performed by the All Star Jazz Group—Mutt Carey (trumpet), Kid Ory (trombone), Barney Bigard (clarinet), Buster Wilson (piano), Bud Scott (guitar), Ed Garland (bass) and Zutty Singleton (drums). Romeo's last scene from Romeo and Juliet, with Welles (Romeo) and Hans Conreid (Paris).
  291. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (several roles), Hans Conreid, John McIntire, Jeanette Nolan, Joseph Kearns (Man in Black), William Spier (producer, director), Lucien Moraweck (composer), Lud Gluskin (conductor).
  292. ^ Five days after he is placed on the U.S. Treasury Department payroll as a consulting expert in the War Finance Division (with compensation of $1 per year) Welles begins to promote the Fifth War Loan Drive with a radio symposium on democracy, from Thomas Paine to Thomas Wolfe. Cast: Orson Welles, Charles Laughton, Lionel Barrymore, John Huston, Leopold Stokowski, Oscar Hammerstein II, others.
  293. ^ Broadcast from the Air Service Command Training Center, Fresno, California. The Mercury Wonder Show—"See the greatest magic show you've ever listened to". Guests: Lee and Lyn Wilde, Lois Collier. "Blues in E flat" performed by the All Star Jazz Group and vocalist Helen Andrews. Welles reads a famous open letter in defense of Father Damien.
  294. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Hans Conreid, John McIntire, Jeanette Nolan, Joseph Kearns (Man in Black), William Spier (producer, director), Lucien Moraweck (composer), Lud Gluskin (conductor).
  295. ^ "Good evening everybody, this is Orson Welles. Welcome to the Mercury Wonder Show. Tonight we've pitched our tents at the Sixth Ferrying Group, Ferrying Division, of the Air Transport Command at Long Beach, California." Guest: Marjorie Reynolds. Skit, "What a Typical G.I. Soldier Does On Leave". Martha Tilton sings "Take It Easy". Spoof of the recent Suspense broadcast of Donovan's Brain. "Tiger Rag" performed by the Mercury All Star Jazz Combination. Welles reads the sonnet "High Flight" by John Gillespie Magee Jr.
  296. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Loretta Young, Cecil B. DeMille (host, director, producer).
  297. ^ Special D-Day broadcast dramatizing the lives of various Americans when they hear of the Normandy landings. Cast: Agnes Moorehead, Hans Conried, Orson Welles (host), Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra, John McIntire (announcer).
  298. ^ "Civilian D-Day" broadcast from Texarkana, Texas, produced with the U.S. Treasury Department. Kickoff of a four-week national effort and a radio campaign led by Welles, encouraging Americans to buy $16 billion in War Bonds to finance the invasion and the most violent phase of World War II. Americans purchased $20.6 billion in War Bonds June 12–July 8, 1944. Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Edgar Barrier, Alan Napier, Walter Huston, Keenan Wynn. Includes statements by FDR and Henry Morgenthau Jr.
  299. ^ Followup to the June 7 D-Day broadcast from Texarkana includes a skit about a fish peddler who causes a war between Texas and Arkansas. Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra perform Raymond Scott's "Powerhouse". Welles reads Stephen Vincent Benét's A Prayer for the United Nations.
  300. ^ Broadcast from the Hollywood Bowl. Cast: Orson Welles, Lionel Barrymore, Henry Morgenthau Jr., Fredric March (narrator), Paul Stewart (producer, director), Peter Lyon (writer).
  301. ^ Broadcast from Soldier Field, Chicago. Cast: Orson Welles, Lana Turner, Jack Benny, Ray Bolger, Paul Lukas, Henry Morgenthau Jr.
  302. ^ Broadcast from the Wrigley Building, Chicago. Guest: Martha O'Driscoll. Ethel Waters sings "Stormy Weather". Welles reads a soliloquy from Richard II.
  303. ^ Broadcast from Camp Haan in Riverside, California. Guest: Lynn Bari, assisting with a Mercury Wonder Show mindreading experiment and a Mercury Fable about a canteen for WACS. Martha Tilton sings "A Good Man". "Oh, Didn't He Ramble" performed by the Mercury All-Star Jazz Combination. Welles reads from the Epistle of James.
  304. ^ "Tonight the Mercury Wonder Show is pitching its tent at the Los Angeles Port of Embarkation in Wilmington". Guests: Lana Turner, Keenan Wynn. Skit, a Mercury Fable about a soldier (Orson Welles, singing "You Made Me Love You") who is granted his wish for a magical visit from an invisible Lana Turner. The Mercury All-Star Jazz Combination and Lud Gluskin and His Orchestra play jive.
  305. ^ "Tonight the Mercury Wonder Show is pitching its tent at Camp Cooke, near Lompoc, California". Guest: Susan Hayward. Kay Thompson sings "Louisiana Purchase". Skit, a WAC's furlough with her husband is disrupted by her family. Welles reads from Richard II. "Royal Garden Blues" performed by the All Star Jazz Group—Kid Ory (trombone), Zutty Singleton (drums), Bud Scott (guitar), Ed Garland (bass), Norman Bowden (trumpet) and Fred Washington (piano).
  306. ^ Broadcast from Long Beach Coast Guard Camp, California. Ruth Terry sings "Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby". Skit, a Mercury Fable called "Life in the Coast Guard". Miguelito Valdés sings "Babalú". Welles reads "With Your Wings" by John Steinbeck.
  307. ^ A look back at the days of vaudeville. Cast: Gracie Fields, Orson Welles, Bill Goodwin (announcer), Lou Bring and His Orchestra.
  308. ^ Written by Lester Cohen. Cast: Orson Welles, Rita Hayworth, Cecil B. DeMille (host, producer).
  309. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Himan Brown (director, producer), Milton Lewis (writer).
  310. ^ Broadcast from Chicago. Guest: Orson Welles.
  311. ^ Welles delivers a campaign speech for FDR, broadcast from Carnegie Hall.
  312. ^ Speakers: FDR, Orson Welles.
  313. ^ Welles is featured speaker at the Pinellas County campaign kickoff in St. Petersburg, Florida.
  314. ^ Radio play about Edgar Allan Poe. Cast: Kate Smith (star), Orson Welles, Ted Collins (host).
  315. ^ Speakers: Thomas E. Dewey, Orson Welles (replacing FDR).
  316. ^ From New York. Speakers: Orson Welles, Quentin Reynolds, John Gunther, Mark Van Doren.
  317. ^ John Dunning: "A 60-minute commercial for Roosevelt, but written as a documentary … The result was a Roosevelt victory, closer than it looked in the electoral college, and a new set of standards for radio. Never again would such a program be allowed." Cast: Humphrey Bogart (host), Judy Garland, Tallulah Bankhead, Lucille Ball, James Cagney, Keenan Wynn, Groucho Marx, Claudette Colbert, Irving Berlin, Joseph Cotten, Rita Hayworth, Walter Huston, Gene Kelly, Danny Kaye, Paul Muni, Edward G. Robinson, Lana Turner, Fay Wray, Dorothy Parker, Charles Boyer, The Ink Spots, Milton Berle, Frank Sinatra. Includes an address by Welles, at FDR's personal request, an 11-minute reprise of Now is the Time: A Soliloquy for Election Year by Norman Corwin.[269]
  318. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (who also recites the Cresta Blanca Winery jingle), Wally Maher, Joseph Kearns, Eric Snowden, Walter Tetley, John McIntire (announcer), Robert Tallman (adaptor), Bernard Katz (composer, conductor), Owen James (announcer).
  319. ^ Welles praises Joe E. Brown on his 44th anniversary in show business. Dorothy Lamour and Rudy Vallee sing "Sunday, Monday, or Always". Cast: Joe E. Brown (host), Orson Welles, Jack Benny, Hedda Hopper, Dorothy Lamour, Matty Malneck and His Orchestra, Ted Meyers (announcer), Rudy Vallee.
  320. ^ Cast: Ray Collins (Santa Claus), Orson Welles (Nero), John Brown (Devil), John McIntire, Bernard Katz (composer, conductor), Owen James (announcer).
  321. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Bing Crosby.
  322. ^ Abbreviated Armed Forces Radio Service version of the December 24 broadcast of "The Happy Prince".
  323. ^ Guests: Orson Welles, Ernst Lubitsch, Greer Garson, Santa Anna Swing Wing, John Brown.
  324. ^ Broadcasting: "Universal Pictures Co., New York has prepared a full half-hour transcribed dramatization of The Suspect, for placement on stations in conjunction with local openings of the film. Orson Welles takes the lead part played by Charles Laughton in the film. Disc was sponsored commercially on six New York stations … Records were cut by WOR Recording, New York. Agency is J. Walter Thompson Co., New York." Aired on WEAF, WJZ, WMCA, WNEW, WOR and WQXR.
  325. ^ Welles takes over as producer, director and star of this series broadcast live from Hollywood before a studio audience. His debut is an adaptation of the Joseph Conrad novella. Cast: Orson Welles (Marlow, Kurtz), Bernard Katz (composer, conductor).
  326. ^ Adaptation of the fable by Theodore Pratt. Cast: Orson Welles (Producer), Ann Sothern (Miss Dilly), Rita Hayworth (Miss Dilly's friend), Francis X. Bushman (Mr. Flagstone), Bernard Katz (composer), Robert Tallman (adaptor), John McIntire (announcer).
  327. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (Sydney Carton), Rosemary De Camp (Lucie Manette), Dennis Greene (Charles Darnay), Verna Felton (Madame DeFarge), Frank Craven (host), Denis Green, Griff Barnett, Norman Field, Ken Christy (doubles), Charles Seel, Lurene Tuttle, Ferdinand Munier (doubles), Jay Novello (doubles), Robert Regent (doubles), Eric Snowden (doubles), Boyd Davis, Paul McVey, Alec Harford, Thomas Mills, Regina Wallace, Virginia Gordon, Herb Lytton, Louis Silvers (music director), John Milton Kennedy (announcer), Fred MacKaye (director), Sanford Barnett (adaptor), Charlie Forsyth (sound effects).
  328. ^ The Brothers Grimm tale as adapted by Walt Disney, including songs from the film. Cast: Jane Powell (Snow White), Jeanette Nolan (Wicked Queen), Bill Daves (Prince Charming), John McIntire (Mirror). Welles states that the program was chosen for broadcast overseas and is dedicated to his daughter Christopher on her seventh birthday.
  329. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (narrator, Braddock Washington), David Ellis (John T. Unger), Sheila Ryan (Kismine Washington).
  330. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Agnes Moorehead, Ray Collins, Alan Napier.
  331. ^ Broadcasting: "Thursday night following the death of the President, the Blue-ABC network mobilized its entire executive staff to participate with national leaders in a series of tributes. Among those appearing were Marshall Field, publisher; Orson Welles, writer, producer and actor; Edward J. Noble, chairman of the Blue-ABC and Undersecretary of Commerce under the late President; Justice Byrnes; Robert Hannegan, chairman of the Democratic National Committee; numerous congressional and labor leaders, as well as representatives of the Supreme Court and of the clergy. All commercial announcements were cancelled and numerous outstanding sponsored programs likewise were put aside. Sir Thomas Beecham, recently arrived in this country, presented one of the first memorial programs in the Blue-ABC series. It was accompanied by comments by Raymond Moley, Rabbi Wise, Rev. Mr. Fosdick and Walter Winchell. Among the outstanding programs which attracted wide attention was a special tribute delivered by Orson Welles." Welles spoke at 10:10 p.m. EWT, from Hollywood: "He has no need for homage and we who loved him have no time for tears … Our fighting sons and brothers cannot pause tonight to mark the death of him whose name will be given to the age we live in … We cannot do him reverence this April twelfth. There will be time for tears only when his work is done."
  332. ^ Orson Welles: "We must move on beyond mere death to that free world which was the hope and labor of his life."
  333. ^ An original radio drama by Milton Geiger, dedicated to FDR and the future of America on the eve of the United Nations Conference on International Organization. Cast: Orson Welles, Joan Lorring.
  334. ^ Adaptation of the best-selling biographical novel by Helen and George Papashvily. Cast: Orson Welles, Edgar Barrier, Konstantin Shayne, Peg La Centra.
  335. ^ Blue-ABC: "Perhaps better than any radio writer he can bring our people the true meaning of the conference." Cast: Orson Welles (narrator), Harold Stassen.[289]
  336. ^ Welles moderates this weekly program of analysis and commentary about the UN Conference on International Organization. Presented at the San Francisco Civic Auditorium by the Free World Association, Americans United and the American Broadcasting Company.
  337. ^ Orson Welles is among the speakers
  338. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Peggy Lee ("You Was Right, Baby"), Larry Adler ("Blues in the Night"), The King Sisters ("Stuff Like That There"), Alfred Drake ("Stan' Up and Fight"), Danny Thomas (postman Jerry Dingle), Bob Jellison, Edward Marr, Ken Carpenter (announcer).
  339. ^ This was Welles's last event in the series; Henry Cassidy conducted the June 17 forum due to his illness.[298]
  340. ^ Welles narrates this documentary about French underground radio during Nazi Occupation.
  341. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Norman Corwin (writer, director, producer).
  342. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (emcee), Ken Carpenter (announcer), Donna Dae ("On the Sunny Side of the Street"), Theodora Lynch, Sgt. Herb Shriner, Larry Stevens.
  343. ^ Cast: George V. Denny Jr. (moderator), Orson Welles, Manchester Boddy, others; published subsequently as a pamphlet.
  344. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Norman Corwin (writer, director, producer).
  345. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Ernst Lubitsch, Jack Benny, Greer Garson, Ken Carpenter.
  346. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Lucille Ball, Lionel Barrymore, Janet Blair, Ken Carpenter (announcer), Claudette Colbert, Ronald Colman, Bing Crosby (emcee), Bette Davis, Marlene Dietrich, Jimmy Durante, Ed Gardner, Greer Garson, Cary Grant, Rita Hayworth, Lena Horne, Jose Iturbi, Danny Kaye, The King Sisters, Diana Lewis, Thomas Lewis (Commandant of the AFRS), Herbert Marshall, Marilyn Maxwell, Johnny Mercer, Burgess Meredith, Carmen Miranda, Robert Montgomery, William Powell, Edward G. Robinson, Lina Romay, Dinah Shore, Risë Stevens ("Ave Maria"), Ginny Simms, Frank Sinatra, Martha Wilkerson, Meredith Willson (conductor), Harry Von Zell, Loretta Young, others.
  347. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Olivia de Havilland, Norman Corwin (writer, director, producer).
  348. ^ Welles begins a weekly series of social and political commentary and readings, sponsored by Lear Radios.
  349. ^ "It begins with Welles reading the 23rd Psalm followed by an unidentified soprano singing Ave Maria. Home on the Range is sung by an unidentified male singer. Welles reads from the Bible and speaks about FDR. He reads from an FDR speech and speaks in tribute to him. Ends with two hymns." (WorldCat)
  350. ^ Welles tells The Story of Bonito, the Bull by Robert J. Flaherty, the only part of the unfinished omnibus film It's All True that he ever presented to an audience.
  351. ^ The launching of the National Victory War Chest Fund, broadcast from the Hollywood Bowl, includes a 15-minute patriotic reading by Orson Welles, "What Price Victory?" Cast: Orson Welles (host), Gene Autry, Lionel Barrymore, Margaret Brayton, Eddie Cantor, Jack Carson, Tommy Cook, Jerry Colonna, The Ken Darby Chorus, Hal Gerard, Bob Hope, Bill Johnson, William Halsey Jr., Kay Kyser, Frances Langford, Arch Oboler, Edward G. Robinson, Tony Romano, Dinah Shore, Frank Sinatra, Lee Sweetland, Earl Warren, Carlton E. Morse (producer, director), James Powell (announcer), Meredith Willson (conductor).
  352. ^ Welles takes the audience on "A Rocket Trip to the Moon" in this spinoff of Command Performance, produced by the Masquers Club of Hollywood. Cast: Orson Welles (host), Johnny Mercer ("On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe"), Eddie Bracken, Ken Christy, Knox Manning, Virginia O'Brien, Leith Stevens (composer, conductor), William N. Robson (director).
  353. ^ Welles discusses the ousting of Brazilian president Getúlio Vargas.
  354. ^ Welles reads a letter from Louis Armstrong, recounting his early days, while Barney Bigard, Zutty Singleton, Fred Washington and others play "Perdido Street Blues".
  355. ^ Broadcast from the U. S. Naval Training and Distribution Center, Treasure Island, San Francisco, California, via KGO. Featuring Commodore Robert W. Cary, USN, commander of the center. The three theatre complexes are named to honor three World War II heroes killed in action: John Basilone (Theatre Three), Edward O'Hare (Theatre Two) and Doris Miller (Theatre One), the first African American to be awarded the Navy Cross. Includes a conversation on race prejudice with Miller's father, Connery Miller, via WACO in Waco, Texas.
  356. ^ Man's struggle against plagues. Cast: Orson Welles, Sherman H. Dryer (producer).
  357. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (emcee), Nat King Cole Trio, Duke Ellington and His Orchestra, Woody Herman and His Orchestra.
  358. ^ Cast: Danny Kaye, Orson Welles, Dick Joy (announcer), Butterfly McQueen, Dave Terry and His Orchestra, Georgia Gibbs.
  359. ^ Cast: Fred Allen, Orson Welles, The De Marco Sisters, Portland Hoffa, Minerva Pious, Alan Reed, Parker Fennelly, Kenny Delmar, Al Goodman and His Orchestra.
  360. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (Guest Armchair Detective), Sydney Smith, Marion Shockley, Ted de Corsia.
  361. ^ Due to illness, Welles is replaced by George Hays.
  362. ^ Excerpts of Welles's Broadway musical extravanganza, with songs by Cole Porter and Noël Coward. Cast: Orson Welles (Fix), Arthur Margetson (Phileas Fogg), Larry Laurence (Passepartout), Mary Healy (Princess Aouda), Julie Warren (Molly Muggins).
  363. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (Edmond Dantès), Julie Warren (Mercédès); with Stefan Schnabel, Guy Spaull, Brainerd Duffield.
  364. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Alice Frost
  365. ^ Welles calls for protest on the end of the Office of Price Administration.
  366. ^ "With a special score composed and conducted by that pillar of the Mercury, Bernard Herrmann" (Orson Welles). Cast: Orson Welles (Rochester), Alice Frost (Jane Eyre), Guy Spaull, Stefan Schnabel, Mary Healy, Abby Lewis.
  367. ^ Welles protests the end of OPA price controls and the imminent atomic test at Bikini Atoll—with Rita Hayworth's image on the A-bomb nicknamed "Gilda".[363]
  368. ^ Adaptation of the short novel by Ellis St. Joseph. Cast: Orson Welles (Reverend Dr. Ralph Walkes), Everett Sloane (Capt. English). As he ends the program, Welles announces that the following week's story will be an adaptation of his next film, The Stranger. Edward G. Robinson and Loretta Young were to be featured, but the program was not realized.[365]: 48 [101] 
  369. ^ Lear Radios does not renew its sponsorship option due to low audience numbers, but ABC continues the program. Welles's pay is cut from $1,700 to $50 per show.
  370. ^ An original radio play by Louise Fletcher. Cast: Orson Welles, Mercedes McCambridge, Julie Warren, Brainerd Duffield.
  371. ^ Comic radio play by Hugh Kemp, originally produced for Stage 46 in Toronto by Andrew Allen. Cast: Orson Welles (host), Fletcher Markle (Adam Barneycastle), Grace Mathews (Eve), John Drainie (Chester), Betty Garde (Jenkins), Hedley Rainie (Waiter, Producer, others); with Patricia Loudry, Mercedes McCambridge.
  372. ^ Don Hollenbeck substitutes for Welles, who is ill. Topics include compromise on OPA rent and price controls, and unrest in Bolivia.
  373. ^ A radio documentary by Norman Corwin. Cast: Orson Welles (Dougal), Mercedes McCambridge (Cecile).
  374. ^ Welles reads an affidavit sent to him by the NAACP. It is signed by Isaac Woodard, a black veteran who was beaten and blinded by South Carolina police hours after he had been honorably discharged from the U.S. Army. Welles promises to identify the officer responsible and makes the case a major focus of his weekly show. Bret Wood: "Welles took up the cause, having always been outspoken on issues of racism and turned the event into a scathing attack on postwar racism and ingratitude".
  375. ^ A love story by Ring Lardner. Welles reads selections from Romeo and Juliet. Cast: Julie Warren, Brainerd Duffield, Mercedes McCambridge, Mary Healy, Ted Osborne, Stefan Schnabel, Santos Ortega.
  376. ^ An adaptation of Edward Ellsberg's book about the USS Jeannette. Cast: Orson Welles, John Brown, Elliott Reid, Byron Kane, Norman Field, Earle Ross, Lurene Tuttle.
  377. ^ An original radio play by Orson Welles and John Tucker Battle. Cast: Orson Welles, Norman Field, Earle Ross, Joe Granby, Barbara Jean Wong, Carl Frank, Byron Kane, John Brown, William Johnstone, Elliott Reid, William Alland.
  378. ^ Adaptations of short stories by Sherwood Anderson and Edgar Allan Poe. Cast: Orson Welles, William Alland, Joe Granby, Elliott Reid, Norman Field, Carl Frank, others.
  379. ^ Museum of Broadcasting: "The NAACP felt that these broadcasts did more than anything else to prompt the Justice Department to act on the case".[8]: 66 
  380. ^ Brainerd Duffield's adaptation of the novel by Herman Melville. Cast: Orson Welles (Ahab), William Alland, Byron Kane, John Brown, Earle Ross, Elliott Reid.
  381. ^ Welles is told in September that ABC is unable to continue his sustained program after the October 6 episode.
  382. ^ Cast: Orson Welles, Norman Field, Mary Lansing, Lurene Tuttle, Jerry Farber, others.
  383. ^ Cast: Orson Welles (King Lear), John Brown (Narrator); with Agnes Moorehead, Edgar Barrier, William Alland, Mary Lansing. Welles reads "Cynara", a poem by Ernest Dowson, to conclude the Mercury Summer Theatre series.
  384. ^ Fifth anniversary of the Armed Forces Radio Service. Cast: Ken Carpenter (announcer), Fred Allen, Robert Anders (Secretary Of War), Eddie Anderson, Lionel Barrymore (emcee), Jack Benny, J. Lawton Collins (Lieutenant General), Bing Crosby, Jimmy Durante, Nelson Eddy, Clark Gable, Judy Garland, Greer Garson, Bill Goodwin, Peter Lind Hayes, Portland Hoffa, Danny Kaye, Ernst Lubitsch, Paul Lukas, Lauritz Melchior, George Murphy, Lina Romay, Dinah Shore, Ginny Simms, Frank Sinatra, Harry Von Zell, Orson Welles, Don Wilson.
  385. ^ Welles's contribution was recorded before he left the U.S. for Europe after the filming of Macbeth was completed in July 1947. Cast: Orson Welles (a two-minute "commercial"), The King Sisters ("Isle of Capri"), Betty Grable ("I Can't Begin to Tell You"), Danny Kaye, Gregory Ratoff, Peggy Knudsen (emcee), Ken Niles (announcer).
  386. ^ Recordings of United Nations highlights, from the founding conference in San Francisco to the Korean debate, introduced and narrated by Dr. Benjamin A. Cohen, UN Assistant Secretary General. Cast: Franchot Tone (narrator), Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Anthony Eden, Edward Stitinius, V. M. Molotov (translator), Orson Welles, Trygve Lie, Bernard Baruch, Dean Acheson, Jawaharlal Nehru, Andrei Vishinsky, Albert Einstein, Ralph Bunche, Clement Attlee, Fiorello La Guardia, Andrei Gromyko, Lester Pearson, Jan Masaryk, Ernest Bevin, Chaim Weitzman, George Marshall, William MacKenzie-King, Eleanor Roosevelt, Benjamin Cohen, Eleanor Gardner (writer, producer, director), Robert Lewis Shayon (director), Wayne Howell (announcer), Lee Jones (producer), Mavor Moore (director).
  387. ^ A total of 52 shows were produced for this series, also known as The Third Man: The Lives of Harry Lime. Welles narrates this prequel series based on the character he portrayed in The Third Man (1949). Produced by Harry Alan Towers, directed by Tig Roe, zither music by Anton Karas. Recorded (beginning in March 1951) at IBC Studios, London. Episode titles are listed alphabetically: "Because the programs were recorded on tape for syndicated release (as opposed to live-performed syndicated line feeds), the programs were not broadcast on particular dates in specific order" (Bret Wood).
  388. ^ Adapted for a satirical film treatment titled V.I.P. and subsequently, published as a novel, Une Grosse Légume.
  389. ^ Recorded in Paris. Welles later developed this story into the script for his film Mr. Arkadin.
  390. ^ A total of 52 shows were produced for this series based on famous cases from the archives of Scotland Yard. Produced by Harry Alan Towers, directed by Tig Roe; recorded in London beginning in 1951. Episode titles are listed alphabetically: "Because the programs were recorded on tape for syndicated release (as opposed to live-performed syndicated line feeds), the programs were not broadcast on particular dates in specific order" (Bret Wood).
  391. ^ Memorial tribute comprising reminiscences recorded over many months. Cast: Orson Welles, Michael Balcon, Michael Bell, Ernestine Evans, Frances H. Flaherty, Peter Freuchen, Lillian Gish, Oliver St. John Gogarty, John Grierson, John Huston, Denis Johnston, Alexander Korda, Henri Matisse, Pat Mullen, Edward Peacock, Dido and Jean Renoir, Paul Rotha, Sabu, Erich von Stroheim, Stephen Tallents, Virgil Thomson, Oliver Lawson Dick (writer), W. R. Rodgers (producer).
  392. ^ Orson Welles narrates and performs the work by Walt Whitman.
  393. ^ From the Haymarket Theatre, London. Cast: Orson Welles, Laurence Olivier (host), Alexander Pushkin (author), Derek Patmore (adaptor), Sidney Torch (music), Harry Alan Towers (producer).
  394. ^ Cast: John Gielgud (Sherlock Holmes), Ralph Richardson (Dr. Watson), Orson Welles (Moriarty), Harry Alan Towers (producer), Tig Roe (director).
  395. ^ Nuclear war drama produced and syndicated by ABC and the Federal Civil Defense Administration. Cast: Orson Welles (narrator), Marshall Thompson, Mona Freeman, Philip Wylie (author), Jimmy Wallington (announcer), Milton Geiger (adaptor), Bill Karn (director).
  396. ^ Cast: Kenneth Banghart (narrator), Charles Brackett, Jane Grant, Harold K. Guinzburg, Ben Hecht, Joseph Hennessey, Charles Lederer, Robert Barnes Rudd, Eleanor Roosevelt, Orson Welles, Rebecca West, Alexander Woollcott, John C. Wilson (preparer).

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk Wood, Bret (1990). Orson Welles: A Bio-Bibliography. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-26538-0.
  2. ^ a b Tarbox, Todd (2013). Orson Welles and Roger Hill: A Friendship in Three Acts. Albany, Georgia: BearManor Media. ISBN 978-1-59393-260-2.
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  4. ^ Cotten, Joseph (1987). Vanity Will Get You Somewhere. San Francisco, CA: Mercury House. ISBN 978-0-916515-17-1.
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  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3.
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  37. ^ "First Person Singular: Treasure Island". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. July 18, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  38. ^ "First Person Singular: A Tale of Two Cities". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. July 18, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  39. ^ "First Person Singular: The Thirty-Nine Steps". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. August 1, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  40. ^ "First Person Singular: I'm A Fool / The Open Window / My Little Boy". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. August 8, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  41. ^ "First Person Singular: Abraham Lincoln". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. August 15, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  42. ^ "First Person Singular: The Count of Monte Cristo". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. August 29, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  43. ^ "First Person Singular: The Man Who Was Thursday". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. September 3, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
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  48. ^ "The Mercury Theatre on the Air: Seventeen". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 16, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
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  50. ^ "Celebrating the 70th Anniversary of Orson Welles's panic radio broadcast The War of the Worlds". Wellesnet, October 26, 2008. Retrieved 2014-04-19.
  51. ^ "The Mercury Theatre on the Air: The War of the Worlds". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 30, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  52. ^ "The Mercury Theatre on the Air: Heart of Darkness / Life With Father". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 6, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  53. ^ a b c d e f g "Alphabetical Listing of Tapes, Orson Welles Papers". Lilly Library, Indiana University Bloomington. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  54. ^ a b "Silver Theatre". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  55. ^ "The Mercury Theatre on the Air: A Passenger to Bali". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 13, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  56. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av "The Campbell Playhouse". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-12-06. Retrieved 2014-11-30.
  57. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "The Campbell Playhouse". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2014-11-30.
  58. ^ Smith, Steven C., A Heart at Fire's Center: The Life and Music of Bernard Herrmann. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991 ISBN 0-520-07123-9
  59. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Rebecca". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 9, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  60. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: A Christmas Carol". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 23, 1938. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  61. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Counsellor-at-Law". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 6, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  62. ^ "Star Cast to Take Air Tonight in Behalf of March of Dimes Drive". Abilene Reporter-News. January 22, 1939.
  63. ^ Thomson, David (1992). Showman: The Life of David O. Selznick. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 238–239. ISBN 0-394-56833-8.
  64. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: I Lost My Girlish Laughter". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 27, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  65. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Arrowsmith". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 3, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  66. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: The Green Goddess". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 10, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  67. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: The Glass Key". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 10, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  68. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Beau Geste". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 17, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  69. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Twentieth Century". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 24, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  70. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Private Lives". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. April 21, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  71. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Wickford Point". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. May 5, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  72. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Our Town". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. May 12, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  73. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: The Bad Man". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. May 19, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  74. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: American Cavalcade". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. May 26, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  75. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Victoria Regina". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. June 2, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  76. ^ a b "Knickerbocker Playhouse". Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs. Retrieved 2014-02-06.
  77. ^ a b "Orson Welles to Head Playhouse". Milwaukee Journal, July 2, 1939. Retrieved 2014-02-06.[permanent dead link]
  78. ^ "Orson Welles in Sensational Comedy on Knickerbocker Playhouse". Pittsburgh Press, June 4, 1939. Retrieved 2014-02-06.
  79. ^ Winchell, Walter (July 7, 1939). "On Broadway". Nevada State Journal.
  80. ^ Quinn, Susan (2008). Furious Improvisation: How the WPA and a Cast of Thousands Made High Art out of Desperate Times. New York: Walker Publishing Company. p. 277. ISBN 9780802716989.
  81. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Peter Ibbetson". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. September 10, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  82. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Ah, Wilderness!". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. September 17, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  83. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: What Every Woman Knows". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. September 24, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  84. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: The Count of Monte Cristo". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 1, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  85. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Algiers". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 8, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  86. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Escape". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 15, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  87. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Liliom". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 22, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  88. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: The Magnificent Ambersons". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 29, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  89. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: The Hurricane". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 5, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  90. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: The Murder of Roger Ackroyd". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 12, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  91. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: The Garden of Allah". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 19, 1939. Retrieved 2018-07-27.
  92. ^ a b c Meryman, Richard (1978). Mank: The Wit, World and Life of Herman Mankiewicz. New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-688-03356-9.
  93. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Dodsworth". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. Retrieved 2018-07-29.
  94. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Vanity Fair". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 7, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  95. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Theodora Goes Wild". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 14, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  96. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: The Citadel". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 21, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  97. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: It Happened One Night". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 28, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  98. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Broome Stages". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 4, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  99. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Mr. Deeds Goes to Town". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 11, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  100. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Dinner at Eight". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 18, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  101. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Only Angels Have Wings". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 25, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  102. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Rabble in Arms". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 3, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  103. ^ "The Jell-O Program starring Jack Benny". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 17, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  104. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Huckleberry Finn". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 17, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  105. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: June Moon". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 24, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  106. ^ "The Campbell Playhouse: Jane Eyre". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 31, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-28.
  107. ^ "This Is Radio". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-02-03. Retrieved 2014-01-25.
  108. ^ "H. G. Wells meets Orson Welles, Parts I and II". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 17, 1940. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  109. ^ a b c "The Rudy Vallee Sealtest Show". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-02-03. Retrieved 2014-01-25.
  110. ^ "Miscellaneous Programs". Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs. Archived from the original on 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2014-01-25.
  111. ^ "George Washington, American". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 22, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  112. ^ "Duffy's Tavern". Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  113. ^ One Step Ahead. WorldCat. OCLC 648196279.
  114. ^ "His Honor, the Mayor". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. April 6, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  115. ^ "Citizen Kane Interview". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. May 28, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  116. ^ "CBS Forecast Radio Program". Digital Deli. Archived from the original on 2013-10-30. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  117. ^ a b c d e f Callow, Simon (2006). Orson Welles: Hello Americans. New York: Viking Penguin. ISBN 0-670-87256-3.
  118. ^ "Orson Welles Show: Sredni Vashtar / Hidalgo / An Irishman and a Jew". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. September 15, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  119. ^ "Orson Welles Show: The Interlopers / Song of Solomon / I'm a Fool". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. September 29, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  120. ^ "Orson Welles Show: The Black Pearl". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 6, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  121. ^ "Orson Welles Show: If in Years to Come". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 13, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  122. ^ The Boston Post, October 12, 1941
  123. ^ The Boston Globe, October 18, 1941
  124. ^ "Orson Welles Show: Wild Oranges". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 3, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  125. ^ "Orson Welles Show: That's Why I Left You / The Maysville Minstrel". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 10, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  126. ^ "Orson Welles Show: Something's Going to Happen to Henry / Wilbur Brown, Habitat: Brooklyn". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 1, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  127. ^ "Orson Welles Show: Symptoms of Being Thirty-Five / Leaves of Grass". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 7, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  128. ^ "The Gulf Screen Guild Theatre". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  129. ^ a b c d e f g "Orson Welles Wartime Broadcasts". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2014-03-15.
  130. ^ a b c d "The Cavalcade of America". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  131. ^ a b c d "Orson Welles on Cavalcade of America". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2014-12-30.
  132. ^ "The Great Man Votes". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 15, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  133. ^ "We Hold These Truths". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  134. ^ "We Hold These Truths". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  135. ^ "We Hold These Truths". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 15, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  136. ^ "Orson Welles Show: St. Luke, ch.2 / The Happy Prince / Christmas Poetry". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 22, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  137. ^ "Orson Welles Show: There are Frenchmen and Frenchmen". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 29, 1941. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  138. ^ "Orson Welles Show: The Garden of Allah". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 5, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  139. ^ "Orson Welles Show: The Apple Tree". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 12, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  140. ^ "Orson Welles Show: My Little Boy". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 19, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  141. ^ "Radio 1938–1947, Orson Welles Papers". Lilly Library, Indiana University Bloomington. Retrieved 2014-02-15.
  142. ^ "Orson Welles Show: The Happy Hypocrite". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 26, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  143. ^ "Orson Welles Show: Between Americans". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 2, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  144. ^ a b c Benamou, Catherine L., It's All True: Orson Welles's Pan-American Odyssey. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007 ISBN 978-0-520-24247-0
  145. ^ "Pan American Day". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. April 14, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  146. ^ "President Vargas's Birthday". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. April 18, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  147. ^ Detroit Free Press, August 29, 1942
  148. ^ "Bond Show Nets 10-Million Order". Detroit Free Press (Associated Press), August 31, 1942
  149. ^ Des Moines Tribune, August 29, 1942
  150. ^ The Washington Post, August 29, 1942
  151. ^ "7 Hour Radio Show to Push War Bonds". The New York Times, August 29, 1942
  152. ^ 100 Million in Bonds Already Sold by Radio for Gov't; Blue Net Alone Sold 16 Million. Billboard, September 12, 1942. 12 September 1942. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  153. ^ "More on War Bond Selling". Broadcasting, August 31, 1942, page 50.
  154. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Suspense". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2018-07-20. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  155. ^ a b c d "Stage Door Canteen". Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs. Retrieved 2014-05-02.
  156. ^ "Information Please". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  157. ^ "Juarez: Thunder from the Mountains". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. September 28, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  158. ^ "Welles Narrates". Mason City Globe-Gazette, October 1, 1942, page 2
  159. ^ "Wendy Barrie and Orson Welles on Radio Reader's Digest". Chicago Tribune. October 11, 1942. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
  160. ^ Barnouw, Erik (ed.), Radio Drama in Action: 25 Plays of a Changing World. New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1945.
  161. ^ "Admiral of the Ocean Sea". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. October 12, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  162. ^ "Philip Morris Playhouse". The Digital Deli. Archived from the original on 2014-02-24. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  163. ^ "The Texaco Star Theatre". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  164. ^ "The Texaco Star Theatre". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2014-05-08.
  165. ^ "The Stranger". DVD Beaver. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  166. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: Flying Fortress". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 9, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  167. ^ a b "Hello Americans". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-04-07. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  168. ^ "Hello Americans". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2014-08-21.
  169. ^ "Hello Americans—Brazil". The Paley Center for Media. Retrieved 2014-02-28.
  170. ^ "Hello Americans: Brazil". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 15, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  171. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: Air Transport Command". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 16, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  172. ^ "Hello Americans—The Andes". The Paley Center for Media. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  173. ^ "Hello Americans: The Andes". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 22, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  174. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: The Navigator". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 23, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  175. ^ "Hello Americans—The Islands". The Paley Center for Media. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  176. ^ "Hello Americans: The Islands". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 29, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  177. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: Wind, Sand and Stars". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. November 30, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  178. ^ a b c "Mail Call". Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  179. ^ "Hello Americans: Alphabet A to C". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 6, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  180. ^ "Hello Americans: Alphabet C to S". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 13, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  181. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: War Workers". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 14, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  182. ^ "Hello Americans: Alphabet: Slavery (Abednego) to End of Alphabet". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 20, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  183. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: Gremlins". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 21, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  184. ^ "Hello Americans: Christmas in the Americas". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 27, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  185. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: Pan American Airlines". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. December 28, 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  186. ^ "Go with your Red Cross". The Paley Center for Media. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  187. ^ "Go with your Red Cross". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. 1942. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  188. ^ "Violet Atkins Klein Papers, 1942–1967". Oviatt Library, California State University, Northridge. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  189. ^ a b c "Treasury Star Parade". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  190. ^ "Hello Americans: Ritmos de las Americas". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 3, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  191. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: Anti-Submarine Patrol". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 4, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  192. ^ "Hello Americans: Mexico". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 10, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  193. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: Finger in the Wind". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 11, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  194. ^ "Hello Americans: Feed the World". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 17, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  195. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: Letter to Mother". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 18, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  196. ^ "Orson Welles Sent to Bed By Doctor". The Port Arthur News (United Press), January 25, 1943, page 1. "Orson Welles, wonder-boy of the entertainment world, was in bed today for an extended rest on orders of his physician. Welles collapsed early yesterday while writing and rehearsing a network radio show."
  197. ^ "The Definitive Mercury Theatre on the Air". The Digital Deli. Archived from the original on 2014-05-20. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  198. ^ "Hello Americans: Ritmos de las Americas". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 24, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  199. ^ "Manuscripts, Orson Welles Papers". Lilly Library. Retrieved 2014-11-06.
  200. ^ a b "Rare Steinbeck WWII story finally published". The Washington Post (Associated Press), November 6, 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-11-07. Retrieved 2014-11-06.
  201. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: Mrs. James and the Pot of Tea, Flyer Come Home". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 25, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  202. ^ "Hello Americans: Bolivar's Idea". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 31, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  203. ^ "Ceiling Unlimited: The Future". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 1, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-20.
  204. ^ The Grape Nuts and Grape Nuts Flakes program [1943-03-14]. WorldCat. OCLC 423624085.
  205. ^ a b c d e "The Jack Benny Program For Grape-Nuts and Grape-Nuts Flakes". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-10-25. Retrieved 2014-12-08.
  206. ^ "The Jack Benny Show". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 14, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  207. ^ The Grape Nuts and Grape Nuts Flakes program [1943-03-21]. WorldCat. OCLC 423622858.
  208. ^ "The Jack Benny Show". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 21, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  209. ^ The Grape Nuts and Grape Nuts Flakes program [1943-03-28]. WorldCat. OCLC 423622871.
  210. ^ "The Jack Benny Show". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 21, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  211. ^ a b "Radio Reader's Digest". Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs. Retrieved 2014-05-02.
  212. ^ "The Jack Benny Show". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. April 4, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  213. ^ "The Jack Benny Show". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. April 11, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  214. ^ "Reading Out Loud". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. September 3, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-16.
  215. ^ "Interviews at the Mercury Wonder Show". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. September 7, 1943. Retrieved 2018-07-16.
  216. ^ "The Pepsodent Show". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-14.
  217. ^ "The Bob Hope Show". Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  218. ^ "The Philip Morris Playhouse". The Digital Deli. Archived from the original on 2014-02-24. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  219. ^ "The New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-14.
  220. ^ "The New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, Part 1 of 2, Leonard Bernstein Debut". The Paley Center for Media. Retrieved 2014-02-28.
  221. ^ a b "The Fred Allen Show". Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs. Retrieved 2014-05-02.
  222. ^ a b c d e "Command Performance". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-03-09. Retrieved 2014-03-08.
  223. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Radio Almanac". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2018-09-15. Retrieved 2014-02-09.
  224. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. January 26, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-16.
  225. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 2, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-16.
  226. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 9, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-16.
  227. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 16, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-16.
  228. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. February 23, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-16.
  229. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 1, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  230. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 8, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  231. ^ a b "Orson Welles Almanac—Part 1". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2014-02-09.
  232. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 22, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  233. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. March 29, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  234. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. April 5, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  235. ^ "Orson Welles Radio Almanac Index". Old Time Radio Researchers Group Library. Archived from the original on 2014-09-13. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  236. ^ "The Orson Welles Almanac". Orson Welles on the Air, 1938–1946. Indiana University Bloomington. April 12, 1944. Retrieved 2018-07-19.
  237. ^ "Suspense: The Marvelous Barastro". The Paley Center for Media. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  238. ^ a b "Kid Ory—Portrait of the Greatest Slideman Ever Born (URCD187)". Upbeat Recordings. Archived from the original on 2014-11-08. Retrieved 2014-03-02.
  239. ^ "The Dinah Shore Program". RadioGOLDINdex. Archived from the original on 2014-05-04. Retrieved 2014-05-04.
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