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WAR OF THE WORLDS Conspiracy or
Science Fiction?
by KC Stapleton
Saturday June 28, 2003 10:24:07 PM CDT
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Orson Wells
Reading a script
during a radio broadcast. |
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October 30, 1938
- Contrary to the historical reference in the movie
Buckaroo Banzai
(1984) the public panic that
happened in 1938 during the broadcast of War of the Worlds does
not appear to have been caused by real aliens. What did happen
though has been the stuff of speculation ever since Orson Wells
and the Mercury Theater Players decide to "experiment" with a new
formula for producing a radio play. Did Wells create the mass
hysteria that night on purpose? Was it actually a government
tactic to discover how the country would react to other worldly
encounters? Or were the people of the 1930's just not as, well,
bright as we are today? As easy as it might seem to laugh at the
gullibility of those listeners that famous night, it should be
considered that to not learn from our past is to be doomed to
repeat it.
The Audience:
The American public that autumn night was not
looking for trouble, quite the opposite. The news in Europe, that
they listened to intently via the fairly new medium of the radio,
gave them the constant rumble of war. To the consternation of
President Roosevelt most people of the United States wanted no
part of the conflict heating up between Great Britain, Germany,
Poland, and Russia. They wanted even less to become involved in
the aggressions across the Pacific. Since World War I they
had experienced one piece of hard luck after another. The long
party of the Roaring Twenties had ended with the Stock Market
Crash of 1929, an economic down slide that was made even more
unendurable by the ecological disaster of the Dust Bowl. Not since
the Native Americans had been removed from their homes and
transported to reservations had so many in this country been
displaced and left homeless after banks foreclosed on one farm
after another throughout the heartland. Cities had filled with
people looking for work with few skills and almost no resources.
The American people had been resilient and determined, but they
wanted a chance to enjoy what opportunities they had found. The
economy was beginning to look better, many individuals had
adjusted to an industrial city existence after a life spent on a
farm. Farmers who had managed to hold on were slowly but surely
beginning to breathe easier. They gathered together as families and
neighbors to listen to radio broadcasts that threatened this
recovering equilibrium with nervousness. Arguments as to who was
responsible to stop the trouble elsewhere in the world broke out
frequently even among family members. That October 30th, a tension
lay across the landscape of America like dry straw waiting for a
carelessly tossed match to ignited it. |
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Orson Wells and The Mercury Theater (http://www.unknown.nu/mercury/)
Orson Wells found success early in his life. Considered a "wunderkind"
he wore many hats in the field of entertainment: writer, actor, and
director. That he was gifted is obvious, perhaps in this case almost
too gifted. As Halloween neared and the final touches on the script
for the War of The World radio play were being worked in, Wells made a
decision based on his instincts as a writer. Science Fiction was not
as popular a genre as it is today, and Wells had an inspiration
for a way of pulling the audience into the story. His ideas were good ones
perhaps, again, a little too good.
He used a formula that many Science Fiction authors would employ with
success later. Getting the reader's or listener's attention often means
having them suspend their disbelief. Just as a magician will use
misdirection, patter, and style to distract his audience from paying
too much attention to what he is really doing with that silk scarf, so
does a writer use believable characters and realism to draw his
audience into a fantasy. Simply showing or describing a frightening
alien to an audience would not catch them up in the story. Instead he
needed to make the play sound as real as possible, give the listeners
characters they would care about then have these fictional creations
menaced by the monsters.
Later it would be speculated that Orson Wells knew very well what
would happen when he decided to base the opening scenes on actual
radio news broadcasts. That he would know ahead of time the series of
factors that caused the hysteria is doubtful, more likely he simply
felt he had hit on a novel way of grabbing his audience's attention.
He paced the studio at CBS where the Mercury Theaters Players were
organizing props and writing dialog and emphasized that their audience
would not believe in the aliens if they couldn't place themselves in
the story and see a clear picture of the action. Drawing from actual
broadcast such as the
Hindenburg
disaster, and first hand accounts of
the news from Europe he added touches to the script by
Howard Koch that would dramatically
change the feel of the play and make the listener feel he was
actually experiencing an invasion by creeping denizens of another
world. Actually this was not the first time he would use a documentary
style, in fact an earlier Mercury Theater play "Dracula", based on
Bram Stoker's novel, had many of these same effects.
The book War of the Worlds written by H. G. Wells ( http://www.online-literature.com/wellshg/)
had a similar technique of using first person narrative to
describe events as if they were actually occurring to the main
character. The story was to some degree upbeat. The aliens who shrug
off the might of men succumb to the smallest defense the planet earth
has to offer.
Orson Wells wanted that same touch of dramatic human interest for his
program. He asked that sounds effects be especially authentic and
substantial. The actors were directed to imitate radio newsmen, and
the names of the cities used in the book were changed to locations
within the United States. He was ready by Halloween to terrify anyone
listening to the show. He probably had no idea how much he would scare
some of them.
But Officer I heard it on the Radio, it has to be true!
One of the factors that Wells had doubtless not taken into account was
the general publics attention span and habits. As the actors gathered
around in the studio and waited to go live on the air most Americans
were tuned into another show. A popular comedy was just coming to
a conclusion as the Mercury Theater Players announced the name of
their play and made clear their intentions to give their audience a
truly frightening performance. Those audience members who sat waiting
to be entertained either looked forward to a scary evenings
diversion or reached for the dial on their radio to find another
program. Meanwhile other listener's hands were also on the dial as the
comedy had ended and the next program didn't capture their fancy.
The play began with orchestra music. Those who had heard the first
announcement knew this was just a prelude to the
action. Those who had been searching the radio dial thought they had
found a program featuring pleasant music and settled back to listen to
the soothing sound. Likewise when the music was interrupted and an
actor broke into the program to make an announcement of a sighting of
something strange in the sky those in the know were not fooled, and
those who had tuned in late sat forward in their chairs wondering what
the objected could possible be.
As the play progressed the unknown object turned into a spacecraft.
Then the spacecraft landed in the very real location of Grover's Mill,
New Jersey. Amid the realistic sound effects an actor using the same
hushed tones heard in the voice of the newscaster during the
Hindenburg crash gave an account of the alien's emergence from the
ship. The audience could heard the man's voice overcome by
horror as the dastardly extra-terrestrials produced a weapon and laid waste not only to the
landscape but also to several extras playing the tortured voices of the crowd
surrounding the craft. For many tuning in late who did not know
they were listening to a science fiction story that was more than
enough to send them into hysteria.
While it could be argued that all anyone swept up in panic had to do
was turn the dial to realize that no such invasion was underway, the
nature of hysteria is to be incapable of rational thought. By the
time the first break came in the program that announced the name of
the night's piece of fiction it was too late for many of the terrified audience members. They were engaged in activity related to
what they perceived was happening. Hard to imagine what you
would do if you thought aliens were taking over New Jersey right this
moment isn't it? But that was exactly what many hapless people thought
was happening and they reacted to that information.
Roads became jammed in some locations as people fled the mythical
Martian visitors to earth. Unfortunate listeners hid terrified in basements, they
covered doors and windows in an effort to keep out the poison gas the
"announcer" had warned them about. Some even managed to convince
others who had not even been listening to the show that the world was
coming to an end. They armed themselves and prepared to fight to their
deaths.-All for nothing.-
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The WAR of the WORLDS
by H.G. Wells |
THIS IS ORSON WELLS
by Orson Wells |
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Father & daughter listening to the radio
by
Lee, Russell, 1903- photographer.
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Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress
[LC-USF34- 037961-D] Photo part of Farm Security
Administration - Office of War Information Photograph
Collection (Library of Congress)
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We Didn't Mean It As the nature of the curious panic became clear to police they arrived
at the studios at CBS to request that the program be stopped. Instead
as the program was by this time so close to completion the actors
finished the broadcast of the play. If
you are tempted to believe that Wells deliberately tricked his
audience that Halloween night, listen to an actual recording of that
radio program if you can. As the program ends Orson Wells stepped
forward to make an unscripted announcement from his own notes he
had hastily written.
"This is Orson Wells, ladies and gentlemen, out of character to
assure you that The War of The Worlds has no further significance than
as the holiday offering it was intended to be. The Mercury Theater's
own radio version of dressing up in a sheet and jumping out of a bush
and saying Boo! Starting now, we couldn't soap all your windows and
steal all your garden gates by tomorrow night. . . so we did the best
next thing. We annihilated the world before your very ears, and
utterly destroyed the C. B. S. You will be relieved, I hope, to learn
that we didn't mean it, and that both institutions are still open for
business. So goodbye everybody, and remember the terrible lesson you
learned tonight. That grinning, glowing, globular invader of your
living room is an inhabitant of the pumpkin patch, and if your
doorbell rings and nobody's there, that was no Martian. . .it's
Hallowe'en."
Simply reading what he had to say does not
convey what his emotions might have been that night. There is an audible gulp between the words
"tomorrow night", and "so we did.." And in the phrase "we didn't mean
it" his voice raises a few octaves. He sounds very much like any other
young man who, in the middle of a very serious time, simply wanted to
have some fun and can't quite understand what all the fuss is about. |
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