I wish I could have heard the original broadcast, I bet it must have been exciting. The "War of the Worlds is definitely a classic. I wonder what would happen today if an author tried pulling a stunt like this?
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10/25/2010 01:24:00 PM
Anonymous said...
My father said he heard the show in Providence and enjoyed it. He had heard the Mercury Theatre before and didn't think we weren't being invaded any more than he might have thought Dracula was undead when they dramatized Bram Stoker's story earlier in the year.
5/16/2011 10:06:00 PM
[Image]Occurring before the Baby Boomer birth years, Orson Welles' grand hoax radio broadcast, "War of the Worlds" remains an all time Halloween classic.
Orson Welles is an icon to boomers from many classic movies of our time, such as "Citizen Kane", which has been hailed as one of the best movies ever made.
On October 30, 1938, Welles, the host and creator of a drama based radio program called, The Mercury Theatre on the Air, broadcast a live dramatic adaptation of the H.G. Wells' novel, "The War of the Worlds", about the invasion of planet Earth by creatures from Mars. The event was taken seriously by thousands of people all over the country and caused a great deal of panic. Of course much of the panic was over-hyped, but as many may have not heard the introductions of the show, they thought it was real. The program did not have commercial interruptions, making it seem even more realistic.
The next day, the New York Times article explained the radio broadcast as a hoax and it made Orson Welles famous.
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Close this window Jump to comment formI wish I could have heard the original broadcast, I bet it must have been exciting. The "War of the Worlds
is definitely a classic. I wonder what would happen today if an author tried pulling a stunt like this?
Become a Facebook Fan for discounts on Baby Boomer products and more
10/25/2010 01:24:00 PM
My father said he heard the show in Providence and enjoyed it. He had heard the Mercury Theatre before and didn't think we weren't being invaded any more than he might have thought Dracula was undead when they dramatized Bram Stoker's story earlier in the year.
5/16/2011 10:06:00 PM