Read Orson Welles, Vol I Online
Authors: Simon Callow
A galaxy of stars in Welles productions
Welles arrives on the West Coast, 1939
Above:
Dinner with journalist Fred Smith in Hollywood. The inscription reads: ‘We look as though we’d already made that million.’
Below:
Maurice Abraham (Dadda) Bernstein, Welles’s guardian, who moved to California to be his personal physician
Welles working on his never-produced screenplay for Joseph Conrad’s
Heart of Darkness
in 1939
The transformation of Orson Welles into Kane
Above
: Make-up man Maurice Seiderman with his cast of Welles’s head.
Centre
: Halfway done.
Below
: The finished product
Orson Welles, made-up as the young Kane, frames a shot during the filming of
Citizen Kane
Macbeth
by William Shakespeare, adapted by O.W.
14 April 1936
Lafayette Theatre, New York
Horse Eats Hat
by Eugene Labiche and Marc-Michel (
An Italian Straw Hat
), adapted by Edwin Denby and O.W.
26 September 1936
Maxine Elliott Theatre, New York
Doctor Faustus
by Christopher Marlowe, adapted by O.W.
8 January 1937
Maxine Elliott
Theatre, New York
The Second Hurricane
by Aaron Copland (musical score) and Edwin Denby (libretto).
21 April 1937
Henry Street Playhouse, New York
The Cradle Will Rock
by Marc Blitzstein.
16 June 1937
Venice Theatre, New York
Caesar
by William Shakespeare (
Julius Caesar
), adapted by O.W.
11 November 1937
Mercury Theatre, New York
The Shoemaker’s
Holiday
by Thomas Dekker, adapted by O.W.
1 January 1938
Mercury Theatre, New York
Heartbreak House
by George Bernard Shaw.
29 April 1938
Mercury Theatre, New York
Too Much Johnson
by William Gillette, adapted by O.W.
16 August 1938 Stony Creek
Summer Theatre, Connecticut
Danton’s Death
by Georg Büchner, translated by Geoffrey Dunlop, adapted
by O.W.
5 November 1938
Mercury Theatre, New York
Five Kings
by William Shakespeare (
Richard II, Henry IV
, Parts I and II,
Henry V
and
The Merry Wives of Windsor
), adapted by O.W.
27 February 1939
Colonial Theatre, Boston
The Green Goddess
by William Archer, adapted by O.W.
June 1939 Palace Theatre, Chicago
Native Son
by Richard Wright, adapted by
the author and Paul Green.
24 March 1941
St James’s Theatre, New York
Hearts of Age
Produced by William Vance, co-directed by O.W.
1934 Woodstock
Summer Theatre Festival
Too Much Johnson
Sequences for insertion in stage play, never used.
Produced by O.W. and John Houseman
1938 Stony Creek
Summer Theatre, Connecticut
The Green Goddess
Introduction to stage play.
Produced by O.W.
1939 Orpheum
Circuit
Citizen Kane
Written by O.W. and Herman J. Mankiewicz
Produced by O.W.
1941 RKO
(Radio Keith Orpheum)
1.
‘Welles’s father was in trade.’ Leaflet about Badger Brass Company.
2.
‘The big city.’ Chicago at the turn of the century:
Chicago’s Left Bank
by Alston J. Smith;
Insight Guide
; various Chicago books.
3.
Information on Welles’s family background largely culled from
Orson Welles: The Rise and Fall of an American Genius
by Charles Higham, whose
work in this area is unrivalled.
4.
‘Orson Welles’, Christmas edition of French
Vogue
, December 1982.
5.
‘They were both charmers.’
Orson Welles
by Barbara Leaming.
6.
‘… a microcosm of industrial America.’ Charles Higham, op. cit.
7.
‘… she was a very handsome woman.’ From
My Life
by Mary D. Bradford.
8.
‘… among the best-known pianists in Kenosha.’ From
Music in Kenosha
by
Mrs Brown, an unpublished study.
9.
‘Over and over again …’ Russell Maloney, ‘This Ageless Soul’:
The New Yorker
8 October 1938.
10.
‘It is the spirit of Loyalty …’ Quoted in
The Todd School
, an unpublished thesis by John Hoke.
11.
‘… the desire to take medicine.’ Quoted in
The Fabulous Orson Welles
by Peter Noble.
1.
‘Out in Chicago …’ H. L. Mencken quoted
in
Chicago’s Left Bank
by Alston J. Smith.
2.
‘Chicago the jazz-baby …’ Smith, op. cit.
3.
‘… a paradise he’d lost.’ Quoted in
Orson Welles
by Barbara Leaming.