Read Young Orson: The Years of Luck and Genius on the Path to Citizen Kane Online
Authors: Patrick McGilligan
WLS (Sears radio station, Chicago), 232, 236
Wonder Show, The
(stage show), 358–59, 362, 368
Woodard, Isaac Jr., 352
Woodstock Opera House, 272, 275, 276, 281–82, 314
Woodstock (Daily) Sentinel
, 161, 179, 181, 184, 282, 321
Woodstock Theater Festival, 272–89
critical reviews of, 282, 284, 285–86, 288
debts of, 288–89, 293
The Drunkard
, 277–78, 289
Hamlet
, 276, 277, 278, 279, 284–86
Trilby
, 276, 277, 278, 279, 281, 282, 284, 285
Tsar Paul
, 276, 277, 278, 279, 287–89
Woodward, Ellen, 399–401
Woollcott, Alexander, 254, 255, 256–57, 259, 301, 303, 406, 512, 571, 645
World War I, 69–70, 78, 79, 80, 511
World War II, 511, 557, 578–79, 599, 620
WOR New York, 358, 404
WPA (Works Progress Administration):
and
Cradle Will Rock
, 390, 391, 392, 394, 396, 397, 399–402
and Federal Theatre Project, 327, 342, 354, 389–90, 391, 397, 399–402
and Project 891, 354–55, 370, 388
and Voodoo
Macbeth
, 332
Wray, Fay, 614, 642
Wright, Frank Lloyd, 170
Wright, Richard,
Native Son
, 660
Writers Guild of America, 696
WTAD Quincy, Illinois, 668
Wuthering Heights
(film), 539, 541, 671
Wyatt, Eustace, 492, 521
Wyler, William, 567, 588
Yeats, George (Georgie Hyde-Lees), 212
Yeats, William Butler, 205–6, 212, 225
Young, Loretta, 454, 560, 643
Your Girl and Mine
(film), 60
Youth’s the Season
(stage play), 209
Yule, George (elder), 61, 74
Yule, George A., 23, 24–25, 35–36, 73–74
Yule, William, 36–37
Yule, William Jr., 279
Zaharoff, Sir Basil, 368–69
Zanuck, Darryl F., 567
Zatkin, Nathan, 308, 309, 317, 318, 327, 328
Ziegfeld Follies
, 122
Zinnemann, Fred, 588
Zorina, Vera, 439, 440, 454, 455–57, 480, 486, 487–89, 490, 542–43, 559, 567
“Rosebud . . . !”
The famous first word of dialogue in
Citizen Kane
, the clue to the puzzle of Charles Foster Kane—with multiple meanings for Orson Welles himself. “Maybe Rosebud was something he [Kane] couldn’t get, or something he lost,” says Thompson the reporter, “but it wouldn’t have explained anything.”
Special from birth, the newborn Orson, son of a power couple, was heralded on page one of his hometown paper in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
The beautiful and multifaceted Beatrice Ives Welles: a prodigy who specialized in classical piano and spoken-word recitals (but wasn’t above serving up a Sousa march at parties); Kenosha’s first female school board official; and a leading suffragist. In his unfinished early film
Too Much Johnson
, Orson included a protest scene (
with Joseph Cotten,
LEFT
) that referenced both Beatrice and his father, Dick Welles, who also supported the suffrage movement.
One of the earliest known photographs of little Orson with Beatrice, whose interest in education manifested itself in both her public school reform efforts and her private mentoring of her special boy in art, music, and literature.
Beatrice’s favorite cousin, the artist and Chicago Art Institute teacher Dudley Crafts Watson, a strong and lasting influence in young Orson’s life.
The only known photo of Orson with his parents, taken during a visit to Kenosha after their separation in Chicago. At far right, behind Orson, is Dr. Maurice Bernstein; to Bernstein’s right is Beatrice Ives Welles. Businessman and inventor Dick Welles stands aloof at far left, next to nanny Sigrid Jacobsen. The two older people are unidentified.
The Hotel Sheffield in Grand Detour, Illinois, Dick Welles’s grand experiment. Orson spent golden summers there, painting across the road on the shore of the Rock River.
As an adult, he considered the place one of the lost Edens of his life.
His first full-length profile:
The Capital Times
, Madison, Wisconsin, February 19, 1926.