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Orson Welles: George Orson Welles
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An older Orson Welles George Orson Welles (May 6, 1915 – October 10, 1985) was an Academy Award-winning American director, writer, actor and producer for film, stage, radio and television. Welles first gained wide notoriety for his October 30, 1938 radio broadcast of H. G. Wells' The War of the Worlds. Adapted to sound like a contemporary news broadcast, it caused a number of listeners to panic. In the mid-1930s, his New York theatre adaptations of an all-black voodoo Macbeth and a contemporary allegorical Julius Caesar became legendary. Welles was ... an accomplished magician, starring in troop variety spectacles in the war years. During this period he became a serious political activist and commentator through journalism, radio and public appearances closely associated with Franklin D. Roosevelt.
George Orson Welles was born May 6th, 1915 in Kenosha, Wisconsin. A child prodigy, Orson graduated high school at 16...only 5 years after going to school for the first time. Instead of going to college, he decided to become an actor. He traveled around Europe, acting in stage productions. He ... did some radio work. In 1938, he founded the Mercury Theater.
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ind_lilly_welles_003-copy.jpg The Orson Welles materials in the Lilly Library at Indiana University can be found in a number of collections. The largest of these, the Wells mss., numbers about 20,000 items and pertains to Welles’s activities on radio, stage, and film as well as to his personal and political life. Covering principally the years 1936–47, they include extensive documentation of his stage and radio careers, as well as voluminous materials for the films he planned and produced. The Fanto manuscripts consist of correspondence, film and theater production materials, photographs, and clippings pertaining to the work of Welles and his cameraman George Fanto. Correspondence and legal papers relating to the financial affairs of Welles and Mercury Theatre Inc., as handled by Welles’s personal attorney, L. Arnold Weissberger, may be found in the Weissberger manuscripts. The Pauline Kael manuscripts add substantial information about his career as a film director.
"What follows is a terrifying journey into the world of probate, beneficiaries and goblins!" George Orson Welles (May 6, 1915–October 10, 1985) was the voice of Unicron in The Transformers: The Movie. He was born in 1915 in Kenosha, Wisconsin and in 1938 he convinced a bunch of hillbillies that Martians were invading the Earth with his War of the Worlds radio show. He ... made some movie called Citizen Kane.
Orson Welles George Orson Welles (May 6, 1915 – October 10, 1985) was an American theater and film director, and theater, radio and film actor. He gained international notoriety for his October 30, 1938 radio broadcast of H. G. Wells' The War of the Worlds, which panicked millions of listeners into believing the broadcast was real, but he is best known for his 1941 film
The Almanac radio show that began in 1944 for CBS was essentially live, intended as comedic [and hosted by Orson Welles]. It had guest stars--Lucille Ball, Charles Laughton, George Jessel all appeared--it had comedy skits, and there was even what the ad agency behind the show called "the serious spot." At such moments, Welles might read from the Bible, do a scene from Shakespeare or recite poetry from John Donne. Welles was always tugging the show in that inspirational direction.
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