The War of the Worlds was an episode of
the American
radio drama anthology
series
Mercury Theatre on the
Air. It was performed as a
Halloween episode of the series on October 30,
1938 and aired over the
Columbia
Broadcasting System radio network. Directed and narrated by
Orson Welles, the episode was an
adaptation of
H. G. Wells' novel
The War of the
Worlds.
The first two thirds of the 60-minute broadcast was presented as a
series of simulated
news bulletin,
which suggested to many listeners that an actual
Martian invasion was
in progress. Compounding the issue was the fact that the
Mercury Theatre on the Air was a '
sustaining show' (it ran without
commercial breaks), thus adding to the dramatic effect. Although
there were sensationalist accounts in the press about a supposed
panic in response to the broadcast, the precise extent of listener
response has been debated. In the days following the adaptation,
however, there was widespread outrage. The program's
news-bulletin format was decried as cruelly
deceptive by some newspapers and public figures, leading to an
outcry against the perpetrators of the broadcast, but the episode
launched Orson Welles to fame.
Welles' adaptation was one of the
Radio
Project's first studies.
Background

Monument erected October 1998
commemorating where the Martians "landed" in Van Nest Park,
Grover's Mill, NJ.
H. G.
Wells' novel is about an alien invasion of
Earth, set in Woking,
England
at the end of the 19th century. The radio
play's story was adapted by and written primarily by
Howard Koch, with input from
Orson Welles and the staff of
CBS's
Mercury
Theatre On The Air.
The action was transferred to contemporary
Grover's
Mill
, an unincorporated village in West Windsor
Township, New Jersey
in the United States. The program's format
was to simulate a live
newscast of
developing events.
To this end, Welles played recordings of
Herbert Morrison's
radio reports of the Hindenburg disaster
for actor Frank Readick and the rest of the cast,
to demonstrate the mood he wanted.
Roughly two thirds of the 55 1/2 minute play was a contemporary
retelling of events of the novel, presented as news bulletins in
documentary style. This approach
was not new.
Fr. Ronald Knox's satirical "newscast" of a riot
overtaking London over the
British Broadcasting Company in
1926 had a similar approach (and created much the same effect on
its audience). Welles had been influenced by the
Archibald MacLeish dramas
The Fall of
The City and
Air Raid, the former using Welles
himself in the role of a live radio news reporter. But the approach
had never been done with as much continued verisimilitude and the
innovative format has been cited as a key factor in the confusion
that followed.
Plot summary
The program, broadcast from the 20th floor at 485
Madison Avenue in New York City, starts with
an introduction from the novel, describing the intentions of the
aliens and noting that the adaptation was set in 1939, a year ahead
of the actual broadcast date. The program continues as a weather
report, then as an ordinary dance band remote featuring "Ramon
Raquello and His Orchestra" (actually the CBS orchestra under the
direction of
Bernard Herrmann) that
is interrupted by news flashes about strange explosions on Mars.
Welles
makes his first appearance as (the fictional) famous astronomer and
Princeton
professor Richard Pierson, who refutes speculation
about life on Mars.
The news
grows more frequent and increasingly ominous as a cylindrical
meteorite lands in Grover's Mill, New Jersey
. A crowd gathers at the site and events are
related by reporter "Carl Phillips" (portrayed by Frank Readick).
The meteorite unscrews, revealing itself as a rocket machine, and
onlookers catch a glimpse of a tentacled, pulsating, barely mobile
Martian before it
incinerates the crowd with "
Heat-Rays."
Phillips' shouts about incoming flames are cut off in mid-sentence.
(Later surveys indicate that many listeners heard only this portion
of the show before contacting neighbors or family to inquire about
the broadcast. Many contacted others in turn, leading to rumors and
confusion.)
Regular programming breaks down as the studio struggles to keep up
with casualty updates, firefighting developments and the like. A
shaken Pierson speculates about Martian technology. The New Jersey
state militia
declares martial law and attacks the cylinder; a message from their
field headquarters goes on about the overwhelming force of properly
equipped infantry and the helplessness of the Martians in Earth's
gravity until a
tripod alien fighting machine
rears up from the pit.
The studio returns to establish the Martians as an invading army
with the obliteration of the militia force. Emergency response
bulletins give way to damage reports and evacuation instructions
while millions of refugees clog the roads. Three Martian tripods
from the cylinder destroy power stations and uproot bridges and
railroads, reinforced by three others from a second cylinder as gas
explosions continue. An unnamed
Secretary of the
Interior advises the nation. (The "secretary" was originally
intended to be a portrayal of
Franklin D. Roosevelt, then President, but CBS
insisted this detail, among others, be changed. The "secretary"
did, however, sound like Roosevelt as the result of directions to
actor
Kenny Delmar by Welles.)
A live connection is established to a field artillery battery. Its
gun crew reports damaging one machine and a release of black
smoke/poison gas before fading in to the sound of coughing. The
lead plane of a wing of bombers broadcasts its approach and remains
on the air as their engines are burned by the Heat Ray and the
plane dives on the invaders. Radio operators go active and fall
silent, most right after reporting the approach of the black smoke.
The planes destroyed one machine, but cylinders are falling all
across the country.
This section ends famously: a news reporter (played by
Ray Collins), broadcasting from atop the
CBS building, describes the Martian invasion of New York City —
"five great machines" wading across the Hudson River, poison smoke
drifting over the city, people running and diving into the East
River] "like rats", others "falling like flies" — until he, too,
succumbs to the poison gas. Finally, a despairing ham radio
operator is heard calling, "2X2L calling CQ. Isn't there anyone on
the air? Isn't there anyone on the air? Isn't there....
anyone?"
After an intermission for "station identification", in which
announcer Dan Seymour mentions the show's fictionality, the last
third is a monologue and dialogue, with Welles returning as
Professor Pierson, describing the aftermath of the attacks. The
story ends, as does the novel, with the Martians falling victim to
earthly germs and bacteria.
After the play, Welles informally breaks character to remind
listeners that the broadcast was a Halloween concoction (the
equivalent, as he puts it, "of dressing up in a sheet and saying,
'Boo!'"). Popular mythology holds this "disclaimer" was hastily
added to the broadcast at the insistence of CBS executives as they
became aware of panic inspired by the program; in fact, it had
appeared in Koch's working script for the play, as detailed in his
1968 book
The Panic Broadcast.
Public reaction

New York Times headline from
October 31, 1938
Some listeners heard only a portion of the broadcast, and in the
atmosphere of tension and anxiety leading to World War II, took it
to be a news broadcast. Newspapers reported that panic ensued,
people fleeing the area, others thinking they could smell poison
gas or could see flashes of lightning in the distance.
Richard J. Hand cites studies by unnamed historians who
"calculate[d] that some six million heard the CBS broadcast; 1.7
million believed it to be true, and 1.2 million were 'genuinely
frightened'". While Welles and company were heard by a
comparatively small audience (in the same period, NBC's audience
was an estimated 30 million), the uproar was anything but minute:
within a month, there were 12,500 newspaper articles about the
broadcast or its impact, while
Adolf
Hitler cited the panic, as Hand writes, as "evidence of the
decadence and corrupt condition of democracy."
Later studies suggested this "panic" was less widespread than
newspapers suggested. During this period, many newspapers were
concerned that radio, a new medium, would make them defunct. In
addition, this was a time of
yellow
journalism, and as a result, journalists took this opportunity
to demonstrate the dangers of broadcast by embellishing the story,
and the panic that ensued, greatly.
Robert E. Bartholomew suggests that hundreds of thousands were
frightened in some way, but notes that evidence of people taking
action based on this fear is "scant" and "anecdotal". Indeed,
contemporary news articles indicate that police were swamped with
hundreds of calls in numerous locations, but stories of people
doing anything more than calling the authorities typically involve
groups of ones or tens and were often reported by people who were
panicking themselves.
Later studies indicate that many missed the repeated notices that
the broadcast was fictional, partly because the Mercury Theatre (an
unsponsored "cultural" program with a relatively small audience)
ran opposite the popular
Chase and Sanborn Hour over the
Red Network of NBC, hosted by
Don Ameche and featuring comic ventriloquist
Edgar Bergen and singer
Nelson Eddy, three of the most popular figures
in broadcasting. About 15 minutes into the
Chase and
Sanborn program the first comic sketch ended and a musical
number began, and many listeners began tuning around the dial at
that point. According to the
American Experience program
The Battle Over Citizen
Kane, Welles knew the schedule of the
Chase and
Sanborn show, and scheduled the first report from Grover's
Mill at the 12-minute mark to heighten the audience's confusion. As
a result, some listeners happened upon the CBS broadcast at the
point the Martians emerge from their spacecraft.
Many listeners were apparently confused. It must be noted that the
confusion cannot be credited entirely to naïveté. Though many of
the actors' voices should have been recognizable from other radio
shows, nothing like
The War of the Worlds broadcast had
been attempted in the United States, so listeners were accustomed
to accepting newsflashes as reliable.
The problem is that the working script had only three statements
concerning the fictional nature of the program: at the beginning,
at 40 minutes, and at the end. In fact, the warning at the
40-minute mark is the only one after the actors start speaking in
character, and before Welles breaks character at the end. This
structure is similar to earlier
Mercury Theatre
broadcasts: due to the lack of sponsorship (which often included a
commercial message at the 30-minute mark during an hour-long show),
Welles and company were able to schedule breaks at will, depending
on the pacing of a narrative. Furthermore, the show's technique of
jumping between scenes and narratives made it hard for the audience
to distinguish between fact and fiction, so it is understandable
that they were no more likely to perceive the three statements of
the fictional nature of the program as being 'outside' the
narrative, than they were to perceive the introduction (and
subsequent interruption) of the music as being 'inside' the
narrative.
While
War of the Worlds was in progress, some residents in
northeastern cities went to ask neighbors what was happening (many
homes still did not have telephones). As the story was repeated,
rumors began and caused some panic.
Contemporary accounts spawned urban legends, many of which have
come to be accepted through repetition. Several people reportedly
rushed to the "scene" of the events in New Jersey to see the
unfolding events, including a few geologists from Princeton
University who went looking for the "meteorite" that had fallen
near their school. Some people, who had brought firearms,
reportedly mistook a farmer's water tower for a Martian Tripod and
shot at it.
Initially Grover's Mill was deserted, but crowds developed.
Eventually police were sent to control the crowds. To people
arriving later in the evening, the scene really did look like the
events being narrated, with panicked crowds and flashing police
lights streaming across the masses.
Some people called CBS, newspapers or the police in confusion over
the realism of the news bulletins.
There were instances of panic throughout
the US as a result of the broadcast, especially in New York and
New
Jersey
.
Future
Tonight Show host
Jack
Paar did announcing duties that night for Cleveland CBS
affiliate
WGAR. When the phone lines to the
studio started to light up with panicking listeners calling in,
Paar attempted to calm them on the phone and on-air by saying, "The
world is not coming to an end. Trust me. When have I ever lied to
you?" When the frightened listeners started charging Paar with
'covering up the truth', he then called WGAR's station manager for
help. Oblivious to the situation, the manager advised the usually
emotional Paar to calm down, saying it was "all a tempest in a
teapot."
Seattle
CBS
affiliate stations KIRO
and KVI broadcast Orson Welles' radio drama.
While this
broadcast was heard around the country, it made a deep impact in
Concrete,
Washington
. At the point where the Martian invaders
were invading towns and the countryside with flashes of light and
poison gases and the lights were going down, there was a loud
explosion and a power failure plunged almost the entire town of
1,000 into darkness. Some listeners fainted while others grabbed
their families to head into the mountains. Others headed for the
hills to guard their moonshine stills. One was said to have jumped
up out of his chair and, in bare feet, run two miles to the center
of town. Some men grabbed their guns, and one Catholic businessman
got his wife into the car, drove to the nearest service station and
demanded gasoline.
Without paying the attendant, he rushed to
Bellingham,
Washington
(50 miles away) to see his priest for a last-minute
absolution of sins. He reportedly told the gas-station
attendant that paying for the gas "[wouldn't] make any difference,
everyone is going to die!"
Because phone lines as well as electricity were out, residents were
unable to call neighbors, family or friends to calm their fears. Of
course, the real story was not as fantastic as the radio drama: all
that had occurred was that the Superior Portland cement company's
sub-station suffered a short-circuit with a flash of brilliant
light, and the town's lights went dark. The more conservative
radio-listeners in Concrete (who had been listening to Edgar
Bergen's program on another station) calmed neighbors by assuring
that they hadn't heard about any "disaster". Reporters heard soon
after of the coincidental blackout of Concrete and sent the story
over the newswire and soon the town of Concrete was known
worldwide.
Edgar Bergen and Don Ameche, who were continuing their
Chase
and Sanborn Hour broadcast on NBC, are often credited with
"saving the world". It is said many listeners were reassured by
hearing their tones on a neighboring station.
Aftermath
In the aftermath of the reported panic, a public outcry arose, but
CBS informed officials that listeners were reminded throughout the
broadcast that it was a performance. Welles and the Mercury Theatre
escaped punishment, but not censure, and CBS is believed to have
had to promise never again to use "we interrupt this program" for
dramatic purpose. However, many radio commercials to this day do
start with the phrase "We interrupt this program".
A study by the
Radio Project
discovered that some who panicked presumed that Germans — not
Martians — had invaded. Other studies suggest that the extent of
the panic was exaggerated by contemporary media .
When a meeting between H.G.
Wells and Orson Welles was broadcast on
Radio KTSA
San Antonio
on October 28, 1940, Wells expressed a lack of
understanding of the apparent panic and it was, perhaps, only
pretense, like the American version of Halloween, for fun. The two men and their
radio interviewer joked about the matter, though with
embarrassment. KTSA, as a CBS affiliate, had carried the
broadcast.
War of the Worlds and the panic have become examples of
mass hysteria and the delusions of
crowds.
In 1988,
during the weekend nearest the 50th anniversary of the broadcast,
West Windsor
Township
, in which Grovers Mills is located, held a Martian
festival. Designed to attract tourist revenue, this included
"Martians" firing "ray guns" and carnival rides and hucksters'
stalls. The
New Yorker
magazine review began "It's not every day we get to see the
Martians invade..."
Conspiracy theory
It has been suggested
War of the Worlds was a
psychological warfare experiment. In
the 1999 documentary,
Masters of the Universe: The Secret Birth
of the Federal Reserve,
writer Daniel Hopsicker claims the
Rockefeller Foundation funded the
broadcast, studied the panic, and compiled a report available to a
few. A variation has the
Radio Project
and the
Rockefeller
Foundation as conspirators. In a
theatrical trailer for his film
F For Fake, Welles joked about
such theories, jesting that the broadcast indeed "had secret
sponsors".
While
Mercury Theatre had no sponsor, CBS and the
Rockefeller Foundation were
contracting the leading
crowd
psychology researchers of the time; CBS had
Edward Bernays, the
Rockefeller Foundation had
Ivy Lee. With the involvement of
Frank Stanton in the
Radio Project and his position in the CBS
research department, it is possible the "creative curiosity" of
Orson Welles came from conversations within these business circles.
A detailed documentary on these circles and the ideas behind social
manipulation was made by the
BBC, called
The Century of the
Self.
There has been continued speculation the panic generated by
War
of the Worlds inspired officials to cover up
unidentified flying object
evidence, avoiding a similar panic. U.S. Air Force Captain
Edward J. Ruppelt, the first head of UFO
investigatory
Project Blue Book
wrote, "The [U.S. government's] UFO files are full of references to
the near mass panic of October 30, 1938, when Orson Welles
presented his now famous
The War of the Worlds
broadcast."
Remakes and re-airings
Since the original
Mercury Theatre broadcast, there have
been many re-airings, remakes, reenactments and new dramatizations
of the original. Notable examples include:
- In
February 1949, Leonardo Paez and Eduardo Alcaraz produced a
Spanish-language version of Welles's 1938 script for Radio Quito in
Quito,
Ecuador
. The broadcast set off panic in the city.
Police and fire brigades rushed out of town to engage the supposed
alien invasion force. After it was revealed that the broadcast was
fiction, the panic transformed into a riot and hundreds attacked
Radio Quito and El Comercio, the local newspaper. In the
days preceding the broadcast, El Comercio had participated
in the hoax by publishing false reports of unidentified objects in
the skies above Ecuador. The riot resulted in six (or more) deaths,
including those of Paez's girlfriend and nephew. Paez moved to
Venezuela after the incident.
- In 1994 the L.A. Theater Works' The Play's the Thing
and KPCC rebroadcast the original play before a
live audience, featuring actors from Star
Trek, including Leonard Nimoy as
Professor Richard Pierson, John de
Lancie as the talk-show host, Dwight
Schultz as an Announcer, Wil Wheaton
as the Commander, Gates McFadden as
Carla Phillips, Brent Spiner as the
Stranger, Armin Shimerman as an
Announcer, Jerry Hardin as Mr.
Wilmouth, and Tom Virtue as the Captain.
John de Lancie was the director.
- Many stations, particularly those that regularly air old time radio programs, re-air the original
program as a Halloween tradition.
Influence
It is
sometimes said the news of the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor
was received in skepticism by the American public,
as a consequence of the radio performance.
Because of the panic in the 1930s and 1940s, U.S. TV networks deem
it necessary to post bulletins to the audience to inform them some
TV stories were fiction . Disclaimers were shown during the 1983
television movie
Special
Bulletin, and during the 1994 telefilm,
Without Warning, both of
which were dramas disguised as news broadcasts (
Without
Warning, presenting Earth being hit by three meteor fragments,
acknowledged it was a tribute to
War of the Worlds and was
broadcast on CBS TV on the 56th anniversary of the radio
broadcast). NBC placed disclaimers in an October 1999 TV movie
dramatizing the possible disastrous effects of the
Y2K bug even though it was drama unlikely
to be confused with reality.
On
February 16, 1991, a popular Estonian
TV satire show Wigla Sou reported, using
the "we interrupt this program" device, that the government of
Finland had voided the bills of one hundred Finnish Markka, most common banknote in
Estonia, when the Soviet ruble was not
trusted because of high inflation. That was parody of Soviet
currency reform, but thousands rushed to get rid of 100 markka
bills, some selling many times under market prices. TV reporters
Ivar Vigla and Felix Undusk received threats while currency
profiteers cheered unexpected high profits .
On
December 22, 1991, the student-run satire TV show Ku-Ku on
Bulgarian state channel Kanal 1 broadcast
reports of an accident in the Bulgarian Kozloduy
Nuclear Power Plant
, to draw attention to the lack of preparedness for
such an accident. The impact was heightened due to memory of
the Chernobyl
Nuclear Power Plant
disaster and its incomplete coverage by official
media during 1986. The show used TV news reporters because
actors from the show would have been recognized. Reminders of the
program's fictional nature were broadcast during music video breaks
but largely ignored. There were reports of people taking iodine
pills to protect their thyroid glands from radiation. In the
aftermath, the show was canceled, but trial charges against
director, screenwriter and producer were dismissed.
In 2005, Danish radio station P2 announced their plan to broadcast
a remake of the original broadcast on September 3.
As the broadcast was
about to start, an announcer interrupted the show to report on a
fake story about a biological terrorist attack on Copenhagen
.
In 2006,
a false Belgian
news bulletin, broadcasted by RTBF, reported that the Dutch-speaking Flanders region of the country had declared its
independence from Belgium, and led to
widespread panic in French-speaking
Belgium. It was a hoax inspired by
The War of the
Worlds. See
2006
Belgian Secession Hoax .
Possible influence on Welles
A 2005
BBC report suggested that Welles' idea
and style may have been influenced by an earlier 1926 hoax
broadcast by
Ronald Knox on
BBC Radio. Knox's broadcast also mixes breathless
reporting of a revolution sweeping across London with dance music
and sound effects of destruction. Moreover, Knox's broadcast also
caused a minor panic among listeners who did not know that the
program was fictional.
A similar
hoax from 1874 used wild animals rather than aliens claiming that
they were escaping from New
York
Central
Park Zoo
and this also seems to have generated some public
panic.
References in fiction
- *Arthur C. Clarke's 2001: A Space Odyssey and
Michael Crichton's Sphere both cite the Orson Welles
broadcast as an example of why, in the event of an actual alien
arrival, it would be more prudent to anticipate mass panic on the
part of humanity rather than wonder and awe. There has been similar
speculation for decades in ufology: that the
War of the Worlds broadcast is the reason evidence
supporting the concept of unidentified flying objects has
been suppressed.
- *The 1968 novel Sideslip by Ted White and Dave Van Arnam takes place
in an alternative history where aliens (quite different from Wells'
and Welles' Martians) took advantage of the confusion following the
broadcast to carry out an actual invasion, and ruled Earth for
three decades (until overthrown thanks to the intervention of an
intrepid private eye from our own reality).
- *The Doomsday
Conspiracy by Sidney Sheldon
makes a mention of this event, using it as a way for one of the
U.S. Generals to justify withholding information from the public to
prevent a mass panic.
- *In Kim Newman's short story "The
Other Side of Midnight" (set in his alternate history Anno Dracula series), the Mercury
Theatre is said to have aired a version of H. G. Wells' (fictional)
The Flowering of the Strange Orchid, convincing the
country that "writhing vampire blossoms" were overrunning
America.
- *In
the 1984 movie The
Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension,
the plot hinges around an alien race of Red Lectroids whose arrival
on earth in Grover's
Mill
, New Jersey instigates Orson Welles' The War of the Worlds
radio broadcast, with the aliens hypnotizing Welles and causing him
to pass the broadcast off as a drama, when it was indeed
factual. Their later cover is that of employees of a
fictional defense contracting company called Yoyodyne.
- *In the 1990 film Spaced Invaders, a crew of rather
dimwitted Martians intercepts radio signals from a rebroadcast of
the performance and believes the entire Martian invasion fleet is
moving in, leading them to land on Earth and get stranded, setting
up the plot of the film.
- *A brief clip of the actual broadcast is heard in the 2007 film
Transformers. During
the scene where the Autobot Bumblebee destroys the other cars
in a car lot, to ensure he is bought by Sam
Witwicky. The sound clip that is heard is Orson Welles saying
"...greater than man..."
- *The episode is briefly referred to in the 1989 film
Radio Days by Woody Allen.
- *In the George Romero film
Diary of the Dead, it can
be heard mentioned by a news reporter voiced by Wes Craven.
- *In the film Gremlins, as the
Gremlins take over the town a worried citizen calls the local radio
personality, and he says, disregarding the caller, that he doesn't
do that "Orson Welles crap".
- *The 1946 Looney Tunes cartoon
Kitty Kornered briefly
spoofs the incident.
- *A similar realistic-looking "hoax" was a 1977 British science fiction program titled Alternative 3 which was presented as a
science documentary, though the credits showed a production date of
April Fool's Day. To this day,
there are many who contend the events documented in Alternative
3 were at least partly factual.
- *The War of the
Worlds TV series also incorporated a similar premise. In
an episode taking place in Grover's Mill during the 50th
anniversary of the broadcast, it is revealed that Orson Welles was
hired by the government to orchestrate the broadcast in order to
cover up what was a reconnaissance
mission by the same aliens who would launch an all-out war 15 years
later.
- *The X-Files episode "War
of the Coprophages" parodied the 1938 panic as a small town called
"Miller's Grove" (a reference to the Welles program's "Grover's
Mill") is seized by fear of an invading horde of tiny robot
cockroaches.
- *In a Halloween episode of Hey
Arnold!, Arnold and Gerald conduct their own radio
broadcast in an attempt to scare the residents of Arnold's boarding
house much like Orson Welles did. They also trick their 4th grade
class, who were all trick-or-treating as aliens, into visiting
Arnold's house precisely after the broadcast had finished. However,
the broadcast is inadvertently picked up by a paranormal
investigator, who mistakes it for legitimate and re-broadcasts it
across the city as a real news bulletin. The water tower covered
with Christmas lights also resulted in an electricity breakdown
that made the broadcast even more believable.
- *A Doctor Who audio drama
titled Invaders from
Mars is set in New York City at the time of the broadcast,
with unusual events occurring in the city's underworld, which
mirror the radio story.
- *The
1992 BBC TV Halloween special Ghostwatch was similar in its shocking
displays of a haunted house in North London
.
- *An Animaniacs segment
starring Pinky and the Brain,
"Battle for the Planet", featured a plan to recreate the broadcast
in hopes of actually taking over the world during the panic.
However, the Brain fails to realize that the public has grown more
sophisticated in viewing such material, especially considering the
amateurish effort the pair attempt, and no one takes it seriously
(The character of The Brain is based on Orson Welles himself)
- *In an episode of The
Flintstones, there was a publicity stunt in the form of a
Halloween radio broadcast about a coming invasion of the Way-Outs,
which was really just a Beatles-like music group wearing odd
costumes. Much of Bedrock was scared, but the fear was exacerbated
by Fred trying to get to the Water Buffalo Lodge in his secret
spaceman costume. Eventually, the broadcaster is forced by the
police to explain his previous announcements were fictitious.
- *The British children's cartoon Budgie the Little
Helicopter featured an episode where the characters (who
are anthropomorphic aircraft) are mistaken as spacecraft during a
stormy night by a driver listening to a Welles-esque radio drama,
leading to local panic.
- *In "Madeline and the Spider Lady", an episode of the animated
series The New Adventures of
Madeline, the girls played around in an 'unused' radio
studio and acted out a phony news broadcast concerning giant
polka-dotted ants who were attacking New York, and got broadcast
when a technician at the station accidentally hits a lever and
switched the broadcast from the Spider Lady drama to the girls'
phony news report. What follows is mass hysteria similar to those
reported as the outcome of the Orson Welles War of the
Worlds radio drama broadcast.
- *A similar plot was used in the short-lived animated series
adaptation of the American Dennis the Menace comic strip,
in which Dennis and his cohorts visit a radio station studio to
record a radio play for a school project. Unfortunately, in this
version, Martians did really try to invade earth, but the plans
were foiled by the coincidence of Dennis' play accidentally leaking
out to the public after Ruff accidentally flips a lever and causes
the recording to be broadcast. The panicking townspeople drive off
the aliens, who were counting on the element of surprise.
- *Touched By An
Angel featured parts of the original broadcast in a
Halloween episode titled "The Sky Is
Falling", where an old man had to deal with the trauma he
endured during the nation wide panic, including the death of his
father due to a misfire by a paranoid citizen. It also set the
scene for the first encounter between the two leads, Monica and
Tess.
- *A 1989 Saturday Night
Live episode hosted by Tony
Danza featured a sketch in which "Da War of Da Woilds" is
dramatized by 'Da Brooklyn Academy of Fine Art'.
- *The November 4, 2007 episode of Cold
Case dealt with a murder that took place during the panic
surrounding the original 1938 radio broadcast.
- * In the October 15, 1956 episode of I Love Lucy, "Lucy Meets Orson Welles",
Lucy is shopping for scuba gear in Macy's at the same time Welles
is signing record albums of his Shakespearian readings. After Lucy
approaches him still wearing a Scuba mask, flippers and assorted
air hoses, Welles takes one look at her and says, "My "Man from
Mars" broadcast was 18 years ago...where were you?"
- *"Panic", a 1997 episode of HBO's
Perversions of
Science, based loosely on a story from the comic book
Weird Science (see below), featured Jamie Kennedy and Jason Lee as listeners confused and
alarmed by a War of the Worlds-style radio broadcast.
However, in this instance, Kennedy and Lee play two
extra-terrestrial invaders disguised as humans, who mistakenly
believe that the broadcast relates to an invasion of Earth by their
own people, about which they had not been informed.
- *In the first episode of Rocky and Bullwinkle, in the part
where Earth thinks moon people are going to land, there is a part
where a man named "Dorson Bells" says on a radio program that "Moon
Men are nearing the Earth and this is not a play so please feel
free to panic."
- *In an episode of Arthur, when
D.W. thought that Mars had giant dinosaurs on it and her father
told her there was no such thing, she said she felt silly about
believing there were Martians. Her father then tells her how Orson
Welles did the radio broadcast and many people thought that the
country was being invaded by aliens.
- *In an episode of 7th
Heaven, Ruthie becomes panicked over the upcoming Y2K
hysteria, and Eric relates the story of the broadcast and ensuing
panic to show how everyone thought the end of the world was coming,
but in reality, there was nothing to worry about.
- *In the Newhart episode "Take
Me to Your Loudon", Michael Harris airs the film version of War
of the Worlds on television in place of Vermont
Today, inspiring a Welles-style panic among the
townspeople.
- *The Simpsons has alluded
to the broadcast several times:
- :*In the episode titled "Radio Bart",
Homer buys Bart a microphone that can be used to broadcast on
nearby radios. One of the pranks Bart pulls is to pretend he is the
leader of a Martian invasion of Earth and has eaten the president
of the United States, which Homer subsequently believes.
- :*In the opening sequence of "Treehouse of Horror IV", Marge
interrupts Bart's Night
Gallery-esque introduction to suggest he warn viewers that
the episode is frightening and that "maybe they'd rather listen to
that old War of the Worlds broadcast on NPR".
- :*Yet another Simpsons episode, "Treehouse of Horror XVII", features
a segment titled "The Day the Earth Looked Stupid", which adapts
the storyline of Orson Welles' famous broadcast and takes place in
Springfield circa 1938. The episode has people act like animals
instead of acting suicidal until the hoax is revealed. Maurice LaMarche portrays Orson Welles, the
actor's impression of him used earlier for The Brain.
- *A 1957 Westinghouse
Studio One episode, "The Night America Trembled", depicts
(in semi-fictionalized form) the creation of the broadcast and
subsequent audience reaction. A 1975 made-for-television film,
The Night That
Panicked America, offers a similar dramatization of the
event.
- *An Adventures in
Odyssey episode, "Terror From the Skies", is based on and
makes many references to The War of the Worlds. Like Orson
Welles' broadcast, it features a dramatized radio broadcast that
tells about an alien invasion of Earth.
- *In the video game Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake
Eater, supporting character Para-Medic from Snake's radio frequency gives an
amusing retelling of her parents' panic during the radio play.
- *In the alternate history
video game franchise Resistance , its alternate
time-line reveals that the broadcast had attracted a harsh response
from the American government in which Orson Welles' career is
ruined. The reason for the government's harsh response is that an
alien threat is already present on Earth.
- *EC Comics did a story in Weird Science where a TV network
decides to a televise a remake of the War of the Worlds
broadcast. To avoid confusion, they publicize the event weeks ahead
of time. Unfortunately, a real invasion occurs the same night, and
as the station breaks into the hoax report with a real report, no
one believes it.
- *DC Comics had a similar story in
Superman #62 (January/February 1950) where Orson Welles
himself learns of an actual Martian invasion, but his radio
warnings are useless since no one takes them seriously because of
his radio play. Fortunately, Superman
realizes that Welles is serious and stops the invasion.
- *In issue 11 of DC Comics' The Shadow Strikes (1989),
The Shadow teams up with a radio
announcer named "Grover Mills" -- a character based on the young
Orson Welles -- who has been impersonating the Shadow on the radio.
(Welles played The Shadow on radio prior to the War of the
Worlds broadcast.)
- *Superman: War of
the Worlds (1999) contains several references to the radio
broadcast and one to the Hindenburg broadcast.
- *In the September 1947 edition of Will
Eisner's satirical police series The
Spirit (reprinted in 1974), Welles -- here redubbed
"Awesome Bells" -- discovers an actual Martian invasion, but his
frantic attempts to convince authorities are derisively ignored.
This story marked the first time the term "UFO" was used in
comics.
- *Queen's song Radio Ga Ga, which is a tribute to the
medium of radio written by Roger
Taylor, includes the lyrics You gave them all those old
time stars / Through wars of worlds - invaded by Mars,
obviously referencing the radio broadcast.
- *Crimson
Glory's song March to Glory, an introduction to their
album Astronomica, contains clips from the War of the
Worlds broadcast, juxtaposed with speeches by Adolf Hitler and World War II-era radio news
broadcasts announcing the invasion of Normandy
and the later death of Hitler. The next song
on the album is entitled War of the Worlds, and is about
an alien invasion.
- *Pinback's song Boo from the
album Blue Screen Life uses sound
bites from the broadcast, including the infamous "2X2L calling CQ"
line, at the beginning. The sound bites correlate to the lyrics of
the song, which describe a sinking submarine.
- *Britney Spears's song
Kill the Lights from the
album Circus contains
a spoken intro by producer Danja that recreates the interruption in
the first minutes of the broadcast.
- *Track 8, "Intermission", on Panic! at the Disco's first studio album
"A Fever You Can't Sweat
Out" includes a sample from Orson Welles' famous radio
adaptation of the classic novel The War of the Worlds: "Due to
circumstances beyond our control..."
See also
Sources
- Cantril, Handley, Howard Koch, Hazel Gaudet, Herta Herzog, H.
G. Wells. (1940). The Invasion from Mars: A Study in the
Psychology of Panic. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton
University Press. ISBN 0691093997 (1982 reprint)
- Hand, Richard J. (2006). Terror on the Air!: Horror Radio
in America, 1931-1952. Jefferson, North Carolina: Macfarlane
& Company. ISBN 0786423676
- Koch, Howard. (1970). The Panic Broadcast: Portrait of an
Event. Boston, Massachusetts: Little, Brown. ISBN
0316500607
- Ruperto, Edward J. (1956).
The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects. Garden
City, New York: Doubleday. 1956. ISBN 096653123X (2002
reprint)
Further reading
External links
References
- Mass Communication Theory: Foundations, Ferment, and Future By
Stanley J. Baran, Dennis K. Davis
- Page 37. Accessed 08-22-09.
- Radio Beat: Oct. 30, 1938 - The broadcast that scared a
nation
- Ruppelt, Edward J. The Report on Unidentified Flying
Objects. 1956. Doubleday.
- http://supermanica.superman.nu/wiki/index.php/Orson_Welles
- Eisner, Will, "UFO". In The
Spirit, September 28, 1947.