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13 - Orson Welles and Charles Dickens 1938–1941

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Marguerite Rippy
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of Literature Marymount University (Virginia)
John Glavin
Affiliation:
Georgetown University, Washington DC
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Summary

In July 1938, Orson Welles introduced “First Person Singular.” In this CBS radio series he intended to wed the performance experimentation he had brought to the Federal Theatre Project with the income and commercial appeal that radio had consistently afforded him since his 1935 appearances in “March of Time.” Over the remaining months of 1938, he produced in “First Person Singular” four radio plays based on the work of Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities (July 25), Oliver Twist (October 2), The Pickwick Papers (November 20) and A Christmas Carol (December 23). Dickens thus became Welles's most frequently adapted author in 1938 (Wood 1990: 92–7). In 1939, when he was lured to Hollywood with an RKO contract, it was widely expected that Welles would continue this practice of adapting the “classics” for the “masses,” and in 1940 rumors circulated about a pending production under his direction of The Pickwick Papers, to star W. C. Fields. This is the story of why that film never materialized.

“First Person Singular”

Following Dracula and Treasure Island, A Tale of Two Cities was the third text to be adapted by Welles in the series. It was an ideal choice for “First Person Singular,” since it both fulfilled Welles's interest in the collapse of narrated time and offered a variety of possibilities for experimentation with the retelling of the story in first-person singular.

Type
Chapter
Information
Dickens on Screen , pp. 145 - 154
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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References

Welles Laments Wane of Theatre.” 29 June 1938. New York Times. 12
First Person Singular: Welles Innovator on Stage, Experiments on the Air.” 11 July 1938. Newsweek. 25
The Shadow Talks.” 14 Aug. 1938. New York Times. Sec. 9: 10
Negotiates RKO Contract.” 25 June 1941. New York Times. Sec. 17: 2
Anderegg, Michael. 1999. Orson Welles: Shakespeare and Popular Culture. New York: Columbia University Press
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Norden, Martin. 1995. John Barrymore: A Bio-Bibliography. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press
O'Brien, Richard B. 1939. “Unmasking a Hobgoblin of the Air.” New York Times. 29 Oct.: sec. 9: 12Google Scholar
Welles, Orson. Selected letters. Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington
Welles, Orson and Houseman, John. 1938. “The Summing Up: The Directors of the Mercury Theatre Look Over Their First Year.” New York Times. 12 June: sec. 10: 1–2Google Scholar
Wood, Bret. 1990. Orson Welles: A Bio-Bibliography. New York: Greenwood Press

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