[NJARC] War of the Worlds

amagoun amagoun at davidsarnoff.org
Mon Oct 24 17:46:26 EDT 2005


In case you missed the meeting...

DAVID SARNOFF LIBRARY TO HOST LIVE
“WAR OF THE WORLDS” RE-ENACTMENT ON OCTOBER 29
Full-Scale Performance Will Mark the 67th Anniversary of Welles’s Radio
Broadcast


PRINCETON, N.J., October 13, 2005—Reviving one of the most famous events
in American radio, the David Sarnoff Library, in cooperation with the
Hunterdon Radio Theatre and New Jersey Antique Radio Club, will host a
live re-enactment of Orson Welles’s 67-year-old broadcast, “War of the
Worlds,” based on H.G. Wells’s classic story. This family-friendly
event, which will benefit the Library’s renovation, is scheduled for
Saturday, October 29 in Sarnoff Corporation’s auditorium in Princeton,
N.J.; a matinee and evening performance will occur, as well as a special
benefit reception.

On October 30, 1938, Orson Welles and his Mercury Theater On the Air
captivated the nation and set off widespread panic—especially in New
Jersey and New York—with a dramatization of H.G. Wells’s late-19th
Century fantasy. Thousands of listeners across the country mistook the
broadcast for news reports of an actual Martian invasion that detailed
meteor landings in nearby Grover’s Mill, N.J. and aliens killing
earthlings with death-rays. What resulted was mass hysteria, with
residents fleeing their homes or joining to combat the “Martians.”

“David Sarnoff predicted and innovated the power of network
broadcasting,” says Alex Magoun, executive director of the David Sarnoff
Library. “Welles’s broadcast showed how the media could instantly
encourage national hysteria as well as national unity. We think that’s a
powerful lesson worth repeating. Moreover, the Princeton Observatory and
Grover’s Mill, where the Martian launches and landing were reported, are
only a mile away from us.”

The “War of the Worlds” broadcast, which was written by Howard Koch and
made famous by Welles is “arguably one of the best radio dramas of all
time,” says William Spear, founder and president of the Hunterdon Radio
Theatre. The group, which will stage the re-enactment with more than 20
actors, is “excited about the opportunity to work with the David Sarnoff
Library and present its version of the broadcast.” The sound effects and
actors’ voices will be transmitted through 1930s microphones to 1930s
radios, provided by members of the New Jersey Antique Radio Club. An
interactive discussion, led by Magoun, will follow the program.

Performances will begin at 2:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., with doors opening
one hour prior to the shows. All tickets for the matinee performance are
$10 in advance ($15 at the door). Ticket prices for the evening
performance are as follows: adults are $20 in advance ($25 at the door);
children (12 and under) and seniors (65 and over) are $10 in advance
($15 at the door).

Library Benefit tickets are also available for $40 in advance ($50 at
the door). Benefit guests will not only enjoy the evening performance,
but also a tour of the Library and dessert reception after the broadcast
to meet the cast. Live music will be provided throughout the reception
by renowned thereminist, Kip Rosser. Tickets are limited and advance
reservations are strongly recommended.

All funds raised from this event will support the David Sarnoff Library,
a nonprofit organization housed within Sarnoff Corporation in Princeton.
Incorporated as the David Sarnoff Collection, the Library contains an
archives and museum with the state’s largest holdings of RCA historical
materials, and is dedicated to the understanding and promotion of
electronic innovation. Funds will specifically pay for the design of two
new exhibits in the Library—David Sarnoff and the Innovative Spirit and
Six Innovations that Changed the World. The Library is open by
appointment to individuals and school groups. For more information,
visit www.davidsarnoff.org on the Web.

The “War of the Worlds” re-enactment is made possible, in part, by
in-kind support from Sarnoff Corporation; the Howard Koch Estate;
Hunterdon Radio Theatre; New Jersey Antique Radio Club; Kip Rosser; and
suite6design.

Additional assistance and funding has been provided by the Board of
Directors of the David Sarnoff Collection; the New Jersey Principals and
Supervisors Association; Panasonic Technologies, Inc.; and an operating
support grant from the New Jersey Historical Commission, a division of
the Department of State.

For more information about the event or advance ticket reservations,
send an email to waroftheworlds at davidsarnoff.org, call (609) 688-0773,
or visit www.davidsarnoff.blogspot.com/ and print and send the order
form.
###

--
Alexander B. Magoun, Ph.D.
David Sarnoff Library
201 Washington Road, CN 5300
Princeton, NJ 08543-5300

609-734-2636
amagoun at davidsarnoff.org
(f) 609-734-2339
www.davidsarnoff.org




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