Orson Welles
Orson Welles
Orson Welles (1915-1985) was a Broadway and Hollywood actor, radio actor, and film director. His earliest film production, Citizen Kane, was his most famous, although most of his other productions were notable.
Orson Welles was born George Orson Welles in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on May 6, 1915, the second son of Richard Welles, an inventor, and Beatrice Ives, a concert pianist. The name George was soon dropped. The family moved to Chicago when Welles was four; two years later his parents separated formally. The comfortable circumstances in which Welles was born gradually diminished. An important early influence on his life was Maurice Bernstein, an orthopedist and passionate admirer of his mother until her death in 1926. That year he was enrolled in the progressive Todd School (Woodstock, Illinois). His formal education ended with graduation in 1931.
After a sojourn to Ireland, where he was involved in the theater as an actor, Welles returned to Chicago where he briefly served as a drama coach at the Todd School and coedited four volumes of Shakespeare's plays. He made his Broadway debut with Katharine Cornell's company in December 1934. He and John Houseman joined forces the next year to manage a unit of the Federal Theatre Project, one of the work-relief arts projects established by the New Deal. Welles' direction was inspired, injecting new life into various classics, including an all-African American Macbeth, the French farce The Italian Straw Hat, and the Elizabethan morality play Dr. Faustus.
Welles and Houseman broke with the Federal Theatre Project over its attempt to censor their June 1937 production of Marc Blitzstein's pro-labor The Cradle Will Rock. They organized the Mercury Theatre, which over the next two seasons had a number of extraordinary successes, including
a modern dress anti-Fascist Julius Caesar (with Welles playing Brutus), an Elizabethan working-class comedy Shoe-maker's Holiday (re-written by Welles), and Shaw's Heartbreak House (with the 24-year-old Welles convincingly playing an octogenerian). Welles also found time to play "The Shadow" on radio and to supervise a "Mercury Theatre on the Air, " whose most notorious success was an adaptation of H. G. Wells' War of the Worlds, which resulted in panic as many listeners believed that Martians were invading New Jersey.
In 1939 the Mercury Theatre collapsed as a result of economic problems; Welles went to Hollywood to find the cash to resurrect it. Except for a stirring dramatization of Richard Wright's Native Son in 1940, an unhappy attempt to stage Jules Verne's Around the World in 80 Days (music and lyrics by Cole Porter) in 1946, and an unsatisfactory King Lear in 1956, his Broadway career was over. He did continue theater activity overseas: during the 1950s he successfully staged Moby Dick in England, directed Laurence Olivier in the London production of Ionesco's Rhinoceros, and wrote a script for a Roland Petit ballet.
Following an early flirtation with movies and after casting around some months for a subject, Welles filmed Citizen Kane in 1939-1940. Since its release in 1941 this film has generally been awarded accolades and in recent years has been acclaimed as one of the best movies of all time. It is a fascinating study of a newspaper publisher (obviously modeled on William Randolph Hearst, despite Welles' disclaimers). Controversy surrounds the production of this film, which Welles is credited with producing, directing, and coscripting.
He also played the leading role. However one views the making of this film, there is no doubt about his role as catalyst.
Years later Welles declared "I began at the top and have been making my way down ever since." All the films he directed are of interest, but none matched his initial achievement. Among his other films are The Magnificent Ambersons (1942), The Lady From Shanghai (1946), Othello (1952), Touch of Evil (1958), The Trial (1962), and F Is for Fake (1973). Most of these films have been marked by disputes; Welles often disowned the final version. His critics argue that a self-destructive tendency caused these problems and cite his experiences with the unfinished It's All True, which he embarked on in Brazil in 1942 before finishing the final editing of The Magnificent Ambersons. But his partisans called it a destroyed masterpiece (in his absence 131 minutes were edited down to a final release print of 88 minutes).
A somewhat hammy actor with a magnificent voice, Welles appeared in over 45 films besides his own. In some of these films, such as The Third Man (1949) and Compulsion (1959), he was superb. But all too many were junk movies such as Black Magic (1949) and The Tarters (1960); he accepted these so that he might earn the funds necessary to finance films of his own such as Chimes at Midnight (released in 1966, an exciting film based on various Shakespeare plays and dealing with Falstaff).
For various reasons Welles left the United States after World War II and for three decades lived a kind of gypsy existence abroad, with occasional visits back to America for movie assignments or other work. An intelligent, multifaceted individual, Welles during World War II had put in a stint as a columnist at the liberal New York Post and later gave some thought to a political career. During the latter part of his life, despite being dogged by ill health, he earned a comfortable living doing television commercials for companies such as Paul Masson wines, putting much of what he earned into the production of various films, including The Other Side of the Wind (which dealt with an old film-maker and which was unfinished at the time of his death as well as being involved in litigation). A superb racontuer, Welles— after moving back to the United States in the mid-1970s— was much in demand as a guest on television talk shows.
Welles was found dead in early October 1985 in his Los Angeles home. Married three times, he had children with each wife: Virginia Nicolson (Christopher), Rita Hayworth (Rebecca), and his widow Paola Mori (Beatrice). He had many friends in his lifetime, including Oja Kodar, a Yugoslav artist who was his companion and assistant from the mid-1960s onward. Welles shared an Academy Award for the script of Citizen Kane and in 1975 was honored by the American Film Institute with a Life-Achievement Award. Welles' other awards include a 1958 Peabody Award for a TV pilot.
Further Reading
See biographies by Charles Higham (1985), Barbara Leaming (1985), and John Russell Taylor (1986). See also Roger Carringer, The Making of Citizen Kane (1985) and Pauline Kael, The Citizen Kane Book (1973). □
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The Towneley Cycle: Unity and Diversity.(Book review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 7/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; The Towneley Cycle: Unity and Diversity. By PETER...ISBN 978-0-7083-2048-8. The Towneley plays, one of the four cycles of medieval...manuscript, once in the keeping of the Towneley family of Lancashire, but now in California...
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Peter Happe, The Towneley Cycle: Unity and Diversity.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 3/22/2008; ; 700+ words
; Peter Happe, The Towneley Cycle: Unity and Diversity...The origins of the Towneley Cycle and its possible...with the Corpus Christi play that was traditional...Queen Elizabeth. Some plays have been wholly or...location within a single play; this may suggest...that at least these plays ...
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Festivals and Plays in Late Medieval Britain.(The Towneley Cycle: Unity and Diversity)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Theatre Notebook; 10/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...that the topics of plays and 'playing' did...association of the Towneley and N-Town 'cycles...genre. Croxton's Play of the Sacrament...reconstructs York's Creed plays in relation to the...Peter Happe's The Towneley Cycle: Unity and...
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Towneley complete rise to top
Newspaper article from: The Northern Echo; 5/23/2003; 654 words
; Consett Sunday League STANLEY Towneley Arms have re-written the history books...Stanley side to win the top flight. The Towneley Arms knew they only had to avoid defeat...with both teams left with one game to play. Golden Lion were crushing 8-0 winners...
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Curtain is set to fall on successful debut.
Newspaper article from: Todmorden News (Todmorden, England); 4/10/2008; 511 words
; ...the 12-0 whitewash of Towneley C. The final two matches...in the top three as they play their final matches against...PWDGmBNTot Gawthorpe119010227129 Towneley A10908727114 Todmorden12818924113 Nelson Col960691887 Towneley B103047956 Towneley C92018624...
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"Veniance, Lord, apon thaym fall": maternal mourning, divine justice, and tragedy in the Corpus Christi plays.
Magazine article from: Medieval and Renaissance Drama in England; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...mothers of the Slaughter plays. In all four cycles...Passion. The Purification play adds the last thematic...lives. (4) In these plays, the mourning Mother...their discussions of the Towneley Slaughter of the Innocents...mothers of the Herod plays, but they reach different...mothers of the ...
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Bid for glory at first attempt.
Newspaper article from: Todmorden News (Todmorden, England); 1/10/2008; 448 words
; ...players formed a team to play competitively. This year...their first match against Towneley A 9-3, Todmorden have...PWDGmBnPt Todmorden650501565 Towneley A440381250 Gawthorpe43036945 Nelson College32020626 Towneley C3108311 Burnley B50011011...
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Katharine Goodland. Female Mourning and Tragedy in Medieval and Renaissance Drama: From the Raising of Lazarus to "King Lear.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Comparative Drama; 3/22/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...two chapters. The resurrection plays resemble the Lazarus plays insofar as several again anticipate...This time, however, the Towneley and N-Town resurrections do...conflicted position of the cycle plays on an issue that they clea
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Bankhead steals show in magnificent seven
Newspaper article from: The Northern Echo; 3/21/2003; 700+ words
; ...of this group is on Sunday when they play each other again in a winner takes...blaster Ivan Moxon has seen Stanley Towneley Arms through to the quarter- finals of the Stanley Aged Miners up. The Towneley stalwart was in devastating form in...
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David N. Klausner and Karen Sawyer Marsalek, eds. 'Bring furth the pagants': Essays in Early English Drama Presented to Alexandra F. Johnston.(Brief Notices)(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Comparative Drama; 6/22/2008; 698 words
; ...64). Part 2, "Medieval Plays," includes Garrett P. J...Womans Witnes' and the Towneley Thomas Indie" (165-80...Theological Issues in Chester's Plays" (212-29); K. Janet...Staging Last Judgment in the Towneley Plays and in Doctor Faustus...
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Towneley plays
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Towneley plays, see under mystery plays .
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Towneley Plays
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Towneley Plays a cycle of 32 plays preserved in a manuscript of c.1460 by the Towneleys...Wakefield, they are sometimes called the Wakefield Plays. The well-known Second Shepherds' Play is one of this collection. See miracle play .
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mystery plays
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
mystery plays, biblical dramas popular...x2018;Miracle Plays’ which...Oberammergau Passion Play). Though it is clear...Wakefield (also called Towneley from the owners of the...xE9;tier and the play. Their great popularity...from the group of six plays in the Towneley cycle ...
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Man of Mode, The
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
...her into the country, there to receive her answer after the play is ended. In counterpoint, Young Bellair has been ordered...Harriet; but he loves Emilia, who with the help of his aunt Lady Towneley enables him to outwit the old man, who has fallen for Emilia...
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Wakefield Plays
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Wakefield Plays see Towneley Plays ; miracle plays .
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