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Originally published Monday, October 27, 2008 at 12:00 AM

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Scary "War" put Welles on map

Orson Welles and his Mercury Theater players' radio broadcast of H.G. Wells' "War of the Worlds" caused pandemonium, showing the power of the mass media and paving the actor's path to Hollywood and great films such as "Citizen Kane."

Newhouse News Service

On Halloween eve 1938, the monsters arrived early.

Theatergoers fled Broadway after hearing a radio report that marauding Martians had landed in Grover's Mill, N.J., and were advancing on New York City.

Switchboards at newspapers and police stations buzzed from Boston to San Francisco with calls from panicked listeners who feared incineration from the Martian death rays.

One Massachusetts man scraped together $3.25 for a railway ticket — only to learn 60 miles later that he and thousands of others had been duped by a CBS radio dramatization of H.G. Wells' science-fiction novel "War of the Worlds."

The culprit was 23-year-old Orson Welles and his Mercury Theater players.

While Welles' Martians laid waste to Manhattan, Norman Corwin was busy in another CBS studio a floor above.

"I was rehearsing a documentary program, and was completely unaware that Orson had emptied the living rooms of America," Corwin, now 98, recalled recently from his Los Angeles home.

Corwin, a major figure during radio's golden age, said that the "War of the Worlds" broadcast "first demonstrated the up-to-then unrealized ubiquity of radio and its power to affect people — in this case to scare them out of their wits, and, in many cases, their homes.

"The fact that this effect was unintended and accidental only increased the surprise, shock, and dismay that it engendered," he added.

With Nazi Germany's annexation of part of Czechoslovakia still fresh in the minds of a jittery public, Welles' use of realistic news bulletins convinced thousands of Americans that war had reached their shores.

Many did not catch the repeated disclaimers made during the CBS broadcast, and by morning there were threats of lawsuits and criminal action.

The newly created Federal Communications Commission launched an investigation, CBS apologized and Welles' weekly radio series picked up a much-needed commercial sponsor, Campbell Soups.

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Joseph McBride, the author of three acclaimed books on Welles, said the broadcast's notoriety intensified Hollywood's interest in Welles, who had already made his mark on Broadway. Months after the broadcast, RKO Pictures signed Welles, who would make his film acting and directorial debut with the landmark "Citizen Kane" in 1941.

The lessons of Oct. 30, 1938, remain relevant today, said Michael Harrison, publisher of Talkers, a leading radio and Internet trade magazine.

"We still live in terror of things we don't understand, and we place our faith in the media for information," he said. "And the situation today is ripe for fraud and deceit."

The wall between news and entertainment has been broken down, particularly in television, where news shows often feature celebrities and infomercials with discreet disclaimers masquerading as news programs, Harrison said.

Harrison believes that Welles fully understood the power of the mass media in 1938, and successfully used it to promote himself.

Welles quipped in his 1973 film, "F for Fake," that a broadcaster who later performed the "War of the Worlds" on South American radio was tossed into prison, but "I didn't go to jail; I went to Hollywood."

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company

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