Hiro and Liling

Hiro & Liling is inspired by Japanese folklore, this original love story by Kristina Armetta unfolds as an old man teaches his grandchild the legend of an ancient rock formation. In Armetta’s simple, lyrical language the grandfather traces the relationship between a war-hardened Japanese General and a young Chinese girl orphaned by his troops. At once poignant and hopeful, potent and reflective, the piece represents some of the best work to come out of WRW’s 2004 Writers On-the-air Workshop.

Willamette Radio Cast and Credits

Chris Porter, Janet Penner, Genevieve Winters, David Loftus, Atticus Welles Mowry and Sam A. Mowry.

Little One / Old Lady Nara – Laura Faye Smith

Written by Kristina Armetta

Original Music by Peter Armetta

Recorded by Robert Kowal

The Writers on the Air Workshop is directed by Cynthia McGean

Produced and directed by Sam A. Mowry

Special Thanks: KBOO, broadcast at 90.7 on your FM dial and is simulcast over the World Wide Web at http://www.kboo.fm/index.php.

The Ogle Awards 2003

WRW’s Murder of Crows Wins Honorable Mention at Ogle Awards

A Murder of Crows featured the original scripts of Cynthia McGean, Bill Gregory and Mary Robinette Kowal and was produced by Sam A. Mowry, Robert Kowal and Marty Gallagher.

Willamette Radio Workshop Cast:

Alyson Ayn Osborn, Janet Penner, Yani Berkshire-Cruse, Tim McKennie, Chris Porter, Mary Robinette Kowal, Carole Dane, Linda Norton, Cynthia McGean and Sam A. Mowry.

Sound Design and Live Foley:

John Martin Gallagher, Atticus Mowry and Rob Kowal.

The Ogle Award is given each year to honor the Best Fantasy Audio Production of the Year. The award is named for Charles Ogle who played the first Frankenstein’s creation in Edison’s silent 1910 film of the famous science fiction horror novel. Fantasy includes magical “high” fantasy, sword and sorcery, horror, modern urban fantasy, and other things that don’t fall under the criteria of Science Fiction. The Mark Time Award, and the Ogle Award, were awarded at CONvergence, July 2-3-4 of 2004.

The Mark Time Awards are the companion award to the Ogle and are given each year to honor the Best Science Fiction Audio Production on the Planet. This year Marc Rose and Jerrel McQuen also received an Honorable Mention for their series Dry Smoke and Whispers — The Shadow Man, also produced in Portland. Several members of both companies traveled to Minnesota to receive the awards, presented by David Ossman of the legendary Firesign Theater. The highlight of the opening ceremonies is an original audio theater piece written by Jerry Sterns and Brian Price called Martian Trombone. Due to an illness in the cast, Sam A. Mowry, WRW Artistic Director, was asked to step in at the last minute and performed with David Ossman and the CONvergence troupe.

The Mark Time Award is given each year to honor the Best Science Fiction Audio Production on the Planet and the Ogle Award for Best Fantasy Audio Production of the Year. Presented by The American Society For Science Fiction Audio (ASFSFA).

Judges for the 2004 Awards are listed below.

  • Henry Howard – Atlanta Radio Theatre Company
  • Kris Markman – National Audio Theatre Festivals
  • Brian Price – Great Northern Audio Theatre
  • Philip Proctor – Firesign Theatre
  • Jerry Stearns – Great Northern Audio Theatre

The Mark Time Awards are sponsored by MISFITS, the Minnesota Society for Interest in Science Fiction and Fantasy. A complete list of winners can be found at:

http://www.greatnorthernaudio.com/MarkTime/MTwinners.html

Horizon Air

(from the June, 2004 issue of Horizon Air magazine)

Ear Pieces
Audio dramas are gaining popularity as producers find people of a mind to listen.

by Kim Cooper Findling

The costumes are wonderful: a radiant pink is outfit, complete with a silver-tipped magic wand; a black robe and face paint for a ghoul; a dazzling green, child-size frog tunic. But only members of the audience are wearing them.

The actors are dressed in T-shirts and jeans. Clutching scripts, they stand at the end of the gymnasium that’s been designated “the stage.”

A small pile of objects–including a bell, a balloon and a large sheet of metal–lies to the side.

The people around me chat excitedly as they settle into their seats. What have we all come to see? Well, nothing, technically. Hearing is the emphasized sense this evening. Tonight–for Halloween–Willamette Radio Workshop is presenting A Murder of Crows. We, the audience, will witness a live taping of a theatrical experience intended primarily for the ears.

Sam Mowry, director of the Willamette Radio Workshop, steps forward to one of the dozen microphone stands. “It was a perfect night for a murder of crows,” he says, in a voice so deep and sensuously scary that a chill runs down my spine to my toes. His voice slips from lush and rich to raspy and guttural, his words sliding into and around each other, the vowels trilling, the sounds so taunting and tempting that I am lulled, drawn forward–so enticed that I barely comprehend his words until, finally, this comes through:

“We will be trying to scare you.”

Whether or not I want to be scared is irrelevant at this point. I am hooked. I must keep listening. And it appears that I am not the only one. The 200-person crowd stays entranced–even the youngest, a child of about 5– through Crows and three other quarter-hour-long plays: one about a gargoyle that comes to life; one about a cell phone that slurps up listeners and deposits them in hell; one about a mother who eats her daughter’s boyfriend for dinner.

A Classic Form, Reborn

This is contemporary audio drama. Some people have fond memories of curling up near the radio in a state of tense, rapt attention while listening to a favorite show.  Others have never heard a radio drama. Now, fans from way-back-when are discovering, to their delight, that audio drama is experiencing a renaissance, while people who were unfamiliar with the genre are becoming a new generation of fans. That’s because the allure of the art form has not changed, although delivery channels and range of subject matter have.

Radio drama was born in the 1920s,shortly after the first commercial radio stations hit the airwaves. For several decades,the medium dominated mainstream American entertainment. In the comfort of their homes, without donning any special attire or paying for a ticket, listeners could turn themselves over to the appeal of a good story. Westerns, mysteries,comedy, horror–no matter the subject,the exchange was simple: Writers and actors, via radio waves, would provide words, a plot and a sound effect or two,and listeners would provide their attention and the power of their imaginations.

But technology continued to march forward. Today, when aficionados contemplate the demise that ultimately befell radio drama, most point to the same culprit: television. Audiences, thrilled to have visual to go with the audio, turned to the TV, and radio dramas all but vanished from the entertainment scene–until recently.

“In the last 10 years, there’s been a real resurgence in audio drama,” says Mowry from Willamette Radio Workshop, one of the numerous West Coast groups producing audio theater. WRW, based in Portland, Oregon, was created three years ago after a writer placed a notice in the Auditions section of The Oregonian inviting people interested in audio theater to meet. Actors, writers and technology junkies all responded, and WRW was born.

Across the country, new audio drama companies are popping up almost monthly. The number of active audio theater companies in the United States is at least 134, and growing, according to radio-theater playwright and enthusiast Erik Deckers, who keeps an updated list on his Website, www.kconline.com/deckers. Some groups consist of a single writer,actor and producer of shows that might air only on the Internet; others are large,professional groups with regular broadcast schedules and CDs for sale.

What’s behind the resurgence? Mowry points to what made radio theater popular in the first place: the voice and the story. “Primal storytelling is at the root of all great entertaining, and that’s what’s at the essence of radio theater–the human voice conveying story and emotion,” he says. “If you’re willing to turn yourself over to it, it’s quite compelling.”

Mowry thinks audio theater is a sort of balm for the flashy nature of other contemporary forms of entertainment. “There’s so much bombardment in popular culture, whereas the human voice has an understated and simple power.”

He also believes that audiences crave interactivity. “Audio theater demands something from the audience. It always asks you to bring something to the table.”

Sue Zizza, executive director of National Audio Theatre Festivals, attributes the resurgence in audio theater to a more practical phenomenon: changing technology. Radio is no longer essential for reaching listeners–which is why the term “radio theater” has largely been replaced by “audio drama” or “audio theater.”

While recordings of various Festivals performances are broadcast on 70 public radio stations, many audio theater companies rarely broadcast on the radio. Instead, they rely on live performances, CDs, cassette tapes or Websites–whose dramas are often downloadable to MP3 players–to reach their audiences. So, ironically, as much as technology contributed to the decline of audio drama, it is now encouraging–and revolutionizing–its return. Not only can producers reach audiences even if a radio station won’t cany their shows, but creating the shows is easier. Recording an audio drama used to require expensive equipment and time-consuming editing. Someone had to slice tape with a razor blade and then splice segments back together. Today, recording equipment is less expensive and of better quality, and professional, relatively easy-to-use audio-editing software can be downloaded from the Web for free.

Production ease and guaranteed means of delivery have not only prompted more people to produce audio dramas,they have promoted creative freedom.   Individual producers can create what they want, not what a radio station directs them to. And because recording and distribution is easy and inexpensive, audio drama producers feel free to produce a variety of material.

Pagliacci’s Fools, a nonprofit audio drama company in Oakland, California,has produced comedies, mysteries and even erotica. Willamette Radio Workshop’s productions include horror shows and classical-book adaptations–sometimes presented the same night.

“It’s very liberating to be able to do so many different things,” says WRW’s Mowry. “The audience can go from 14th century France to the present day in an hour. A gargoyle and a 20-year-old rock star can both be played by the same actor–who’s actually a 62-year-old bus driver.”

Because of the variety of the delivery media, determining total listener numbers is difficult, but various producers cite growing audiences.

National Audio Theatre Festivals, which receives an average of $10,000 a year from the National Endowment for the Arts,began in 1999 with one week-long festival in Missouri that attracted 200 audience members. Now the organization presents performances all over the country, all yearlong, attracting about 10,000 people to its shows.

Mowry notes that not only is a local radio station broadcasting WRW’s work,but corporate sponsors such as hotel-and-pub owner McMenamins Inc. are paying WRW to present shows. Vini Beachem, who directs Pagliacci’s Fools,points to an average of 1,200 hits a month on the company’s Website,www.foolsradio.com.

While Erik Deckers estimates that radio theater currently makes up 1 percent or less of the billion-dollar audio book market, he says that over the next five to 10 years the industry hopes to cap-ture 10 percent of the market.

The audio theater segment of the market is distinct from other audio products because it consists of works written specifically for audio presentation, or books fully adapted for audio theater, with actors performing parts, and music and sound effects fleshing out the presentations, according to the website www.audiotheater.com.

Mary Beth Roche, president of the audio Publishers Association, says the association does not break out sales for radio dramas, but the market for audio books as a whole has been growing more than 11 percent a year since 1997. A 2002 nationwide study by the Consumer electronics Association determined that approximately 42 million U.S. adults listen to audio books, with 33.5 million of lose adults able to receive audio presentations online.

Customer demand led XM Radio–subscription-based satellite-radio system that is available for at-home or in-car use and offers 100 stations of music, news,talk, traffic reports and entertainment–to add two audio theater channels. Sonic heater and Radio Classics, in 2002. While the company doesn’t release specific listener numbers. Alien Goldberg, XM director of corporate affairs, says audio theater is popular. “These are well-listened-to channels,” he says. “They’re favorites of families, commuters and truckers.”

Building a Fan Base

Another audience settles into chairs, this time at the Kirkland Performance Center in a suburb just east of Seattle. The crowd is mature and conservatively dressed.   Conversation about the characters who will soon be on stage is quiet but eager. Two shows will be taped tonight: one episode each of The Adventures of Harry Nile, Private Detective and The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.

Both series were created by Jim French,owner and president of Seattle-based Jim French Productions Inc., whose audio dramas are broadcast nationwide. French steps onto the stage to enthusiastic cheering. He acknowledges the applause and then notes that “editing is easier these days, but human foible hasn’t been eliminated.”

“We may pause if something goes wrong,” he says. “But we won’t have to rewind to tape something over–we have miles and miles of digital tape.”

By things “going wrong,” French apparently means actor slips of tongue and audience gaffes. “We’re not trying to suppress your natural reactions,” he says,”unless they are vulgar or loud.”

The audience laughs and then quiets. The actors take their places on simple folding chairs behind a row of mikes.

French, who created the title “Movies for Your Mind” to describe some of his works, is a pioneer of contemporary audio theater. He was among the first to recognize that there was still potential for audio entertainment, and his productions have been on the air for more than 30 years. They are now broadcast coast to coast on 130 radio stations and on XM Radio.

Many of French’s fans have been fol-lowing Harry Nile since the character first aired in 1976. That series, along with Kincaid The Strangeseeker, Sherlock Holmes and Call Simon Walker, is produced for Imagination Theater, which is syndicated by San Francisco-based TransMedia.

French, long a popular Seattle radio personality, began his career as a radio announcer and talk-show host in 1946,and so has witnessed the changes in radio theater from a front row seat.

He agrees that technology and the nature of modern life have both contributed to the resurgence of audio theater. “Portable CD players make listening to radio drama an option anytime, any-where,” he says. “And more and more people are stuck in their cars and would like something to divert them.”

Interestingly, French believes that radio drama never really disappeared,but instead morphed into commercially viable genres in response to the pressures of television. “We never lost the genre,”he says. “Most radio ads are little tiny radio dramas.”

He has done his part to nudge audio drama back into traditional, and profitable,formats. He syndicated his shows in 1996, and XM Radio began daily broadcasts of Imagination Theater soon after XM added audio theater to its lineup. The exposure is an audio theater producer’s dream: While anyone can enter the industry for the price of a Website, more airtime means more opportunity to be heard, and more potential to attract listeners.

“We want Jim French Productions to be on as many stations as possible and, of course, also have a good Website,” French says. “I think that as long as we can keep reaching people, radio drama as a genre will continue to increase. ”

Just Like It” Used to Be–With a Techno Twist

For my final audio theater experience, my home is the auditorium. I am the only person in the audience; the time is 6:30A.M.; and I am wearing pajamas. The creators of the piece I will enjoy work in San Francisco, California. I am in Bend, Oregon.

I have located the Pagliacci’s Fools Website and downloaded the requisite(and free) audio software. A box pops upon my screen, telling me the title of my selected show–The Gentleman Caller–and the duration: 36:33 minutes. I am restless for a moment, fidgeting in my chair until, over the whiny tone of a violin playing a Renaissance tune, I hear a strong and clear voice: “The unicorn opens the door. …”

The story is grand. There is romance,intrigue, tragedy. There is spectacular dancing. There are flapping, colorful skirts. There are flaming swords. There are mystical beasts.

Of course, all of it’s only in my mind.

Kim Cooper Findling is a new audio theater fan.

Flash Gordon 1935 and Dry Smoke & Whispers Holodio Theater

Where: Mack theater
When: 2:30pm Saturday, May 15th, 2004.

The Willamette Radio Workshop is proud to return to McMenamins UFO Festival for its 5th year. Last year we presented Orson Welles’ War of the Worlds, this year, join us for two new productions from the Workshop. First on the bill Flash Gordon 1935: Episode #3, join Flash, Dale and Dr. Zarkov as they travel to the planet Mongo. Live sound effects and music will take you back to those thrilling days of yesteryear, when all you needed for a trip to Mars was a glowing Philco and a rug in front of it to dream on.

Next the present state of Science Fiction is represented by Dry Smoke & Whispers Holodio Theater: The Jewel, featuring Emile Song, Special Detective. Dry Smoke & Whispers has been broadcast across the country on more than 100 public radio stations for the last 20 years and is now beginning a new series of adventures on XM Satellite Radio. WRW is lucky to have partnered with Marc Rose and Jerrel McQuen To create the first live production of Dry Smoke & Whispers.

Dry Smoke and Whispers Holodio Theatre sweeps you into the interstellar intrigue of another dimension. Emille Song, Special Detective, a Telepath living on the vigilante fringe of a Future Society, battles the hitmen of a technopolis underworld, heartless galactic corporations, and ruthless Secret Societies. With his trusted partner, Prof. Durrick Henchard, weapons expert, they face a bewildering gauntlet of foes, in cinematic adventures that will entertain, surprise and mystify. DSW currently airs on XM Radio, and community radio stations across the country. Past seasons are available via its website: www.drysmoke.com

This is a special world premiere presentation called The Jewel, transmigrating you to a misbegotten corner of an alien universe, to bear witness to a thought-provoking drama of naked avarice and noble sacrifice.

We close our program with Flash Gordon 1935: Episode #4, this gives you the feel of an actual serial, cliff hangers and payoffs for everyone as Flash Meets Ming the Merciless and Ming’s daughter falls hard for the adventurer from the distant planet Earth. If you’re a fan of Sci-fi, Old Time Radio or just need some serious fun to distract you from the more pressing issues of the day, check out Willamette Radio Workshop at the Mack theater Saturday, May 15th at 2:30pm following the most unusual parade you’ll see all year. The Mack theater is located in McMinnville Oregon, across the street from the Hotel Oregon. Visit the McMenamins Hotel Oregon 5th Annual UFO Festival website for more information.

Marc Rose
Producer and Creator of Dry Smoke, Marc is a collector of Psychotronic DVD’s and one psychotic three-legged Maine Coon. Voice Talent, Sound Designer and Musician for the Dry Smoke series, he also finds time to claim there have never been anything called dinosaurs, FireSign Theatre still reigns supreme, pop music should go “pop” once and for all, and is reassured by the fact that the FDA only allows .02% “retired” mafia hit men per baseball stadium hot dog. Marc has provided the pre-recorded Sound Design for “The Jewel”, and plays the role of Emille Song, the hero of Dry Smoke, in our live presentation.

Jerrel McQuen
Author of tonight’s play, and Writer and Illustrator for Dry Smoke, Jerrel is a total recluse who only goes outside during solar eclipses and impenetrable thunderstorms. Last seen muttering to himself about “@#$* deadlines”, Jerrel doesn’t believe there’s anything on the moon, that UFO’s are the product of Temporal/Electro/Magnetic technology pioneered by Tesla and exploited by various world governments, and that sheep should remain inside their pen, though many times they’ve seen the way to leave. Jerrel will attend the UFO Festival and the Willamette Radio Workshop Presentation via a telepathic trance while resonating in the Second Attention inside a secret recreation of a Tchotalan pyramid.

We are pleased to present our first partnership with these very talented gentlemen and look forward to many interstellar adventures to come.

A Murder of Crows

Halloween, 2003
Sponsored by McMenamins Theatres and Pubs

Once again the Willamette Radio Workshop presented a live radio theater event at three of our favorite venues. First a tantalizing preview of our full show, presented by our director Sam A. Mowry, Tuesday, October 28th, 2003 on Stage & Studio, KBOO 90.7�s Arts and Entertainment show hosted by Dmae Roberts and Emily Young. (Stage & Studio and all KBOO�s other fine shows can be found on its webcast by visiting http://www.kboo.fm/index.php.)

Then on Halloween night, Friday, October 31st, 2003 @ 7pm & 8:30pm, we presented an hour of original stories, written especially for the Workshop, at the McMenamins Kennedy School. Saturday November 1st was the anniversary party for the famous White Eagle Saloon and we were there once again. Each show featured a different hour-long combination of stories.

An article featuring Murder of Crows appeared in Horizon Air Magazine.

A Murder of Crows featured the literary talents of Kris Armetta, Carole Dane, Mark Homayoun, William E. Gregory, William S. Gregory, Mary Robinette Kowal, Robert Kowal, Cynthia J. McGean, Chris Porter, Phil Rudolph and Douglas Watson.

John Martin Gallagher was once again doing our sound design and Sam A. Mowry was our producer.

War of the Worlds, 2003

WRW joins the 4th annual UFO Festival to produce a live re-creation of radio’s most famous broadcast.

Sponsored by McMenamins Theatres and Pubs

When & Where:
Saturday, May 10th – 1:00pm
Mack Theater in McMinnville, OR

Friday, May 9th – 7:00pm
The historic White Eagle Saloon in Portland, OR.

All performances are free and open to the public.

WRW presents Orson Welles� production of H. G. Wells� War of the Worlds. This is a live recreation of the original 1938 �Panic Broadcast� that shook a nation on the brink of war. The script, a loose adaptation of H.G. Wells’ Sci-Fi classic by Howard Koch (who went on to write Casablanca) tells the story of Martians invading the Earth.

The program was presented as a series of live news feeds that created a touch of realism by breaking into a placid evening of dance music. Although the program clearly stated at the beginning and at the half way point that it was a radio drama, most of the country was tuned into the Chase and Sandborn Hour with Edgar Bergen and Charley Macarthy, the most popular radio tandem in the country. However, Nelson Eddy was the musical guest that night and when he began to sing a couple of not-too-popular songs, the radio audience began to spin those dials, coming into the War of the Worldsbroadcast after the disclaimer. The subsequent panic, from listeners who took the radio play for real, traumatized several cities across the eastern seaboard. It is important to note that no one was killed or killed themselves, but rumors of such activity spread as fast as the rumors of Martian invasion. The ensuing notoriety made Orson Welles a star and showed the devastating power of radio in the new age of mass communication.

WRW�s 12 actors, using live foley sound effects, live music and a plethora of old school analog audio magic reproduce the excitement and drama with a production faithful to the spirit of “live Radio.” Enjoy a look at a vibrant entertainment medium and this opportunity to look back at the best Halloween prank ever pulled on the American Public.

If you haven�t seen live radio, you ain�t heard nothing yet.

The Aliens are Coming!
4th Annual UFO Fest
at McMenamins Hotel Oregon � McMinnville, Oregon
Thursday, May 8, Friday, May 9 and Saturday, May 10

It just may be the most fun-and eye-opening-event you�ll encounter all year! For three days, Thursday, May 8th through Saturday, May 10, hear experts� compelling reports of unexplained, extraterrestrial visitations from the skies, and join the dancing humans dressed head-to-toe in tin foil�

With both a serious eye and a light heart, the UFO Fest explores and celebrates the realities and possibilities of life emanating from beyond Planet Earth. It�s Oregon�s largest annual UFO event and this year�s expanded program promises to be galaxies beyond the last.

The lineup for the 2003 event features a UFO costume parade, keynote presentation by internationally UFO authority Stanton Friedman, theUFOstore.com Video Film Festival at McMinnville�s historic Mack Theater, an Alien Costume Ball, a special reception with the keynote speaker and other presenters, exhibitor booths of UFO literature, art and merchandise, and much more�

All UFO Fest events are free and open to all ages, unless otherwise noted. Details about specific events can be found at their website:
http://www.ufofest.com/McHO/ufo/

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
THURSDAY, MAY 8
Dinner with Stanton Friedman at Hotel Oregon, 7pm
FRIDAY, MAY 9
UFO Exhibits at Hotel Oregon, 4pm to 9pm
Speaker Forum at the Mack Theater, 8pm
Speaker Reception & Book Signing at Hotel Oregon, 9:30pm

SATURDAY, MAY 10
UFO Exhibits at Hotel Oregon, 9am to 5pm
�Orson Welles� War of the Worlds� a live radio theater performance at the Mack Theater, 1pm
2nd Annual UFO Parade, 3pm
theUFOstore.com UFO Film Festival at the Mack Theater, 4pm
Alien Ball at Hotel Oregon, 8pm

Dracula — Halloween 2002

A live radio re-creation of Orson Welles’ Mercury Theatre of the Air’s first broadcast.

Sponsored by McMenamins Theatres and Pubs

The Willamette Radio Workshop presented a live re-creation of the Mercury Theatre of the Air‘s first radio broadcast, Dracula, by Bram Stoker adapted by Orson Welles. This was the latest installment in a series of performances, started on Halloween, 2001 with the wildly successful War of the Worlds presented at CoHo Theatre to standing room audiences.

2002 found the WRW bringing the ultimate story of the supernatural to the McMenamins Empire. First published in 1897, the novel Dracula by Irish author Bram Stoker has never been out of print. It has been reissued in over 300 editions, including dozens in foreign languages. The figure of Count Dracula has dominated twentieth-century culture, from movies to cereal boxes to radio.

Cast: Mark Homayoun, Scott Jamieson, Mary Robinette Kowal, Bryan Mackey, Atticus Welles Mowry, Sam A. Mowry, Chris Porter, Mark Twohy and Emily Young

Sound Design and Live Foley:
John Martin Gallagher, Robert Kowal and Amy Gray

Read the Script!

Call of the Mummy

Call of the Mummy, by Cynthia J. McGean

Premiered On:

Tuesday, October 29th, 2002
KBOO 90.7 FM Portland, OR
Courtesy of Stage & Studio with Dmae Roberts and Emily Young

Thousands of years ago, a secret was buried deep beneath the sands of Egypt – the secret of eternal youth. Now, Dr. Clyde Evans seeks to unearth that secret. His expedition will travel to the deadly River of Souls in search of the legendary tomb of Imhotep. In his unnatural quest, Dr. Evans will risk
not only himself, but the lives of his friend, Reginald Bonhoffer, and his financier, the beautiful Victoria Neeferts. They have the hunger for knowledge, but do they have the strength to resist The Call of the Mummy?

Willamette Radio Cast and Credits

Mark Homayoun – Reginald Bonhoffer
Atticus Welles Mowry – Dockworker, KBOO announcer, Live Foley
Scott Jamieson – Dr. Clyde Evans
Mary Robinette Kowal – Victoria Neeferts, Cluna
Sam A. Mowry – Voice on the Wind, Announcer
Mark Twohy – Live Organ

Producer – Robert Kowal
Director – Sam A. Mowry
Sound Design – Marty J. Gallagher

Special Thanks: KBOO, Emily Young and Dmae Roberts

Radio Free Frights! — Portland Tribune

Radio free frights

Willamette Radio Workshop gets ready for some Halloween broadcasts of Bram Stoker’s “Dracula”

BY PAUL DUCHENE Issue date: 10/25/2002

The Tribune

Orson Welles’ radio career is inextricably linked with “The War of the Worlds.” This 1938 production of the H.G. Wells sci-fi story caused widespread panic when its broadcast was thought to be actual news bulletins of an alien invasion.

But “Worlds” was actually Welles’ 29th show with the Mercury Theatre of the Air. He’d been doing radio dramas since 1936, and for a year he was the main character voice in “The Shadow” radio serial.

He would go on to produce and act in more than 100 additional dramas before Hollywood beckoned in 1940.

Sam Mowry’s Willamette Radio Workshop group successfully revived “War of the Worlds” last year at Halloween, filling the CoHo Theatre in Northwest Portland for a midnight performance.

“We had 50 no-shows, and it was still full — thank God they didn’t come,” he says.

This year, Mowry’s crew is tackling Bram Stoker’s “Dracula,” which Welles adapted in July 1938. They’ll perform it live at the White Eagle Saloon, McMenamins Grand Lodge in Forest Grove and the Kennedy School in the days leading up to Halloween.

“Welles got the rights to it at the last minute — he was going to launch the season with ‘Treasure Island,'” Mowry says. “He and John Houseman sat in an all-night cafe cutting up seven copies of the book and gluing pages together to make the script. They argued around the clock for 36 hours, eating and drinking the whole time, then dropped off the pages at the typing pool and left Welles’ secretary to pay the bill.”

Mowry follows up with a prize-winning piece of trivia about English theater manager Bram Stoker, who wrote the story in 1897 and made vampire a household word. Vampires continue to enthrall 100 years later, immortalized in movies and television.

“Bram Stoker was (actor-impresario) Henry Irving’s stage manager, and one of the first things he did was offer Irving the play of ‘Dracula,'” Mowry says. “Irving wouldn’t touch it, and many people believed that it was because the character of Dracula was based on him.

“Think about it,” Mowry says. “We accept the idea of vampires, but when the story was written, nobody knew what they were. Here’s this great story: Basically, a real estate salesman goes to close a deal in Eastern Europe — and instead this evil is loosed on the world!”

Welles’ script runs 55 minutes and can be heard online at http://www.scifi.com/set/playhouse/dracula/ though it’s not a high-quality recording. But the adaptation rushes along, with foley sound effects creating the atmosphere of doom.

Radio drama is a very mobile production, Mowry says.

“It’s not like theater, where you have six weeks of rehearsal and a six-week run,” he says. “Here we can do five shows with a cast of 12. It takes a half-hour to set up a one-hour show and a half-hour to break it down. The sound equipment is the biggest thing.”

And Halloween horror stories are perfect for radio drama, Mowry says. “It’s the power of suggestion. Everybody carries their own private hell with them.’

Contact Paul Duchene at pduchene@portlandtribune.com.

ORSON WELLES’ ADAPTATION OF BRAM STOKER’S “DRACULA”

When: 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 26

Where: White Eagle Saloon, 836 N. Russell St., 503-282-6810

When: 2:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 27

Where: McMenamins Grand Lodge, 3505 Pacific Ave. Forest Grove, 505-992-9533

When: 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 31

Where: The Kennedy School, 5736 N.E. 33rd Ave. 503-249-3983

Cost: $3 at Grand Lodge, other performances free

War of the Worlds

The Willamette Radio Workshop in conjunction with CoHo Theatre presented Orson Welles’ production of H. G. Wells’ War of the Worlds The 1938 “Panic Broadcast” This was a live recreation of the original broadcast that shook a nation on the brink of war. The script, a loose adaptation of H. G. Welles SCI-FI classic by Howard Koch (who went on to write Casablanca) tells the story of Martians invading the Earth.

The program was presented as a series of live news feeds that created a touch of realism by breaking into a placid evening of dance music. Although the program clearly stated at the beginning and at the half way point that it was a radio drama, most of the country was tuned into the Chase and Sandborn Hour with Edgar Bergen and Charley Macarthy, the most popular radio tandem in the country. However, Nelson Eddy was the musical guest that night and when he began to sing a couple of not-too-popular songs, the radio audience began to spin those dials, coming into the War of the Worlds broadcast after the disclaimer. The subsequent panic, from listeners who took the radio play for real, traumatized several cities across the eastern seaboard. It is important to note that no one was killed or killed themselves, but rumors of such activity spread as fast as the rumors of Martian invasion. The ensuing notoriety made Orson Welles a star and showed the devastating power of radio in the new age of mass communication.

WRW’s 12 actors, using live foley sound effects, live music and a plethora of old school analog audio magic sought to reproduce the excitement and drama with a production faithful to the spirit of ” live Radio.” The sell-out crowds to WRW’s production of War of the Worlds enjoyed take a look at a vibrant entertainment medium and this opportunity to look back at the best Halloween prank ever pulled on the American Public.

If you haven’t seen live radio, you ain’t heard nothing yet.

Willamette Radio Cast and Credits

Cast:

Sam A. Mowry – Orson Welles / Professor Person
Chris Porter – Carl Phillips
Mary Robinette Harrison – New York Announcer
Solomon Grundy – Announcer #2
Amy Gray – Wilmuth
Margie Boule – Announcer #3
Mark Twohy – Operator # 5
Mark Homayoun – Stranger
Tim McKennie – Announcer #4
Jodi Eichelberger – Mercury Announcer/Captain Lansing

Sound Design – Marty Gallagher, Amy Gray
Lights – Sally Lawson
Box Office – Alyson Ayn Osborn

Producer – Robert Kowal
Director – Sam A. Mowry

Special Thanks: CoHo Theatre, Gary Cole, Liane, The Cast and Crew of Spinning into Butter, Amy Gray, Marty Gallagher, Cindy McGean, Atticus Mowry, Michael Gandsey & T2 Audio and all our family and friends that make our work possible.