An otherworldly experience

An otherworldly experience

Queen鈥檚 campus radio station CFRC presents historic radio drama The War of the Worlds 80 years after original airing.

By Anne Craig

October 29, 2018

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[CFRC War of the Worlds]
To mark the 80th anniversary of the The War of the Worlds, CFRC 101.9 FM is recreating the radio drama on Tuesday, Oct. 30. (Supplied Image)

When it was originally broadcast in 1938, The War of the Worlds caused mass panic when listeners believed the alien invasion was real.

Queen鈥檚 University campus radio statio CFRC 101.9 FM is recreating the radio drama on Tuesday, Oct. 30, exactly 80 years after the original broadcast with principal and campus radio personality Daniel Woolf playing the role of Narrator, a part played by actor and future filmmaker Orson Welles in the original broadcast.

鈥淚 have a true love of old theatre and this is the perfect mix of radio and theatre,鈥 says CFRC station manager Dinah Jansen. 鈥淲e asked students, staff, faculty and members of the community to audition and the result is a broadcast that is sure to please our listeners.鈥

Based on the book by H.G. Wells, the program began with an announcement that the evening鈥檚 show was an adaptation of The World of the Worlds. A popular myth was many people missed that announcement which caused the panic.

After an opening by Welles, the next half hour of the broadcast was presented as a typical evening radio program interrupted by a series of news bulletins. They first describe a series of odd explosions on Mars followed by the report of an unusual object falling on a farm in New Jersey. The situation escalates when Martians emerge from the cylinder which leads to the alien invasion. In the end, the Martians were finally defeated by microbes.

鈥淲e really tried to stay true to the original,鈥 says Jansen, 鈥渁nd we loved that the principal wanted to be involved. He鈥檚 been with the station for seven years and really does a great job.鈥

Dr. Woolf says he really enjoyed playing the Narrator role and has only praise for the work the radio station does to appeal to the campus community and beyond.

鈥淚 know the 1950s film and several other adaptations of the work, and thought it would be really interesting to play a role,鈥 says Dr. Woolf. 鈥淭his is a timeless story with lessons about hope when all seems lost, and about our indomitable spirit as a species."

The broadcast gets underway at 8 pm followed by interviews with the cast, director Ben Charland and producer Mike Sheppard, who will explain how this mix of drama and radio came to life.

The broadcast of The War of the Worlds kicks off CFRC鈥檚 13th annual fundraising drive. The drive aims to raise $30,000 for Canada鈥檚 longest running campus-community radio station, broadcasting from Queen鈥檚 since 1922. For information visit the CFRC .