Every so often, Norman's name comes up here, and I get any number of emails asking about his work, and how to obtain it.
Norman Corwin is (and has always been) American's pre-eminent radio dramatist, as well as one hell of an essayist...he has written screenplays (such as the Oscar nominated Lust for Life), composed cantatas for the UN ("Yes, Speak Out, Yes"), was a contemporary and friend of Carl Sandburg and Edward R. Murrow (not to mention Humphrey Bogart and Elsa Lanchester and Charles Laughton), and his radio dramas run the gamut from important historical documents ("On a Note of Triumph" was commissioned to be broadcast on VE day by all three networks), to light fantasy/sf (from "The Reluctant Molecule" with none other than Groucho Marx and Vincent Price, to "The Curse of 589" starring William Shatner and Carl Reiner), to the biography of Miguel de Cervantes ("The Writer with the Lame Left Hand"), and his watershed collection, "Thirteen by Corwin."
To give you some idea of the kind of actors who come out for a Corwin script, here are a few of the names who appear on his programs: Charles Kuralt, Pat Carroll, Franklin D. Roosevelt (yes, you read that right), Jimmy Stewart, Orson Welles, Edward G. Robinson, Marjorie Maim, Martin Landau, Jack Lemmon, Charles Durning, Ed Asner, Sammantha Eggar, Norman Lloyd, Frederic March, Robert Benchley, Henry Morgan, Richard Dysart, Jill Eikenberry, James Earl Jones, Fess Parker, Esther Rolle, and others, with music conducted by Bernard Herrmann and Leopold Stokowski among others.
This is a writer who has inspired a generation of other writers, from Rod Serling to Ray Bradbury, Charles Kuralt, Studs Terkel, Norman Lear, Robert Altman, Stan Freberg, and somewhere far, far down the list...myself.
Norman's work and his inspiration have been seminal for me as a writer, and as a person, though I'll never quite hit the same interstellar gulfs he leaves between his footsteps.
If you don't know his work...find out about it. Let me give you a starting point:
http://www.lodestone-media.com
Here you can find the majority of his radio dramas, both from the heyday of the form, and more contemporary stuff, along with an excellent introductory program about Norman, as well as the actual scripts, which deserve the study of anyone who chooses to call himself a writer.
Norman is a *writer's writer*. He's the sort we all point to and say, "That's what I'd like to be able to do someday."
I don't generally put up something that is as blatantly an advertisement as this. But in this particular case, it's worth the attention of any B5 fan, as the core of the fire that set me in motion, inspires and informs much of the ethical content of Babylon 5. He is not only my friend, he has been my mentor and my benchmark for nearly twenty years.
If you're not sure what to get when you get to lodestone, I suggest the Charles Kuralt bio (featuring interviews with Terkel, Bradbury, Altman, Lear and Corwin) about "On a Note of Triumph," the actual broadcast of "Note" itself so you can hear the whole thing straight through, and "Thirteen by Corwin." (John Copeland's personal favorite is "Fifty years after 14 August" commemmorating VJ day.)
If you want only to go for the more modern stuff, then I'd suggest "We Hold These Truths," "The Writer with the Lame Left Hand," and for something truly unique, "No Love Lost," about a fictional meeting between Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr.
Trust me on this one.
jms
From: (jmsatb5@aol.com) B5 Official Fan Club at: http://www.thestation.com |
|