- Arch Oboler
Arch Oboler (
December 7 ,1909 -March 19 ,1987 ) was a scriptwriter, novelist, producer and director who was active in films, radio and television. Born in Chicago, to aBavarian -Jewish German father and an IrishCatholic mother, he grew upProtestant [ [http://otrcat.com/archobolerplays-p-1056.html] "Born to in 1909 to Bavarian-Jewish German father and a Irish Catholic mother, Arch Oboler grew up protestant in Chicago, IL"] .Oboler generated much attention for his radio scripts, and his work in radio remains the outstanding period of his career. Although some noted a tendency for gruesomeness, he received praise as one of broadcasting's top talents, and he is regarded today as one of the innovators of
old time radio .Radio
Early radio career
Oboler sold his first radio scripts while still in
high school during the 1920s. He pursued a career in radio, and first found notoriety via a rare comedy efforts provoked a then-notorious furor: his sketch, for the 12 December 1937 edition of "The Chase & Sanborn Hour", in which then-hostDon Ameche and guestMae West portrayed a slightly bawdy Adam & Eve, satirising the Biblical tale of the Garden of Eden.On surface, the sketch didn't include much more than West's customary style of suggestive double-entendres, and today the sketch seems extremely tame. But in 1937, that sketch and a subsequent routine featuring West trading suggestive quips with
Edgar Bergen 's primary dummyCharlie McCarthy helped the broadcast cause a furore that resulted in West being banned from broadcasting and, reputedly, from being mentioned at all on NBC programming for fifteen years. The timing may have been the major factor, according to radio historian Gerald S. Nachman in "Raised on Radio"::The sketch resulted in letters from outraged listeners and decency groups . . . What upset churchgoing listeners wasn't the biblical parody so much as the fact that it had the bad luck to air on a Sunday show.
Lights Out and Arch Oboler's Plays
Oboler took over the NBC horror anthology "Lights Out" in 1936. The show was already a sensation because of creator
Wyllis Cooper 's violent, quirky scripts, and Oboler continued in a similar vein. Oboler stated at the beginning of every episode::This is Arch Oboler bringing you another of our series of stories of the unusual, and once again we caution you: These "Lights Out" stories are definitely not for the timid soul. So we tell you calmly and very sincerely, if you frighten easily, turn off your radio now.
In 1939, Oboler was given another show "
Arch Oboler's Plays ", which ran onCBS . While still featuring horror stories, "Plays" used more topical material, especially regarding the war then beginning in Europe.tage and screen
His screen credits include "Escape" (1940), "Gangway for Tomorrow" (1943) and "
On Our Merry Way " (1948). In 1945, he moved into directing with "Bewitched" and "Strange Holiday", followed by the post-apocalyptic "Five" (1951), filmed at his ownFrank Lloyd Wright -designed house. He made film history with the 3-D "Bwana Devil " (1952). "The Twonky " (1953) was adapted from theLewis Padgett short story in the September, 1942, issue ofAstounding Science Fiction .Sidney Lumet directed Oboler's Broadway play, "Night of the Auk", a science fiction drama about astronauts returning to Earth after the firstmoon landing . Produced by Kermit Bloomgarden, the play ran for only eight performances in December 1956 despite an impressive cast that included Martin Brooks,Wendell Corey ,Christopher Plummer ,Claude Rains , andDick York . The play was published by Horizon Press in 1958. In theDecember 17 ,1956 issue, "Time" reviewed::"Night of the Auk" (by Arch Oboler) took place on a rocket ship returning to the earth from man's first landing on the moon (time: "The day after some tomorrow"). The mood of the return voyage is far from jubilant, what with a loathed egomaniac in command, a succession of murders and suicides, the discovery that full-scale atomic war has broken out on earth, and the knowledge that the rocket ship itself is almost surely doomed. Playwright Oboler seems indeed to be prophesying that the atomic age may end up with man as extinct as the great auk. Closing at week's end, the play mingled one or two thrills with an appalling number of frills, one or two philosophic truths with a succession of Polonius-like truisms, an occasional feeling for language with pretentious and barbarous misuse of it. A good cast of actors, including Claude Rains, Christopher Plummer and Wendell Corey, were unhappily squandered on a pudding of a script—part scientific jargon, part Mermaid Tavern verse, part Madison Avenue prose—that sounded like cosmic advertising copy.
Audio horror gained an added dimension with Oboler's stereo LP recording, "Drop Dead!" (1962). It features the following tracks: "Introduction to Horror," "I'm Hungry," "Taking Papa Home," "The Dark," "A Day at the Dentist's," "The Posse," "Chicken Heart" and "The Laughing Man."
Oboler returned to films with another 3-D feature, "The Bubble", in 1966. His fantasy novel, "House on Fire" (Bartholomew House, 1969) was adapted by Oboler for radio's "Mutual Radio Theater" in 1980.
References
External links
*imdb name|id=0643443|name=Arch Oboler
* [http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/filmography.html?p_id=104918&mod=bio Arch Oboler biography by Hal Erickson (All Movie Guide)]
* [http://www.bmonster.com/scifi5.html Marty Baumann's The Astounding B Monster: Arch Oboler]
* [http://www.sfsite.com/gary/obol01.htm Gary Westfahl's Bio-Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Film: Arch Oboler]
* [http://thethunderchild.com/RadioDrama/LightsOut/TheChickenHeart.html "Lights Out" "Chicken Heart" script excerpt]
* [http://www.old-time.com/otrlogs2/mutualrt_dj.log.txt Mutual Radio Theater]
*isfdb name|id=Arch_Oboler|name=Arch Oboler
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