“And the
prophet said: And lo, the beast looked upon the face of beauty. And it stayed
its hand from killing. And from that day, it was as one dead.”
--
Old Arabian Proverb
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Bruce Cabot, Fay Wray and Robert Armstrong |
Months before the motion-picture King Kong was released theatrically, a novelization of the
screenplay appeared in print in 1932, adapted by Delos W. Lovelace, a friend of movie producer Merian C. Cooper and a minor writer who mainly scripted biographies and children's
books. Originally published by Grosset & Dunlap, the story was also
serialized in two parts in 1932 by Walter Ripperger for Mystery
magazine. Lovelace’s prose is by no
means great, but the novel features descriptions of scenes not present in the
motion-picture, including the legendary spider pit sequence.
Publication of the novelization was not the only means
the studio used to promote the picture. Executives at RKO Pictures began making
plans to promote their big screen epic, King
Kong, supposedly a loose inspiration of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Lost World (1912). Advertising for
the motion-picture was both elaborate and costly. The studio, without utilizing
the practice of an advertising agency, purchased airtime in the space of
fifteen-minutes, twice a week, Saturday and Monday. Incorrectly reported on a
number of websites as a 30-minute weekly feature, the radio serial was
considered a Holy Grail among connoisseurs of vintage radio broadcasts and fans
of retro horror movies.
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Fay Wray in a publicity photo |
King Kong masquerades
as a beauty and the beast fairy tale, a story involving a Hollywood producer
who sought the eighth wonder of the world, only to partake in an adventure that
takes him to an unchartered island and rampage through the streets of New York.
The female protagonist named Ann Darrow, played by actress Fay Wray, found
herself kidnapped by the giant gorilla named Kong, worshipped by the tribal
natives, on an island occupied by prehistoric beasts. Sailors race across
unexplored territory in an attempt to rescue the damsel, only to face gruesome
death from all shapes and sizes. She was eventually rescued and in the process,
Kong was knocked unconscious and brought back to New York City, where the beast
was put on exhibition. Kong ultimately broke free of his bonds and ran amok
through an asphalt jungle, destroying cars and climbing tall buildings. The
monster met his demise in a historic cinematic sequence on top of the Empire
State Building. But don’t kid yourself – theater goers in 1933 knew it was not
a real ape. They observed the same stop-motion effects you
see today.
As Joe Bigelow of Variety
reported in his March 6, 1933 column, “It takes a couple of reels for King Kong to be believed, and until then
it doesn’t grip. But after the audience becomes used to the machine-like
movements and other mechanical flaws in the gigantic animals on view, and
become accustomed to the phony atmosphere, they may commence to feel the power.
As the story background is constantly implausible, the mechanical end must
fight its own battle for audience confidence. Once won, it reaches a high pitch
of excitement and builds up to a thrill finish in which the ape almost wrecks
little ol’ New York.”
The March 3, 1933, issue of the New
York Times remarked, “While not believing it, audiences will wonder how
it’s done. If they wonder they’ll talk, and that talk plus the curiosity the
advertising should incite ought to draw business all over. King Kong mystifies as well as it horrifies, and may open up a new
medium for scaring babies via the screen.”
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Merian C. Cooper |
King Kong was the brainchild of
Merian C. Cooper. To go into detail regarding the movie's production would take multiple blog entries and we don't have time for that. You can find a nice write-up about the production of the movie here:
RKO reportedly spent more than half a million to produce the movie so it comes as no surprise that the studio that was among the first to utilize the medium of radio as a means of publicizing their motion-pictures, decided to expand promotion of King Kong beyond commercial copy.
RKO predicted box office revenue surpassing most of their
productions that calendar year and went to a lot of trouble to build publicity.
They were correct as a number of inter-office memos suggest the studio would
have filed bankrupt had King Kong not
grossed as well as it did. The financial success of the movie, in part, is due
to the major publicity – including using radio as an advertising medium. Publicizing
on radio, however, was an unusual decision at the time – a medium shunned by
movie studios in fear theater goers would abandon the silver screen for
economical and convenient means of entertainment. Executives at RKO knew radio could help publicize their screen ventures and booked eight
weeks on NBC to dramatize a fifteen-chapter radio serial adapted from the
screenplay.
Like the movie put before the cameras, the struggle for
survival on the primitive, fog-enshrouded, tropical Skull Island between the
energetic filmmakers (led by Robert Armstrong), the hero (Bruce Cabot), and the
forces of nature are dramatized. Unrequited love and the repression of violent
sexual desires, a combat against the voodoo natives, and a depiction of
economic oppression, was not evident upon reviewing the surviving radio scripts
from the 1933 radio serial.
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1933 King Kong radio script |
Until recently, the radio serial, produced from March 18
to April 22, was considered “lost.” Among the Holy Grails of vintage radio
broadcasts, no recordings were known to exist, produced from air checks. An LP
record, produced many years later, has often been distributed over the Internet
and mistakenly labeled as a chapter from the 1933 radio serial. To date,
recordings of the 1933 broadcasts still do not exist. Few would not even know
of its existence if it was not for a brief mention in the RKO press book for King Kong, and a number of newspaper listings. A collector residing in
Virginia, however, who buys and sells radio scripts on eBay, apparently had in
his possession originals of all 15 radio scripts – safely protected in a
cardboard box –this discovery a historic find indeed.
From careful examination of the scripts, it is learned that
New York stage actors played the roles. None of the Hollywood elite reprised
their screen performances. The serial was originally slated for 16 broadcasts,
twice a week, and while newspaper listings confirm this, further digging proved
that a major news item (coverage of a major earthquake in Los Angeles)
pre-empted one of the broadcasts. This forced the script-writer to combine two
chapters into one.
The adaptation was handled by William S. Rainey, who was
hired to adapt the screenplay and/or novelization into 16 chapters, each
running 15 minutes in length. For the most part, Rainey remained faithful to
the material. Rainey also doubled as the narrator for the opening and closing
of every radio broadcast, and on occasion supplied voices of natives, sailors
and spectators when action called for it. It was not uncommon during the
thirties for radio actors, writers, directors and sound men to double for roles
before the days of unions and guilds. Alois Havrilla, the director of the
serial, was an accomplished radio announcer in his own right and it appears he
also doubled for roles of natives, sailors and spectators. It seems more
logical that Havrilla would have served as announcer while Rainey handled the
directing – the names on the extant radio scripts were penciled in and the
positions could have been mislabeled. Havrilla would venture to Hollywood
shortly after completion of this radio play, signing a contract with Universal
Studios for a series of film shorts. While on the West Coast, he would further
his career as a radio announcer for Jack Benny’s The Chevrolet Program, Joe Cook’s Colgate House Party and Paul Whiteman’s Musical Varieties.
|
Merian C. Cooper and Fay Wray |
There was no apparent opening theme for the chapter
plays. The opening signature for each broadcast was the distant mutter of drums
surmounted by a native chant in which there is constant repetition of the
phrase, “Ani Saba Kong.” If anything, a few bars of “Oriental Love Dance” by Irénée
Bergé would have been used, according
to a single music cue sheet that survives from the NBC files. Other music
featured on the program included “Queen of the Night” (from In Babylon) by Justin Elie, “In a
Pagoda” by John W. Bratton, “Chinese Dance” (from Two Oriental Dances) by Bainbridge Crist, and parts one and eleven
of “Sea Shantiss” arranged by Sir Richard Runcian Terry. Musical instruments
included oboe, drums and accordion.
The opening chapter features Carl Denham, in the role of
a Hollywood motion-picture director, related the events as it happened to the
radio audience. Because the radio cast had not yet seen the motion-picture,
they were instructed by the director not to view the film until after the
conclusion of the radio serial, to ensure the personas depicted on celluloid
would not influence the manner of which they portrayed the radio counterpart.
Stage and radio actor George Gaul, playing the lead of
Carl Denham (referred to as Worthington Denham in the premiere episode and Carl
throughout the remainder of the serial), played the part ala Richard Halliburton,
a then-famous adventurer and lecturer. Halliburton’s first book, The Royal Road to Romance (1925), was a
best seller. New Worlds to Conquer
(1929) recounted his famous swim of the Panama Canal, retracing the track of
Cortez’ conquest of Mexico, and a trip to Devil’s Island. Halliburton appeared
on radio numerous times for the lecture circuit, recounting bizzare foreign
encounters, often drawn from his real-life escapades. It is believed that Gaul
played the role in the same manner as the eccentric Halliburton portrayed over
the ether waves, complete with high-pitched voice and occasional discomfort on
the details. Halliburton’s love of the world’s natural wonders, monuments
bestowed to mankind from Mother Earth, may have partially been the inspiration
for the character created for the motion-picture.
As the first chapter opens, Denham briefly introduces his
background and foreshadows the aftermath of the horrific events. “My friends,
not long ago it was my fate to be involved in a series of happenings which form
the basis of the strange story I have to tell you. The events which happened to
me and those others who were with me, never happened before to mortal men – or
at least, no man ever survived to tell of them. The days of deadly terror which
I then endured have broken me up body and soul. My hair has turned white,
though I am not old. My limbs are weakened. My nerves are unstrung. I tremble
at the least exertion. I am frightened at a shadow. I hold by stanchly with
Shakespeare’s dictum that “there are more wonders in Heaven and Earth, than are
dreamt of in your philosophy.” My friend who knew me when I was a successful
picture director tell me that the whole expression of my countenance has
changed. My mirror corroborates them. Before this amazing thing happened, I had
knocked around the world a good bit. I had made pictures in the jungles of the
Amazon, in South Africa, in India, among the Australian Bushmen in Labrador and
in Russia.”
The character of Denham provides first person narrative
throughout most of the serial, bridged between extended action scenes which are
almost verbatim from the film script.
Among the notable differences between the film script and the radio drama was the inclusion of the famous Spider Pit sequence, which was apparently cut from the film before the motion-picture was released nationally. (More about this next week on the blog.)
Other noticeable differences between the finished movie
and the radio script was the way in which the old chief and witch doctor
carried out their threats to offer Ann as a golden-haired bride for Kong. On
the island, ceremonial fires were lit and Ann was covered with garlands. Her
arms tied between two pillars, she witnessed first hand the roaring defiance of
Kong. The scene in which the gates opened and Kong entered the village to take
Ann away, followed by the natives’ closing of the gate, was not exactly the
same manner depicted in the movie. Kong is apparently allowed to enter and exit
with his sacrifice. The fact that the actress was not in the radio script may
have had a hand in the formation of this scene.
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Fay Wray cheesecake photo |
The initial length of King Kong was originally 14
reels but, to cut down on budget, the studio asked Cooper to trim the movie to
11 reels. Scenes that supposedly ended up on the cutting room floor was Kong’s
confrontation with a Triceratops, Jack and Ann’s perilous escape down the
river, and Kong crashing down Skull Mountain chasing after Jack and Ann. The
fight between Kong and the Triceratops was featured in chapter nine, as evident
in the script reprint.
In chapter eleven, Denham describes his trek back to the
vessel for more guns and bombs, and his observations of the quietness of the
native village. When Kong approaches in chapter thirteen, chasing Driscoll and
Ann, the great ape smashes the gate and tears through the village. As Denham
narrated, “Kong filled the aperture, his body in a crowd, his eyes peering
above the little men at his feet to the dark huts. I gazed unbelievingly at the
bulk of the invader and raced back for the gas bombs. Kong lumbered forward to
begin a slow patient search of the still, dark village. In the cluster of huts
the rays of the early dawn had not yet penetrated. The last native had fled to
the deceptive shelter of his home or out into the encircling brush. Kong ripped
off the top of one hut after another, stooping down to peer into each. At
first, he only rumbles an impatient disappointment but as he met repeated
failure his tune sharpened to fury. By a wide, swinging run behind concealing
huts and trees, I finally interposed myself across Kong’s line of advance.
Gripping a prized bomb in either hand, I kept my distance watchfully.”
In two radio episodes, the refuge is referred to as Skull
Mountain Island. (Same for the Lovelace novel.) In the movie, it is referred to
as Skull Mountain. It was mentioned in one chapter that Skull Mountain was
located somewhere off the coast of Sumatra, Indonesia. RKO referred to it as
Skull Island in publicity materials. (In Song
of Kong, the 1933 motion-picture sequel, it is referred to as Kong’s Island.)
In the final episode, the scene
where Kong reached in and takes Ann from her hotel room is not prominently
referenced. Instead, Driscoll informs Denham in the streets that Kong kidnapped
his prey and is climbing the buildings of the city. It is Driscoll who tells a
police officer that army planes from Roosevelt Field “might find a way to
finish Kong off.” Denham and Driscoll describe the confrontation to each other,
between Kong and the planes as they witness the events from the street. (This
was, no doubt, a cheat for sound effects men to avoid re-creating the sound of
Curtiss Helldiver aircraft.) The death of Kong was described by Denham to the
radio audience. It appears, based on analyzing the radio scripts, that the
final two chapters were edited together as one. This might be why Kong’s
escapades through the city and the daring rescue of Ann was provided mostly
through narration and little action and sound effects.
|
Alois Havrilla |
Beginning with the second episode,
the following announcement was delivered over the radio by announcer George
Hicks, over WEAF in New York only: “Our listeners in the vicinity of New York
City may be glad to know that King Kong
is of such tremendous interest that it will be presented at the Radio City
Music Hall beginning Thursday, March 2nd, and at the new RKO-Roxy
Theatre beginning Friday, March 3rd, for one week.” A similar
announcement was repeated through chapter six. In other areas of the country,
New Jersey, Connecticut and upstate New York, a station identification was
instead provided. The cliffhanger serial was not heard in other areas of the
country, including Washington, D.C., Chicago or Los Angeles.
EPISODE GUIDE
Broadcast
Saturday and Monday, 6:30 to 6:45 p.m.
Originated
from WEAF in New York City.
Episode #1, Broadcast Saturday, February 25,
1933
CAST: Pierce Benton (Bjorusen), Arthur
Ebony (the watchman), Parker Fennelly, (Capt. Englehorn), George Gaul (Carl
Denham), Ned Weaver (Jack Driscoll), and Charles Webster (Weston).
PLOT: We are introduced to
Worthington Denham, the famous picture director, whose adventure pictures, made
in the far corners of the earth, have been seen by millions of people. Denham
describes, through dramatic flashback, hearing by chance of a mysterious island
in an uncharted portion of the Southern ocean, decided to try to find it and
make a picture there. His previous pictures had been less successful than they
should have been because they lacked romance. He decided to talk to a Norwegian
skipper, Bjorusen, who in Singapore two years ago gave him the details of the
mysterious island. Denham bought a boat, hired a skipper, Englehorn and his
mate, Driscoll, who had been with him on two earlier voyages. Denham explains
the reason why he needs to hire a young girl for the trip and sets out to find
one.
Episode #2, Broadcast Monday, February 27,
1933
CAST: Peggy Allenby (Ann
Darrow), George Gaul (Carl Denham), Joseph Granby (the fruit vendor), and William
S. Rainey (the cabman and the
narrator).
PLOT: The day before they were
to set sail, the New York theatrical agents failed to find a girl willing to go
on such a hazardous and mysterious voyage. Denham set out into the obscuring
twilight of a snowy winter’s evening to hunt for her along the highways and
byways of New York City. Saving a young starving beauty from arrest as a result
of stealing an apple from a fruit peddler, Denham meets Ann Darrow and treats
her to a full meal in a tiled lunchroom. She was undernourished but he promised
to make good on full meals in the future… provided she tag along on his
expedition.
Deleted Scene
DENHAM:
How come you’re in this fix?
ANN: Bad
luck, I guess. There are lost of girls just like me.
DENHAM:
Not such a lot who’ve got your looks.
ANN: Oh,
I can get by in good clothes, perhaps. But when a girl gets too shabby…
Episode #3, Broadcast Saturday, March 4, 1933
CAST: Peg Allenby (Ann Darrow), Parker
Fennelly (Capt. Englehorn), Tim Daniel Frawley (Lumpy), George Gaul (Carl
Denham), William S. Rainey (narrator), and Ned Weaver (Jack Driscoll).
PLOT: Boarding The Wanderer, Ann
meets the first mate, Driscoll, who confesses his dislike towards having a
woman on board, believing them to be “cock-eyed pests.” When the vessel gets
west of Sumatra, Denham provides the map leading to Skull Island. Pictured on
the map is a wall higher than a dozen men, and impregnable, stretching across
the base of the peninsula serving as a mighty barrier against who or what might
attempt to come down the precipice from the back country. Built so long ago
that the descendants of the builders slipped back into savagery. Denham assures
the men that the map is legit and that “every legend has a basis of truth.”
Episode #4, Broadcast Monday, March 6, 1933
CAST: Peg Allenby (Ann Darrow), Parker
Fennelly (Capt. Englehorn), Tim Daniel Frawley (Lumpy), George Gaul (Carl
Denham), William S. Rainey (narrator), and Ned Weaver (Jack Driscoll).
PLOT: With a strange mountain
suggesting a skull, the crew is apprehensive in their journey. Ann, however,
enjoys being on the ocean and longs to remain on the waters with each passing
day. Denham asks Ann to pick something from the costume boxes that pleased her
fancy, for camera tests. She had selected a curious primitive costume blend of
soft, rustling grasses and softer, iridescent silken strips. Where it failed to
cover her, the flesh of her arms and legs flashed in ivory contrast to the
brown of the grasses and the brightness of the cloth. Denham refers to it as
his “Beauty and the Beast” costume. After a screen test involving Ann screaming
for her life, Driscoll expresses displeasure in the treatment she may be
subjected to, confesses his love and the two romantically kiss. On the morning
of May the seventh, they woke to find themselves in the midst of a thick
yellow-white blanket of fog. They found the island as described on the map.
The Saturday, March 11, 1933 broadcast was
not dramatized because of news coverage of Los Angeles earthquake coverage.
Episode #5, Broadcast Monday, March 13, 1933
CAST: Peg Allenby (Ann Darrow),
Paul Durant (the Native Chief), Parker Fennelly (Capt. Englehorn), Tim Daniel
Frawley (Lumpy), George Gaul (Carl Denham), Alois Havrilla (native voices), William
S. Rainey (narrator), and Ned Weaver (Jack Driscoll).
PLOT: Arriving on the island,
the adventurers find the natives performing some type of ceremony. Along for
the trek are Driscoll, Ann, Denham, Engelhorn and about 40 members of the crew.
The men observed the great wall first hand, observing a gate hinged to massive
stone pillars supporting the story of the structure’s antiquity. There was also
an overhanging precipice made chiefly of huge logs. The natives are chanting “Kong!
Kong!” while a native girl, young and smoothly attractive, wearing an apparel
consisting of woven strands of flowers, is offered as a sacrifice. The natives,
discovering they have visitors, temporarily halt the proceedings. Engelhorn,
able to speak the native language, discovers the girl is the bride and gift of
Kong. Blondes are scarce in this part of the world and Ann, is eyed by the
natives as a gift for Kong.
Episode #6, Broadcast Saturday, March 18,
1933
CAST: Peg Allenby (Ann Darrow),
Paul Durant (the Chief), Parker Fennelly (Capt. Englehorn), Tim Daniel Frawley
(Lumpy), George Gaul (Carl Denham), Alois Havrilla (native voices), William
Naughton (the guard), William S. Rainey (narrator), and Ned Weaver (Jack
Driscoll).
PLOT: The Chief of the natives
offers six women for Ann, but the offer is declined and the men of The Wanderer
retreat back to the vessel. Hours later, the men gather in the skipper’s cabin.
Their first reaction had been one of exhilaration over the lucky outcome of
their encounter. How, however, they had time to ponder the danger they had run
– and the ominous mystery of the native chiefs’ parting words. Meanwhile, Lumpy
shows the men a native bracelet found on deck… and Ann is missing. There was no
doubt that the natives had been on the ship under the cover of darkness and
spirited Ann away to a possible fate. A rescue party is formed.
Episode #7, Broadcast Monday, March 20, 1933
CAST: Parker Fennelly (Capt.
Englehorn), George Gaul (Carl Denham), Taylor Graves (Jimmy and voice of
sailor), Alois Havrilla (voices of sailors) and Ned Weaver (Jack Driscoll).
PLOT: The old chief and witch
doctor carried out their threats to offer Ann as a golden-haired bride for
Kong. The skipper ordered the boats manned. Every man was armed with a rifle
and one of the boats contains a crate of gas bombs. On the island, ceremonial
fires were lit and Ann was covered with garlands. Her arms tied between two
pillars, she witnesses first hand the roaring defiance of King Kong. The beast
takes Ann away and the natives close the gate. With Driscoll in the lead the
men plunged into the murky jungle. The great size of the horrible monster awed
all of them. Trekking through the jungle, the men risk arm and limb to track
Kong. They encounter an immense beast with a thick, scaly hide, a huge spiked
tail and a small reptilian head. They came face to face with surviving
creatures of prehistoric life. Using the gas bombs, the men knock the creature
out. But valuable time was being lost while Kong had Ann in his possession.
Episode #8, Broadcast Saturday, March 25,
1933
CAST: George Gaul (Carl Denham),
Taylor Graves (Jimmy and voice of
sailor), Alois Havrilla (voices of sailors), Ned Weaver (Jack Driscoll and voice of sailor).
PLOT: Using logs the men venture
downstream in speed of pursuit. The men continue to encounter monstrous
apparitions, dinosaurs on water-soaked logs, and one scaly-back smashed the
raft into pieces… sending the men into the water and guns to the bottom of the
water. Denham felt sick wondering how many of the crew were to go before they
could catch up with Kong. The men reach land and continue their trek, a
tricerotop gores to death one of the rescue party, then ultimately witness Kong
battling a Tricerotops. The battle, as described by Denham during the audible
roars from the fight, reveal Kong the defiant. The chances of rescuing Ann from
the fiendish clutches of Kong seem fainter and fainter.
Episode #9, Broadcast Monday, March 27, 1933
CAST: George Gaul (Carl Denham),
Taylor Graves (Jimmy and voice of
sailor), ALois Havrilla (voice of sailors), and Ned Weaver (Jack Driscoll).
PLOT: Of what use was the guile
and wit against the huge fantastic beasts of the nightmare island? Their frail
knives were useless and they lost their rifles and gas bombs when the raft was
destroyed. Driscoll and Denham did their best to pull the men out of the mood
of surrender. Driscoll agrees to cross the ravine and find Ann while the rest
of the men return to the ship to fetch more rifles and bombs. The men ultimately plunge to their deaths in a pit of giant insects and spiders. Driscoll takes
shelter in a cave in the ravine as Kong reaches in to apprehend his next prey.
Driscoll, backing up, drew his knife and stabbed Kong’s fingers and arm,
enraging the ape. Driscoll crouched in his shallow wall stabbing hopelessly at
every chance…
Episode #10, Broadcast Saturday, April 1,
1933
CAST: George Gaul (Carl Denham),
and Ned Weaver (Jack Driscoll).
PLOT: A giant snake made for
Ann, who screamed for her life. Kong whirled about and Kong was again defiant.
Driscoll, during the battle, snuck out of the cave and continued to following
Kong to his lair. Ann’s one chance for continued safety depended upon his own
ability to keep track of her and Kong’s temper. He trailed the ape, not
provoking him to a furious outburst. Denham, who was witness to all that
happened, agreed to go back to the boat and get bombs. Together the men cannot
catch Kong. They need bombs to do that. Denham departs.
Episode #11, Broadcast Monday, April 3, 1933
CAST: Parker Fennelly (Capt. Englehorn),
Tim Daniel Frawley (Lumpy), George Gaul (Carl Denham), and Alois Havrilla
(voice of sailor).
PLOT: Meeting Capt. Englehorn in
the village with the other men, Denham reveals that everyone was wiped out,
except Driscoll and possibly Ann. He asks for volunteers to go back after them.
Sleep was out of the question, tired as he was. The sailors completed
preparations for a new search, armed with rifles and more bombs. The image of
the sailors who met their fate was fresh on his mind. He feared the possibility
of a similar fate for these men, and Driscoll was now sick at heart and with
heavy misgivings, he could not free his mind of the disturbing thought that in
a sense he was to blame for the whole horrible business. He cursed the day he
ever heard of the island.
Episode #12, Broadcast Saturday, April 8,
1933
CAST: Peggy Allenby (Ann Darrow),
George Gaul (Carl Denham), Alois Havrilla (voice of sailor), and Ned Weaver (Jack
Driscoll).
PLOT: As described by Jack
Driscoll, the first mate gave chase as the ape lumbered through the jungle. He
was following no beaten trail, leaving his geat tracks plainly upon bruised
leaves and broken branches and sodden jungle floor. Ann was, apparently, unconscious
by this time. She lay in the crook of one of the beast’s enormous arms. Her
hair foamed down her back in a bright cascade made more bright by its contrast
with Kong’s black snarl of fur. Along the slope of the island’s highest peak,
Kong came to a full stop in a great, natural amphitheatre which was encircled
by a curving cliff. When a great bird-like monster, a prehistoric pterodactyl
soared, Ann woke and screamed and Kong came to her rescue. During the fight,
Driscoll made a move to rescue Ann. Together, the two jump off the ledge into
the pool below. The two follow the stream to safety. They finally reach the
gates of the great wall. But they are not yet beyond the gate and the crashing
which they heard in the forest behind them was Kong in pursuit.
Trivia: Narration by Jack Driscoll,
filling in on the events on the island, after Denham introduces him to the
audience.
Episode #13, Broadcast Monday, April 10, 1933
CAST: Peggy Allenby (Ann
Darrow), Parker Fennelly (Capt. Englehorn), George Gaul (Carl Denham), and Ned
Weaver (Jack Driscoll).
PLOT: Denham and his men reached
the gate about the same time as Ann and Driscoll. Racing back to the Plain of
the Altar, everyone was delirious with joy. Before the men agree to leave the
island, Denham points out that he was here to make a moving picture and Kong
was worth all the movies in the world. They have bombs and if they capture him
alive, they will have proof of their story for all the world to see. Against
the wishes of Ann and Driscoll, Denham wants to use the beauty as bait. Before
the great doors can close completely, Kong’s lumbering bulk rolls against the
wall, shouting a wail of terror. The gap at the gate had become scarcely more
than a wide crack when Kong’s charge struck home. The surprised natives scream
and flee in terror. The gate fell inward with a terrific crash. Sailors
scramble shrewdly to safety on either side. Kong tears through the village and
Denham throws a bomb squarely against Kong’s chest so that the liquid struggled
blindly on, knocking the beast out. With the giant beast conquered, Kong is put
into chains and arrangements made to transport him back to New York. After
considerable effort the men got the animal towed out to the ship, as she lay at
anchor in the little harbor. “We’ve got the biggest capture in the world,”
Denham tells the skipper. “There’s a million in it. And I’m going to share it
with all of you. Listen! A few months from now it’ll be up in lights on
Broadway. The spectacle nobody will miss. King Kong! The Eighth Wonder of the
World!”
Episode #14, Broadcast Saturday, April 15,
1933
CAST: Peggy Allenby (Ann Darrow),
George Gaul (Carl Denham and voice
three), Jack McBryde (one of the reporters and
voice one), William Naughton (photographer and voice two), and Ned Weaver (Jack Driscoll and voice four).
PLOT: An uneventful trip back to
the great night on Broadway finally arrived. The crowd jammed four full blocks
above Times Square and spilled over into the middle of Broadway. Traffic cops
shook hopeless heads, twiddled helpless fingers and wearily motions taxicabs
into the side streets above and below. Opening night and orchestra seats are
$10. Backstage, Driscoll is wearing a tux; Ann is wearing an expensive gown.
Reporters ask questions and Driscoll and Ann admit they are engaged to be
married. When the curtain opens, Denham introduces people to Kong, chained to
the wall with chrome steel. Ann Darrow is brought on stage to meet her captor.
Photographers take pictures; the flash of the bulbs disturbs Kong greatly, who snaps
chains and breaks from his bonds. Driscoll races Ann out the back door to her
hotel for safety. Kong, meanwhile, crashes into the hotel lobby. The hotel
detective empties his revolver into the monstrous intruder and looked
incredulously at his weapon when Kong swung around in undiminished strength and
crashed back to the street. The fury of Kong escapes into the street.
Episode #15, Broadcast Saturday, April 22,
1933
CAST: Peggy Allenby (Ann Darrow and Mable, the voice over the telephone),
Tim Daniel Frawley (the police officer and
first voice), George Gaul (Carl Denham), Taylor Graves (third voice), Horace
Sinclair (second voice), and Ned Weaver (Driscoll).
PLOT: Kong kidnaps Ann and makes
for the Empire State Building. Carl Denham rationalizes that the ape sought out
the highest peak in the city, comparable to Skull Mountain. Planes from
Roosevelt Field are careful not to fire in the direction of Ann, but Kong
attempts to get the better of them. When multiple bullets rip through his
heart, the ape plunges to his death. Admiring the body of Kong in the street, a
police officer comments that he did not expect the airplanes to do the job.
Denham replies that the aviators did not kill him. “It was beauty. As always,
Beauty killed the beast.”
Closing
King Kong
made a return visit to radio multiple times. On the evening of March 2, 1933*, King
Kong premiered in New York at the Radio City Music Call. Broadcast over WJZ
(NBC Blue Network) that Thursday evening, on a clear evening with little
overcast, Graham McNamee hosted a special broadcast from 10:00 to 10:30 p.m.,
airtime purchased by RKO in an effort further promotion of the motion-picture
to the radio audience. McNamee’s dialog over the air was scripted in advance.
* A number of reference sources on the Internet
cite the New York premiere being March 7. This is obviously incorrect.
|
Actress Peggy Allenby |
“I am speaking to you from the Musical Hall in Radio
City, where we are gathered tonight to celebrate the gala opening of the
thrilling picture, King Kong, by
Marian C. Cooper and Edgar Wallace. This picture opens today simultaneously in
both of the great theatres in Radio City. It is really an amazing sight to
witness the great throngs gathered in these two theatres for this event. There
are at least 10,000 people now watching the picture in the Music Hall and the
new Roxy and there are thousands more in the lobbies waiting to get in. Out in
the street, huge searchlights make Sixth Avenue and the cross-streets as bright
as day. In the weird light, the display of prehistoric monsters on the marquee
are fearsome indeed. There is a huge ape, fourteen feet tall, indulging in
almost human motions. The life-size dinosaur stretches its menacing form over
the gaping crowds.”
“The distinguished first night audience is typical of
other famous Broadway first nights,” McNamee continued. “Stars of the
entertainment world, business and political celebrities, critics and skeptics
and just plain people. In a few moments I am going to see if I can’t bring to the
microphone, some of these people whose names you all know.”
John Chapman, ace columnist of the New York News, appeared before the microphone, providing the radio
audience advance notice of his review that would soon appear in the newspaper. Lowell
Thomas followed, also providing his opinion of the gala and the movie itself. The
comments of both Chapman and Thomas were scripted.
The New York engagement at Radio City’s Music Hall and
the Roxy attracted a reported 50,000 people on opening day. Within the first
four days, advertisements were hailing an all-time attendance record for an
indoor event. The two movie theaters screened the film ten times every day.
On the evening of March 24, King Kong premiered on the West Coast. A
remote broadcast over KECA from Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood, 11:30 to
midnight, opening of movie on the West Coast in Hollywood. Broadcast from
Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood, Harry Jackson directed the broadcast
under the sponsorship of RKO Studios. Band leader Phil Harris served as master
of ceremonies, interviewing a slew of personalities directly involved with the
production of the motion-picture, including Merian C. Cooper, cinematographer Ernest
B. Schoedsack, author, lecturer and adventurer Richard Halliburton, columnist
Louella Parsons, and actors Frank Reichter, Bruce Cabot and Fay Wray. The
interviews, though brief on the air, were not scripted.
Kong’s giant head was displayed both
inside the lobby during the premiere and outside for a spell for publicity
purposes. Because of the unplanned “Bank Holidays” that occurred as a result of
FDR and the Great Depression, the Los Angeles premiere was delayed by over a
week, with ticket prices dropped from $5.50 to $3.30.
On the evening of June 2, Jack Benny
and cast performed a continuation of an on-going murder mystery, “Who Killed
Mr. X?” on the weekly Chevrolet Program.
Characters Holmes and Watson (pronounced Vatson, a Jewish stereotype) travel to
the newly constructed Empire State Building where they do battle with King
Kong. (Radio and stage actor Ralph Ashe also supplies the voice of radio’s The
Shadow during the same spoof.) Howard Claney was the announcer. Alois Havrilla
would not assume the announcing chore for that program until the fall.
Going forward, when guest
celebrities appeared on radio programs, a mention of their accomplishments
often included a reference to King Kong.
When Bruce Cabot appeared on The Royal
Hawaiian Hotel Show in 1934, the announcer mentioned his appearance in Midshipman Jack (1933) and King Kong (1933). When Fay Wray appeared
as a guest on the Jimmy Fidler radio program in 1934, Hollywood on the Air, she talked about the technical challenges
involved during the production of King
Kong. When the actress appeared on 45
Minutes in Hollywood on the evening of May 6, 1934, she discussed the
movies she enjoyed making, including King
Kong… joking that the giant ape was the most difficult to take action from
the director.
In 1963, Golden Records released a
commercial LP dramatizing the movie scenario. New York actors Elaine Rose,
Ralph Bell, Nat Polen and Dan Ocko supplied the voices. This recording, split
into two parts, has been mistaken many times as surviving chapters from the
1933 radio serial. A seven-minute audio recording used to promote the movie was
made by RKO in 1933, syndicated via transcription disc to local radio stations
across the country, does exist in collector hands. The announcer asks those by
the radio speakers to listen to the horrific sounds of Kong battling a
ferocious dinosaur, and the screams of Fay Wray through the music of Max
Steiner. Audio clips from the movie are featured prominently. “King Kong is
coming! The picture that staggers the imagination!” the announcer proclaims.
Again, the 1933 radio serial does not exist in recorded form. You can listen to the 1963 Golden Records on YouTube, as well as the seven-minute 1933 radio advertisement.