Lights Out (radio show)
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Lights Out was an American old-time radio program featuring "tales of the supernatural and the supernormal." It was immensely popular, and was one of the first horror programs, predating Suspense and Inner Sanctum. In its heydey, Lights Out rivalled the popularity of those shows.
Lights Out ran through several series and networks, from January 1, 1934 to August 6, 1947. The principal sponsor was Ironized Yeast. Most episodes were broadcast at midnight. Lights Out then made the transition to television in 1949, where it was broadcast until 1952.
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[edit] History
[edit] The Wyllis Cooper Era
Lights Out was created in Chicago by writer Wyllis Cooper in 1934, and the first series of shows (each 15 minutes long) ran on a local NBC station, WENR. By April 1934, the series was expanded to a half hour in length and moved to midnight Wednesdays. In January 1935, the show was discontinued in order to ease Cooper's workload (he was then writing scripts for the network's prestigious Immortal Dramas program), but was brought back by huge popular demand a few weeks later.
After a successful tryout in New York City, the series was picked up by NBC in April 1935 and broadcast nationally, usually late at night and always on Wednesdays. Cooper stayed on the program until June 1936, when another Chicago writer, Arch Oboler, took over. By the time Cooper left, the series had inspired about 600 fan clubs.
Cooper's run was characterized by grisly stories spiked with dark, tongue-in-cheek humor, a sort of radio Grand Guignol. A character might be buried or eaten or skinned alive, vaporized in a ladle of white-hot steel, absorbed by a giant slurping amoeba, have his arm torn off by a robot, tortured or decapitated -- always with the appropriate blood-curdling acting and sound effects.
Adhesive tape, stuck together and pulled apart, simulated the sound of a man's or woman's skin being ripped off. Pulling the leg off a frozen chicken gave the illusion of an arm being torn out of its socket. A raw egg dropped on a plate stood in for an eye being gouged; poured corn syrup for flowing blood; cleavered cabbages and cantalopes for beheadings; snapped pencils and spareribs for broken fingers and bones. The sound of a hand crushed? A lemon, laid on an anvil, smashed with a hammer.
Though there had been efforts at horror on radio previously, there had never been anything quite as explicit or outrageous as this on a regular basis. When the series switched to the national network, a decision was made to tone down the gore and emphasize tamer fantasy and ghost stories.
There are no known recordings from Cooper's 1934-1936 run, but his less gruesome scripts were occasionally rebroadcast. An interesting example is his "Three Men," which had aired on Christmas 1935, was performed again on the series in 1937 (a version circulates among collectors under titles like "Uninhabited" or "Christmas Story"), and was revived for a 1948 episode of NBC's prestigious "Radio City Playhouse" anthology series. The plot is typical of Cooper's gentler fantasies. On the first Christmas after World War I, three Allied officers meet by chance in a train compartment and find one another vaguely familiar. They fall asleep and share a dream in which they are the Three Wise Men searching for Jesus. But is it really a dream? In the best tradition of supernatural twist endings, Cooper has the officers wake to find a strange odor in their compartment -- which turns out to be myrrh and frankincense.
In the mid-1940s, Cooper's decade-old scripts were used for three brief summertime revivals of Lights Out. The surviving recordings reveal that Cooper was experimenting with both stream of consciousness and first person narration a few years before these techniques were popularized in American radio drama by, among others, Arch Oboler and Orson Welles. In one tale, a murderer describes how the Chicago police try to beat a confession out of him. When that doesn't work, they put him in a jail cell haunted by the ghost of a previous occupant, a smooth gangster named Skeeter Dempsey who describes his own execution and discusses the afterlife knowledgably. In the final twist, the narrator reveals that he has taken Skeeter's advice to commit suicide and is now, himself, a ghost.
Another story, originally broadcast in March, 1935 as "After Five O'Clock" and revived in 1945 as "Man in the Middle," allows us to follow the thoughts of a businessman as he spends a day at the office cheating on his wife with his secretary. The amusing contrast between what the protagonist thinks to himself and what he says out loud to the other characters enlivens one of Cooper's favorite plot devices, the love triangle.
Some of the scripts are rather routine, perhaps in part because the author's attention was divided by other projects. Until August, 1935, Cooper was NBC Chicago's continuity chief, supervising a staff of writers and editing their scripts. He resigned in order to devote more time to Lights Out as well as a daily aviation adventure serial, Flying Time. He also served on NBC's Program Planning Board, wrote soap operas like Betty and Bob and commuted weekly to produce another program in Des Moines, Iowa.
From early 1934 to mid-1936, Cooper produced close to 120 scripts for Lights Out. Typical titles (all from 1935) include "The Mine of Lost Skulls," "Sepulzeda's Revenge," "Three Lights From a Match," "Play Without a Name" and "Lost in the Catacombs" (about a honeymoon couple in Rome who lose their way in the catacombs under the city). Typical plots:
- A novelist, struggling to write a locked room mystery, locks himself in his office, only to be interrupted by a stranger who resembles the story's murderer.
- Two newsreel cameramen travel to an allegedly haunted house and film an interview with a man who claims to be a ghost. But the man fails to show up on the negative...
- A scientist accidentally creates a giant amoeba that grows rapidly (perhaps inspiring Arch Oboler's more notorious monster, a giant chicken heart), eats living things (like the lab assistant's cat), and exhibits powers of mind control. However, Leon Oboler, Arch's nephew, states that family legend credits the source of "Chicken Heart" as an article found in the Chicago Tribune announcing that scientists had succeeded in keeping a chicken heart alive for a considerable period of time after its having been removed from the chicken.
The show benefited tremendously from Chicago's considerable pool of creative talent. The city was, with New York, one of the main centers of radio production in 1930s America. Among the actors who participated regularly during the Cooper era were Sidney Ellstrom, Art Jacobson, Don Briggs, Bernardine Flynn, Betty Lou Gerson, and Betty Winkler. The sound effects technicians frequently had to perform numerous experiments to achieve the desired noises. Cooper once had them build a gallows and wasn't satisfied until one of the sound men personally dropped through the trap. The series had little music scoring save for the thirteen chime notes that opened the program (after a deep voice intoned, "Lights out, everybody!") and an ominous gong which was used to punctuate a scene and provide the transition to another.
[edit] The Arch Oboler Era
When Cooper departed, his replacement, a young, eccentric and ambitious Arch Oboler, picked up where he left off, often following Cooper's general example but investing the scripts with his own style and concerns. Oboler made imaginative use of stream of consciousness narration and sometimes introduced social and political themes that reflected his commitment to anti-fascist liberalism.
Although in later years Lights Out would be closely associated with Oboler, he was always quick to credit Wyllis Cooper as the series' creator and spoke highly of the older author, calling him "the unsung pioneer of radio dramatic techniques" and the first person Oboler knew of who understood that radio drama could be an art form.
In June, 1936, Oboler's first script for Lights Out was "Burial Service," about a paralyzed girl who is buried alive. NBC was flooded with outraged letters in response. His next story, one of his most popular efforts, was the frequently repeated "Catwife," about the desperate husband of a woman who turns into a giant feline. He followed with "The Dictator," about Roman emperor Caligula. This set the pattern for Oboler's run -- for every two horror episodes, he said later, he would try to write one drama on subjects that were ostensibly more serious: usually moral, social and political issues.
Other tales from Oboler's 1936-1938 run include: "War Horse," about a vengeful military nag named Joan of Arc who tramples a man to death; "The Flame Men," about creatures from the sun who infest the earth; "Front," in which "supernatural forces take over a suite in a world famous hotel."
Like Cooper, Oboler was much in demand and highly prolific. While working on Lights Out, he wrote numerous dramatic sketches for variety shows (Grand Hotel, Chase and Sanborn, Rudy Vallee's programs), anthologies (The First Nighter) and specials, as well as Lady Counselor, a series about a woman lawyer, starring Irene Rich. In August 1936, singer Vallee, then the dean of variety show hosts, claimed that Lights Out was his favorite series. Subsequently, Oboler redrafted some of his Lights Out scripts for use on Vallee's and other variety hours. Among the revised scripts for Vallee was "Prelude to Murder" which starred Peter Lorre and Olivia de Havilland in a November, 1936 broadcast. Other Lights Out plays that turned up on various late 1930s variety programs included "Danse Macabre," "Alter Ego" and "The Harp."
Oboler met the demand by adopting an unusual scripting procedure: He would lie in bed at night, smoke cigarettes and improvise into a Dictaphone, acting out every line of the play. In this way, he was able to complete a script quickly, sometimes in as little as 30 minutes, though he might take as long as three or four hours. In the morning, a stenographer would type up the recording for Oboler's revisions. Years later, Rod Serling, who counted radio fantasists like Cooper, Oboler and Norman Corwin among his inspirations, would use a similar process to churn out his many teleplays for The Twilight Zone, a series that, in many respects, was to television what Lights Out was to radio.
Despite acclaim for Oboler's dramas, NBC announced it was canceling the series in the summer of 1937 -- "just to see whether listeners are still faithful to it" -- but another outcry from fans forced the program back on the air that September for another year.
In the spring of 1938, the series earned a good deal of publicity for its fourth anniversary as a half-hour show when actor Boris Karloff, the star of many a Hollywood horror film, traveled to Chicago to appear in five consecutive episodes. Among his roles: an accused murderer haunted by an unearthly creature (played by Templeton Fox) urging him to "Kill ... kill ... kill ..." in "The Dream"; the desperate husband in a rebroadcast of "Catwife" opposite Betty Winkler in the title role; a mad, violin-playing hermit who imprisons a pair of women, threatening to murder one and marry the other, in "Valse Trieste."
Oboler left in the summer of 1938 to pursue other projects, writing and directing several critically acclaimed dramatic anthology series -- Arch Oboler's Plays, Everyman's Theatre and Plays for Americans. A variety of NBC staff writers and freelancers filled in until Lights Out was canceled in 1939. NBC Chicago continuity editor Ken Robinson supervised some of the writing. Regular contributors included William Fifield and Hobart Donovan. A recording of the fifth anniversary show survives from this season. "The Devil's Due" by Donovan, about criminals haunted by a mysterious stranger, is predictable but in keeping with the formula laid down by Cooper.
In 1942, Oboler, needing money, revived the series for a year on CBS. Airing in prime time instead of late at night, the program was sponsored by the makers of Ironized Yeast. Most of the Lights Out recordings that exist today come from this version of the show. For this revival, each episode began with an ominously tolling bell, over which Oboler read the cryptic tagline: "It...is...later...than...you...think." This was followed by a dour "warning" to listeners to turn off their radios if they felt their constitutions were too delicate to handle the frightening tale that was about to unfold. Naturally, the intended -- and successful -- effect of this was more tantalizing than off-putting.
Directing and hosting the 1942-1943 broadcasts from New York and Hollywood, Oboler not only reused old scripts from his 1936-1938 run but also revived some of the more fantasy-oriented plays from his other, more recent, anthology series. Some of the most interesting episodes had originally aired on the author's groundbreaking, critically acclaimed 1939-1940 program Arch Oboler's Plays, among them: "The Ugliest Man in the World," a sentimental tale of a hideously deformed man seeking love in a cruel world, inspired by gentle Boris Karloff's typecasting in horror roles, and enlivened by strikingly expressionistic dramatic effects; "Profits Unlimited," a still-relevant allegory on the promises and dangers of capitalism; "Bathysphere," a political thriller about a scientist and a dictator sharing a deep sea diving bell; "Visitor from Hades," about bickering married couple trapped in their apartment by a hellhound. Another unusual script, "Execution," about a mysterious French woman who bedevils the Nazis who are trying to hang her, had previously aired on Oboler's wartime propaganda series Plays for Americans.
Like Cooper, Oboler made effective use of atmospheric sound effects. Listeners were treated to the ghastly sounds of skulls being crushed and people being eaten. One memorable episode, "Chicken Heart" (which debuted in 1937 and was rebroadcast in 1938 and 1942), features an ever-growing, ever-beating chicken heart which, thanks to a scientific experiment gone wrong, threatens to engulf the entire world. In a classic stand-up routine from his 1966 album Wonderfulness, comedian Bill Cosby relates his humorous account of staying up late against his parents' wishes and being frightened by this episode.
Other well-remembered Oboler tales include: "Come to the Bank," in which a man learns to walk through walls, but gets stuck when he tries to rob a vault; "Oxychloride X," about a chemist who invents a substance that can eat through anything; "Murder Castle," based on the real-life case of H. H. Holmes, Chicago's notorious serial killer; "Spider," in which two men attempt to capture a giant arachnid; "The Flame," a weird exercise in supernatural pyromania; and "Sub-Basement," which finds yet another husband and wife in peril -- this time trapped far beneath a department store in the subterranenan railway of the Chicago Tunnel Company.
A winking sense of self-referential, metafictional humor sometimes enlivened the proceedings. Perhaps inspired by Cooper's "The Coffin in Studio B," in which actors rehearsing an episode of Lights Out are interrupted by a mysterious coffin salesman peddling his wares, Oboler wrote stories like "Murder in the Script Department," in which two Lights Out script typists become trapped in their building after hours as frightening, unexplained events occur. In "The Author and the Thing," Oboler even plays himself, pitted against one of his own monstrous creations.
After the 1942-1943 Lights Out, Oboler continued to work in radio (Everything for the Boys and revivals of Arch Oboler's Plays) and pursued a second career in filmmaking, first in the Hollywood mainstream, and then as an independent producer, writing and directing a number of offbeat, low-budget films, including Five, about survivors of a nuclear war, The Twonky, a satire of television, and the notorious 3-D schlock-fest Bwana Devil which made a huge profit on a small investment. He dabbled in live television (a six-episode 1949 anthology series, Arch Oboler Comedy Theater), playwriting (Night of the Auk) and fiction (House on Fire). In 1962, he produced an album entitled Drop Dead! which recreated abbreviated versions of his Lights Out thrillers including "Chicken Heart" and "The Dark," about a mysterious fog that turns people inside-out. In 1971-1972, Oboler produced a syndicated radio series The Devil and Mr. O (he liked for people to call him "Mr. O") which featured vintage recordings from Lights Out and his other series with newly recorded introductions by Mr. O himself.
The success of Oboler's 1942-1943 Lights Out revival was part of a trend in 1940s American radio toward more horror. Genre series like Inner Sanctum, Suspense and others drew increasingly large ratings. Perhaps with this in mind, NBC broadcast another Lights Out revival series from New York in the summer of 1945, using eight of Wyllis Cooper's original 1930s scripts. Like Oboler's, this revival aired in the early evening and not late at night, and because of this, it was reported, "only those Cooper scripts which stressed fantasy rather than horror" were broadcast. These included a bloodless ghost story about a man who accidentally condemns his dead wife to haunt a nearby cemetery and "The Rocket Ship," science fiction involving interstellar travel. Cooper, then an advertising executive at New York's Compton Agency, may have had little or nothing to do with the actual broadcasts other than allowing his scripts to be performed.
This was followed by another eight-episode revival in the summer of 1946, from NBC Chicago, although at least one of the scripts is not by Cooper (a fine adaptation of Charles Dickens' "The Signal-Man"). This series also avoided the use of outright gore. In fact, a review in Variety complained that the premiere episode was "a little too serious in content for a thriller" since it included "religious background, philosophical discussion and dream diagnosis ..."
A third series of eight vintage Cooper scripts was scheduled to run in the summer of 1947 as well. Broadcast from Hollywood over the Mutual Broadcasting System, it starred Boris Karloff and was sponsored by Eversharp whose company president canceled the series after the fourth episode, apparently unhappy with the gruesome subject matter. The chilling premiere, "Reviving the Corpse," featured Karloff as a scientist who brings his wife back from the dead, only to find she's become a gibbering homicidal maniac.[1] An uncredited Lurene Tuttle, as the wife, gives an unnerving performance. This episode is one of the few surviving examples of Cooper's Lights Out work that reflects the sort of explicit horror that characterized the original series. Eversharp paid off Cooper for his four unused scripts and Lights Out ended its long run on network radio.
From 1936 to 1939, Cooper pursued a screenwriting career in Hollywood (his major credits are the screenplay for Universal's 1939 Son of Frankenstein and contributions to the Mr. Moto mystery series starring Peter Lorre) but continued to work in radio, advertising and, later, television. By 1940, he had changed the spelling of his name from "Willis" to "Wyllis" (to satisfy "his wife's numerological inclinations") and lived mainly in the New York City area where he worked on a number of radio programs, the most important of which was probably Edward M. Kirby's popular and acclaimed government propaganda series, The Army Hour, which Cooper wrote, produced and directed for its first year.
In 1947, Cooper created Quiet, Please, another fine radio program dealing with the supernatural, which he wrote and directed until 1949, occasionally borrowing ideas from his Lights Out stories while creating wholly new scripts that were often more sophisticated than his 1930s originals. In 1949 and 1950, he produced and contributed scripts to three live TV series that frequently dealt with the supernatural: Volume One, Escape and Stage 13.
[edit] On television
In 1946, NBC brought Lights Out to TV in a series of four specials, broadcast live and produced by Fred Coe, who also contributed three of the scripts. NBC asked Cooper to write the script for the premiere, "First Person Singular," which is told entirely from the point-of-view of an unseen murderer who kills his obnoxious wife and winds up being executed. Variety gave this first episode a rave review ("undoubtedly one of the best dramatic shows yet seen on a television screen"), but Lights Out did not become a regular NBC TV series until 1949.
Coe initially produced this second series, but for much of its run, the live 1949-1952 Lights Out TV series was sponsored by Admiral (makers of television sets and refrigerators), produced by Herbert Bayard Swope, Jr., directed by Laurence Schwab, Jr.,and hosted by Frank Gallop. Critics were not always kind, but the program drew huge ratings until competition from the massively popular sitcom I Love Lucy helped to kill it off.
In 1972, NBC aired yet another TV incarnation of Lights Out, a pilot episode which was not well received. In fact, Oboler (who was then syndicating his The Devil and Mr. O radio show) made a point of announcing publicly that he had nothing to do with it.
[edit] Influence
The series influenced many genre writers, including works directly inspired by Lights Out:
- One of Bill Cosby's earliest comedy routines was a retelling of "Chicken Heart," and as a result, many believe the story originated with Cosby.
- "What the Devil," (1942), about a highway motorist menaced by a truck whose driver he cannot see, may have later inspired Steven Spielberg's TV movie Duel, adapted by Richard Matheson from his own short story. Oboler, feeling his copyright had been infringed, claimed in an interview that he "reached for a lawyer and got paid off by Universal Studios."
- The Lights Out television episode "The Martian Eyes" starred Burgess Meredith as a man whose glasses enable him to see Martian invaders who have disguised themselves as normal people. A similar premise in John Carpenter's 1988 film They Live was adapted from the story by Ray Nelson, who reworked the idea from his friend Philip K. Dick's never-produced film treatment for an episode of The Invaders TV series.
- A Halloween episode on The Simpsons referenced Oboler's radio play "The Dark" about a mysterious fog that turns people inside-out. In the episode, The Simpsons turn inside out, and then break into a song and dance number. No recordings of the original broadcasts of "The Dark" have survived, but Oboler recorded a memorable remake for his 1962 stereo album "Drop Dead!"