Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)

 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
type
TVTItem
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
label
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
page
TheMercuryTheatreOnTheAir
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
comment
Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })The Mercury Theatre on the Air, created and hosted by Orson Welles, is one of the most famous programs of the Golden Age of Radio Drama.Welles had first made a name for himself in 1936 at the ripe old age of 20 as an actor and director on the New York stage. In 1937 Welles and his partner, future Paper Chase star John Houseman, formed their own stock company, the Mercury Theatre. This also proved very successful, especially the 1937 production of Julius Caesar in a then-contemporary Fascist Italy setting.In 1938, CBS hired Welles, already a veteran of radio acting, to perform in a summer series filling the time slot of Lux Radio Theatre. Welles insisted that he be allowed to take his entire Mercury Theatre troupe with him, and CBS agreed. The series (originally titled First Person Singular but renamed The Mercury Theatre on the Air a few months later) debuted on July 11, 1938, with an adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula. In addition to hosting the program, Welles co-wrote, directed, and played the lead in each episode. His Mercury Theatre company included several performers who would become famous when Welles brought them to Hollywood for Citizen Kane, including Ray Collins, Agnes Moorehead, and Joseph Cotten, as well as musical director and composer Bernard Herrmann.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })Still, the show might be largely forgotten today if not for the most famous—or infamous—broadcast in the history of American radio: The War of the Worlds, first aired on October 30, 1938. Welles chose to present his adaptation of the novel by H. G. Wells as a Phony Newscast reporting on a "live" Martian invasion. The following day the nation's newspapers were full of stories of mass panic caused when listeners tuned in and missed the opening announcement of the fictional program. These stories were almost certainly fabricated by newspapers wishing to discredit radio, but they still made Orson Welles famous.They also resulted in a Retool and re-name of the program. The Mercury Theatre on the Air had run without corporate sponsorship, but after the War of the Worlds publicity, Campbell Soup picked up the show and it became The Campbell Playhouse. The new show, debuting on December 11, 1938, also featured a Special Guest star every week, typically a Hollywood actress starring opposite Welles, and veered more towards adaptations of popular contemporary movies. The trope list below is based on the original July–December 1938 run of The Mercury Theatre on the Air.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_3'); })Four of the 22 episodes are lost.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
fetched
2022-08-02T02:43:02Z
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
parsed
2022-08-02T02:43:02Z
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
processingComment
Dropped link to AroundTheWorldInEightyDays: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
processingComment
Dropped link to JuliusCaesar: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
processingComment
Dropped link to TheManWhoWasThursday: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
processingComment
Dropped link to TheWarOfTheWorlds: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_16364a29
type
Evil Sounds Deep
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_16364a29
comment
Evil Sounds Deep: Welles adapts appropriately low, rumbling voices to play both Dracula and Edmond Dantes in The Count of Monte Cristo.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_16364a29
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_16364a29
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_16364a29
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2719ab04
type
Special Guest
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2719ab04
comment
Special Guest: H.V. Kaltenborn, who in his day was a very well known radio commentator and news analyst, appeared as the narrator in the Mercury's broadcast of Julius Caesar.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2719ab04
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2719ab04
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2719ab04
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_297170d3
type
Halloween Episode
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_297170d3
comment
Halloween Episode: The October 30, 1938 episode is pretty famous.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_297170d3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_297170d3
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_297170d3
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2fac1b86
type
Flying Dutchman
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2fac1b86
comment
Flying Dutchman: It turns out that Mr. Walkes, the creepy passenger on board the Roundabout, is an anarchist who specializes in raising the natives of the South Pacific and Far East against their colonial overlords. Capt. English finds out to his horror that no port will accept Walkes, thus dooming their ship to sail apparently forever. Walkes is even called a "Flying Dutchman".
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2fac1b86
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2fac1b86
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_2fac1b86
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_347fef9a
type
The Coconut Effect
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_347fef9a
comment
The Coconut Effect: This most famous effect of radio drama is heard in the first scene of the first episode (Dracula, July 11, 1938), when Jonathan Harker's coach makes its way to Dracula's castle.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_347fef9a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_347fef9a
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_347fef9a
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_43b154c9
type
Not Even Bothering with the Accent
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_43b154c9
comment
Not Even Bothering with the Accent: In various dramas set in England, like Dracula, The Man Who Was Thursday, A Tale of Two Cities (July 25, 1938), and The Pickwick Papers (Nov. 20, 1938), neither Welles nor most of his cast make attempts at British accents. Averted when Welles did make a stab at an accent as Long John Silver in Treasure Island, probably because he was also playing Jim Hawkins using his own voice.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_43b154c9
featureApplicability
-1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_43b154c9
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_43b154c9
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_51c7574c
type
Abandon Ship
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_51c7574c
comment
Abandon Ship: The crew of the Jeanette have to abandon ship when it is crushed by the Arctic ice (Oct. 9, 1938, adaptation of Hell on Ice, the Real Life story of the Jeanette expedition).
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_51c7574c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_51c7574c
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_51c7574c
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_52989fee
type
Narrator
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_52989fee
comment
Narrator: The adaptation of The Man Who Was Thursday (Sept. 5, 1938) is told by Syme in the first person, a device the novel does not use, likely to help with the radio exposition. The staging of Julius Caesar used radio commentator H.V. Kaltenborn as a narrator to fill in the action. (Among other things, Kaltenborn narrates the actual murder scene, since on radio the audience couldn't see the actors getting stabby or Caesar collapsing at the foot of Pompey's statue.)
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_52989fee
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_52989fee
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_52989fee
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_53c9fc92
type
Flashback
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_53c9fc92
comment
Flashback / In Medias Res: The 39 Steps starts In Medias Res, with Hannay already on the run. Later, Hannay recounts in a long flashback how things came to this.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_53c9fc92
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_53c9fc92
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_53c9fc92
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6a993504
type
Audio Adaptation
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6a993504
comment
Audio Adaptation: The show didn't perform original stories, instead adapting well-known novels and stage plays.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6a993504
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6a993504
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6a993504
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6aee32d1
type
Radio Drama
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6aee32d1
comment
Radio Drama
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6aee32d1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6aee32d1
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6aee32d1
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6b27162d
type
The Remake
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6b27162d
comment
The Remake: One of the shows that had made Welles and the Mercury famous in New York theater was their staging of Julius Caesar, in modern dress, Fascist Italy-style. For the radio series the Mercury reprised Julius Caesar, getting the same fascism vibe across over the radio with the sound of marching boots and military music. To further evoke the modern-day feel, since modern dress couldn't be used for a radio show, Welles got radio commentator H.V. Kaltenborn to narrate.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6b27162d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6b27162d
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_6b27162d
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_736d791f
type
Adaptational Badass
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_736d791f
comment
Adaptational Badass: In the original novel Dracula, as well as the 1924 stage play, the men kill Dracula with a stake through the heart. In Welles's version, it's Mina who grabs the hammer and stakes Dracula through the heart, after Harker freezes up.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_736d791f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_736d791f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_736d791f
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_93deab19
type
Ominous Fog
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_93deab19
comment
Ominous Fog: In A Passenger to Bali, the crew of the Roundabout comment about how the fog is unnaturally thick. They're all creeped out by it. Then Mr. Walkes steps out of the creepy fog and talks the captain into letting him sail with them.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_93deab19
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_93deab19
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_93deab19
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_9cdb5ec5
type
Genre Anthology
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_9cdb5ec5
comment
Genre Anthology: A drama anthology. And specifically, the August 8, 1938 episode featured three short stories: "My Little Boy" by Carl Ewald, "The Open Window" by Saki, and "I'm a Fool" by Sherwood Anderson.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_9cdb5ec5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_9cdb5ec5
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_9cdb5ec5
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a4c37cbe
type
Mood Whiplash
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a4c37cbe
comment
Mood Whiplash: The November 6, 1938 broadcast featured two stories: harrowing drama Heart of Darkness, followed by light comedy Life with Father.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a4c37cbe
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a4c37cbe
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a4c37cbe
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a90fff3
type
Based on a True Story
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a90fff3
comment
Based on a True Story: While most of the episodes were adaptations of novels or plays, Hell on Ice was not. It was an adaptation of a non-fiction book of the same name, about the Real Life disastrous DeLong expedition to the Arctic aboard the Jeanette.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a90fff3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a90fff3
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_a90fff3
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ad22fa80
type
Apocalyptic Log
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ad22fa80
comment
Apocalyptic Log: Hell on Ice ends with Welles' character reading from Capt. DeLong's log, as DeLong recorded the horrifying fate of the sailors in his party, starving to death in the Siberian far north.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ad22fa80
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ad22fa80
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ad22fa80
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ae254ead
type
Narrating the Obvious
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ae254ead
comment
Narrating the Obvious: A near-unavoidable drawback of radio drama, with its lack of visuals. In the Dracula broadcast Van Helsing explicates how the earth from Dracula's coffin has spilled over the snow, while everyone else there is seeing the same thing.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ae254ead
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ae254ead
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ae254ead
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_b15ad926
type
Time-Shifted Actor
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_b15ad926
comment
Time-Shifted Actor: Welles manages to get this effect across with only his voice when playing Edmond Dantes in the August 29, 1938 broadcast of The Count of Monte Cristo. He adopts a higher pitch when playing Edmond Dantes before he's thrown into prison, and a low, rumbling voice when Dantes emerges a couple of decades later as the Count of Monte Cristo.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_b15ad926
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_b15ad926
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_b15ad926
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_bb40e7e0
type
Failed Future Forecast
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_bb40e7e0
comment
Failed Future Forecast: "The Affairs of Anatol" aired on Aug. 22, 1938, just five months after the Nazi takeover of Austria. In his opening narration Welles muses about how there once was a charming, cosmopolitan city called Vienna, where the story is set.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_bb40e7e0
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_bb40e7e0
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_bb40e7e0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c3c3771c
type
Sting
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c3c3771c
comment
Sting: The Dracula episode leans on this trope heavily, with dramatic chords at dramatic moments.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c3c3771c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c3c3771c
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c3c3771c
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c4286511
type
For Doom the Bell Tolls
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c4286511
comment
For Doom the Bell Tolls: The adaptation of The Thirty-Nine Steps (Aug. 1, 1938) starts off with the ringing of heavy, ominous church bells as Richard Hannay, a murder suspect on the run from the police and enemy secret agents, is trying to catch a train.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c4286511
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c4286511
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_c4286511
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cc107e3b
type
Introdump
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cc107e3b
comment
Intro Dump: The adaptation of Hell on Ice introduces most of the characters by having them answer to their names at roll call, while Welles explains who they are.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cc107e3b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cc107e3b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cc107e3b
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ccaaef88
type
Broadcast Live
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ccaaef88
comment
Broadcast Live: Every episode, leading to some amusing moments. Welles seemed to be unhappy with the broadcast of Julius Caesar (Sept. 11, 1938), muttering in the background, once calling out for a cue ("I'm not running this show!"), and at one point interrupting his soliloquy as Brutus to shout "QUIET IN THE STUDIO!" before dropping right back into character and continuing his soliloquy.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ccaaef88
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ccaaef88
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_ccaaef88
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cd0637d2
type
Extra! Extra! Read All About It!
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cd0637d2
comment
Extra! Extra! Read All About It!: "Extra special, extra special", cry the newspaper sellers in the Dracula show, carrying stories of children being attacked by a vampire that looks a lot like Lucy Westenra. "Extra, extra, read all about it" is how the adaptation of Around the World in 80 Days tells the audience about the robbery at the Bank of England. In the novel, it was simply described by Verne's third-person narration.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cd0637d2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cd0637d2
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_cd0637d2
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_de414a38
type
Bad Guys Play Pool
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_de414a38
comment
Bad Guys Play Pool: In The 39 Steps, Richard Hannay has chased down the trio of bad guys, but can't be sure that they're actually the right people. While they all sit in the seaside house in a standoff, they all play a game of billiards—until the three men are in fact revealed to be the bad guys. This is a change from the novel where they play bridge in the climactic scene.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_de414a38
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_de414a38
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_de414a38
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fa6bfde9
type
Have a Gay Old Time
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fa6bfde9
comment
Have a Gay Old Time: The captain of the Demeter in the Dracula episode describes the boxes of earth loaded onto his ship as "a queer cargo". The narrator of The Affairs of Anatol describes the time of his story as "a very gay winter".
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fa6bfde9
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fa6bfde9
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fa6bfde9
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fcbdbac2
type
Lohengrin and Mendelssohn
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fcbdbac2
comment
Lohengrin and Mendelssohn: The Mendelssohn part, namely, the wedding recessional, is used at the end of "The Affairs of Anatol" to confirm for the audience that Anatol the ladies' man did in fact go through with his marriage to Louise.
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fcbdbac2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fcbdbac2
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_fcbdbac2
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_name
type
ItemName
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_name
comment
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_name
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio) / int_name
itemName
The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
Abandon Ship / int_bc64d108
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
American Media / int_bc64d108
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
Bad Guys Play Pool / int_bc64d108
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
Genre Anthology / int_bc64d108
 The Mercury Theatre on the Air (Radio)
hasFeature
Radio of the 1930s / int_bc64d108