{
  "title": "AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS",
  "category": "[NOVEL]",
  "article": "[Sean Branney] “‘At the Mountains of Madness’ is a terrific story, but to tell it well as a movie, we\nwould need a whole lot more money than we have. So, we thought once again we'd turn to the\ntechnologies of Lovecraft's age. Part of what works so well with the novella is the spectacular\nimages which you imagine as you read it. In a radio drama, we could provide sound effects and\nmusic that would be evocative, but the listener would still have the experience of conjuring these\npowerful images in their imaginations. We've been very gratified that so many of our customers\nwho never listened to old radio shows have found ATMOM (and radio drama) to be a very exciting\nway to experience a story.”\n“Dark Adventure Radio Theatre: At the Mountains of Madness brings Lovecraft's tale to life as it\nmight have been adapted for radio during his lifetime. In the style of The War of the Worlds and\nThe Shadow, Dark Adventure Radio Theatre dramatizes HPL's story with a cast of professional\nactors, exciting sound effects and original music by Troy Sterling Nies (composer for The Call of\nCthulhu). Relive the excitement of 1930s radio with one of HP Lovecraft's most exciting and\nfascinating stories: At the Mountains of Madness.\n[Lausch Rausch] By processing the HPLovecraft Hörspiel classic MOUNTAINS of madness,\nrealized the young Hörspiel Publisher Lausch RAUSCH its first publication.\n“Mountains of madness (original title At the Mountains of Madness) is a horror story by HP\nLovecraft, which in 1936 in Astounding magazine was first published. It builds on the Cthulhu\nmythology to Love Crafts.\nInterview with Gerd Naumann, reprinted in Gothic Magazine # 60 published in May 2008",
  "origination": "",
  "duration": "",
  "personnel": "",
  "extant_recordings": "",
  "chronology": "(ATLANTA RADIO THEATRE, ATLANTA)\n??? ??, 19??\n“At the Mountains of Madness”\nEXTANT RECORDING\nDARK ADVENTURE RADIO THEATRE (THE H. P. LOVECRAFT HISTORICAL\nSOCIETY)\nCirca 2006\n“At the Mountains of Madness”\nPERSONNEL: Sean Branney (director), Troy Sterling Nies (composer).\nEXTANT RECORDING\n(LAUSCH RAUSCH, BERLIN)\nOctober 2006\n“Berge des Wahnsinns”\n[“…In the form of a diary is characterized first-person narrator William\nDyer the course of an expedition to Antarctica after. First search he and\nhis team of exceptional and Mesozoic rocks, like chalk slate. But then\nthey come to a cave in which they are fossils of an unknown man, half\nplant and half-animal race to discover. Soon, they met with the ancient\ncities of a superior civilization and see that the prehistory of the Earth\nwas very different than the science accepts….”]\nSCRIPT: Gerd Naumann.\nPERSONNEL: Gerd Naumann (director), Akki Schulz (music).\nCAST: Herbert Fux (Pabodie), Lutz Harder (William Dyer), Michael Jackenkroll\n(Moulton), David Nathan (Danforth), Jan Pröhl (Douglas), Christian Rode\n(Lake), Friedrich Schoenfelder (Professor).\nEXTANT RECORDING\nAT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS (RADIO 7, LONDON—BBC)\n[Monday-Friday—6:00-6:30 PM]\nNovember 1, 2010\n[EP. 1]\n[RADIO 4 EXTRA NEWSLETTER: “…A professor of geology attempts to\nstop an expedition to a remote mountain range in Antarctica—having\nhimself experienced the terrors that await the unsuspecting traveller.\nRichard Coyle reads HP Lovecraft’s chilling tale, directed by Neil\nGardner…”]\n[BBC RADIO: “…High in the Antarctic, a team of scientists make an\nunexpected discovery…”]\nNovember 2, 2010\n[EP. 2]\n[BBC RADIO: “…A grisly discovery at Professor Lake’s camp sparks a\nperilous two-man flight over monstrous mountains…”]\nNovember 3, 2010\n[EP. 3]\n[BBC RADIO: “…Dyer and student geologist Danforth discover sprawling\nevidence of an incredible ancient civilization…”]\nNovember 4, 2010\n[EP. 4]\n[BBC RADIO: “…Investigating fantastic ancient structures high in the\nAntarctic, Dyer and Danforth face pure terror…”]\nNovember 5, 2010\n[EP. 5]\n[BBC RADIO: “…Battling in the Antarctic, can Dyer and Danforth escape\nwith their lives? Richard Coyle concludes HP Lovecraft’s tale of terror…”]\nSCRIPT: Paul Kent (abridger).\nPERSONNEL: Richard Coyle (reader), Neil Gardner (producer).",
  "sources": "",
  "gallery": "",
  "images": []
}