THE BRONZE VENUS

[SHORT-STORY]

Adaptations from the story “La Venus d’Ille” by Prosper Merimee…

“A gallant young French gentleman has found, Un Antique statue on his

grounds Just as sheisexhumed the Yonus is stood up In the field It oeais the

bemblanee of a Venus—a Venus Vlctilx—so grand and iTiperlous is she The young

man Is playing tennis, and a ring on his finger tioubles himitpi events the piopei

handling of his racket Taking o« hli i ing he sees that the hand of the statue has a

beckoning linger Trat nnger he decides,is i convenient thing- to put his ring on

Ho does so—blips his ling over the finger of the Venus—and laughingly says. "

Now, Uiou ail my wife When the ball frame Is oi ei the young fentleman goes for

his ilng A niitaele' iho maible linger Is now ho crooked that

it Is impossible to remove the ling The slatue absolutely takes on a sinister and

vengeful look—and then, when he sees, that his efforts are in \aln to pull off the

ting, Venub assumes lur sweettbl <j-ulbe The young man Is engaged to be

maineel to a ladv he loves The incident of the i f n p r annoys him The Venus is

brought to his house She is cleaned and renovated, and eveiy soil of earth has

been removed fiom her He novel passes through the long coirldor, where the

btatue now standb on L pedestal, that lie floes not believe that the eyes of the

Venus follow him

w i t h an imploring look The day of his marilage comes Then as ho passes near

the statue, it tn-mblt-b on Its pedestal totters falls on h!m, and he Is killed Venus

is avenged, and still the rigid maible lingerof a broken hand holds Ust to the lino;

No. 83 THE STATUE-DEMON;

by Protp«r Merimee.

M. do Peyrelioarde was grubbing; out Iho roots of a (lend olive tree in the orchard

ot his home at Illo (In the Catalon region ot France) when he found a statue

buried beneath the old tree. Calling his servants lie had (he statue lifted to the

level of the ground. It was a life sUe bronze inugc ot Venus with silver eyes, and It

evidently

dated back to the days when ancient Rome ruled France. On the statue's tatr face

was a look of m** llcloug deviltry Uiat appalled the laborers.At the pedestal's

base; w»s a Latin inscription: "Let those who;iove me beware!" A3 the workmen

were lifting the Image it keeled over backward and fell over on one of tho

laborers, breakingIlls leg in such, a way as to make him lame for lite.. Accident

after accident followed this mishap. Pious folk wanted the finder to have the

bronze statute cast as a church

bell. Ho laughed at their superstition and declared the Venus should continue to

adorn his garden. So at the edge of We' tennis court it was

get up near the front door of the house.

The Bronze Enchantreit.

M. de Peyrehoradc had one 3*n, • an athletic .young fellow, Alphonse by name,

whose engagement to a .pretty girl in the neighborhood had just .been

announced. Alhopnso was proud of his father's wealth and of his own social

position in the village. So' Instead of getting an ordinary gold wedding ring for his

.marriage ceremony, he procured' ohfe'tltat was thickly set

with diamonds. This ring arrived from the jeweler a day or two 'before the date

set for the wedding and just as Alphonse was beginning a game of tennis. He put

the ring on hi* little finger for safekeeping. Btjt^ttjwfs tight and hurt

him. So, Iox»lifag for a safe place to leave it until the end of the game, he noticed

the image ot Venus. He slipped the ring on the outstretched forefinger, of the

statue's left hand and went on playing. Later, when he' went to remove the ring,

he found the statute's finger bent in such a way that the circlet would not come

off. This puzzled the young man. Ho was quite certain that the bronze finger had

not been curved like that when first he put the ring on it. His bewilderment was

tinged with alarm as he tugged vainly to fraw

away the diamond circlet. He recalled old fables ot mythology days—.fables that

told how mortals had unwittingly betrothed themselves to deities by placing

rings' on the fingers of tJieir statues. Unable togetback the trinket and ashamed

to tell what he had done, Alphonso proceeded to get very drunk and then went to

bed. That night heavy ^jteps were heard climbing the stairs and entering the

room. Presently a scream of anguish rang thru the house and the tamo heavy

steps were heard descending the stairs. Old M. • de• Peyrchorade rushed into his

son's room, followed by a scared servant. Across the threshold, fully dressed, lay •

Alphonse—stone dead, an expression of horror on his. face. Besitie him on the

floor lay the diamond ring. Around the dead man's body was a^ great :bruise-, as

tho the pressure of a mighty vise had crashed the life out of him.In the soft earth

outside the house were two sets of footsteps—one going, one returning—that led

to the pedestal whereon stood the cruelly smiling bronze statue of Venus. That is

all—except that the heartbroken father now yielded to his good friend's cnteraties

and had the ibronze ffeure cast into a bell for the church.

[Program information]
ORIGINATION:

Various.

DURATION:

Various.

PERSONNEL:

Stephen Ker Appleby (producer—1952,Maritime Theatre),

Norman Bortnick (scriptwriter—1961,Prairie Playhouse), Himan Brown

(producer-director—1974,CBSRadioMysteryTheater),PaulCastan

(scriptwriter—1935, 1936, Tour-Eiffel), Alonzo Deen Cole (scriptwriter, director—

1931, etc.), Sam Dann (scriptwriter—1974,CBS Radio Mystery Theatre),

Christian Gilbert (scriptwriter—1956,Les Fantastiques), Gustaf Kristjanson

(producer—1961,Prairie Playhouse), Jean Low (scriptwriter—1948,Winnipeg

Drama; 1952,Maritime Theatre), Archie MacCorkindale (producer—1948,

Winnipeg Drama), Lee Marcourt (scriptwriter—1952,Vancouver Theatre), John

Richmond (producer—1938, BBC), Ernest Short (scriptwriter—1938, BBC),

Raymond Whitehouse (1952,Vancouver Theatre).

CAST [1974,CBS Radio Mystery Theatre]: Robert Dryden, Evie Juster, Joan

Lovejoy, Dan Ocko, Norman Rose.

EXTANT RECORDINGS:

“The Bronze Venus” (The Witch’s Tale, 1934).

[Program log]
THE WITCH’S TALE (WOR, NEW YORK)
[Thursday—9:45-10:15 PM]

July 2, 1931The Bronze Venus

[Monday—9:30-10:00 PM]

July 18, 1932The Bronze Venus

(TOUR-EIFFEL, PARIS)

[

July 16, 1935La Venus d’Ille

THE WITCH’S TALE (WOR, NEW YORK)
[Thursday—10:00-10:30 PM]

August 22, 1935The Bronze Venus

(TOUR-EIFFEL, PARIS)

[

September 26, 1936 “La Venus d’Ille

(NATIONAL PROGRAMME, LONDON)
[Tuesday—12:15-12:40 PM]

September 27, 1938 “The Bronze Venus

[“…The bronze Venus, as readers of Merimee will remember,

was dug up in a little village down in the Pyrenees; the

workman who found her put his pick into her by mistake and

she fell on him and broke his leg. That was a sample of her

vindictive qualities. If you want to know how much more

damage she did before she was melted down to make a

church bell, listen to the play… Characters: Prosper

Merimee, who tells the story; A Muleteer; The Mayor; The

Mayoress; Alphonse, their son; Mlle. de Puygarrig, his

bride…”]

WINNIPEG DRAMA (WINNIPEG)

[

August 6, 1948The Venus of Ille

MARITIME THEATRE (HALIFAX)

[

July 14, 1952The Venus of Ille

VANCOUVER THEATRE (VANCOUVER)

[

May 2, 1952The Bronze Venus

LES FANTASTIQUES (BRUXELLES 1, BRUSSELS)

[Monday—8:55-9:25 PM]

March 5, 1956La Venus d’Ille

PRAIRIE PLAYHOUSE (CBW, WINNIPEG)

[

January 13, 1961The Venus of Ille

THE CBS RADIO MYSTERY THEATER (WRVR, NEW YORK)

[???day—10:07-11:00 PM]

April 30, 1974The Venus d’Ille

[“…Vicomte Claude Louis de Charbert—handsome, young and owing a

million-franc gambling debt—tries to save himself from his creditors by

seeking the hand of the wealthiest young lady in France. But when he

carelessly places his ring on the finger of an eight-foot bronze statue of

Venus, the goddess demands his love—or his life…”]

CAST:

Joan Banks (Heloise), Bob Dryden (Henri), Evelyn Juster (Venus), Danny

Ocko (Ormonde), Norman Rose (Claude).