THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI

[RADIO-SCRIPT]

The original 1919 filmThe Cabinet Of Dr.Caligarihas itself been adapted for radio at least four

times, twice in 1938 for French radio and for the BBC seriesThe ExperimentalHour, in the 1970s

by the Chicago Radio Theatre, and in 1998 by Yuri Rasovksy.

The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. Based on the silent film. National Radio Theater. 1973, 1975.

Hollywood Theater of the Ear. Revised 1998.

By Jeff Davis -November 7, 2004

“The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari,” by Yuri Rasovsky (Blackstone Audiobooks; one hour; one cassette,

$14.95. Also available on one CD; $15 or as a download from www.audible.com; $7.95; full cast

recording.)

Yuri Rasovsky may not be a household name, but within the industry of theater and audio

theater, he is the most honored “audio dramatist” in the U.S. He has won two Peabody Awards, a

Grammy Award, two Corporation for Public Broadcasting Awards, two Audio Publisher’s

Association Audie Awards, and the list goes on. He is also a contributing editor of Audiofile

magazine. So you can imagine that when such a talent (or “genius,” by which he is often referred)

gets a hold of a classic art film, the end result should be nothing short of magnificent.

“The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari” is inspired by the historically artistic silent film produced in

Germany in 1919. When it was released internationally it was billed as ‘Europe’s greatest

contribution to modern picture art’ and it remains one of cinema’s landmarks. What Rasovsky has

done with the it is to maintain the macabre story of murder and intrigue and present it in the style

of the old radio plays of the 1930s and 1940s, complete with a Foley Sound Effects Artist.

The story focuses on the main character, a grad student named Franz, expertly portrayed by

John De Lancie, best known as Q on Star Trek. It begins with him recounting the time when a

string of murders occurred in his village during the annual carnival. At that time a mysterious

hypnotist, Dr. Caligari (Tony Jay) arrived with a somnambulist, Cesare (Lorna Raver—who is

quite reminiscent of Peter Lorre). This man, “who is everywhere and nowhere at the same time,”

only awakened from his suspended state at Caligari’s request. When so awakened, Cesare would

predict the future. Franz’s friend Karl (Robertson Dean) could not resist and asked for a

prediction. Surprisingly, Cesare envisioned Karl soon dead. When this prediction came true the

very next day, naturally Dr. Caligari and Cesare were suspected. Several others also ended up

murdered and paranoia soon took over the small town. Rasovsky’s version is slightly different

than the original story, but it does contain the one, or you may even say two, unexpected twists at

the end. The writing and performances are reminiscent of the classics. The often witty, intelligent

dialogue is delivered with precision from these talented actors. The style seems evocative of Oscar

Wilde, had he written mysteries. Why? Because Rasovsky plays upon the weaknesses of those who

seem to have everything - those with status, love, and happiness. Even they are susceptible of

losing it all … including their sanity. One of our esteemed characters describes his disturbed soul

as “a predator crouched in the shadows of my being.” Franz, whose best friend is murdered, never

gives up in his determination to prove Caligari is the villain, even if it drives him over the edge.

There are just a few flaws in this production. There are times when a number of characters speak

nearly on top of themselves, which makes it hard to determine who is speaking. Also, the

character of the Sargeant (James Otis) seems a little too cartoonish, and so stands out amongst

the more incisive performances of the other characters. One performance that is particularly

enjoyable is that of Frau Bittle. Hers is a small role but well performed. Sadly, she doesn’t get

credit on the package, so the actress remains anonymous.

As you know, it is a horror film from Germany about a sideshow mesmerist who may or may not

be a homicidal maniac. When I started on the radio play, I had seen the film only once and that

perhaps three years earlier. I wrote the first draft in one all-night session, fleshing out the

characters from the schematic hints in the original and creating a milieu for the action from my

memory of the small German town I had spent a year in during the ‘60s, and what I knew of the

culture offin de siecleEurope. The scenes laid themselves out all by themselves. In fact, the whole

thing wrote itself.

I made no attempt to approximate sonically the expressionism -- the skewed sets and turgid

stylization -- of the original. For one thing, radio drama is inherently expressionistic, and for

another, as I said, the whole thing wrote itself. Perhaps because I was performing in Mourning

Becomes Electra at the time, the dialogue came out very O'Neill. However, as I honed the

dialogue, it grew increasingly reminiscent of the symbolist poets who were inspired by Poe --

particularly Rainer Marie Rilke (1875-1926). Somehow this seemed appropriate. In fact, the more

Rilke I put in it, the spookier it got.

I first put my mind to this property in 1972. Since then, I have intermittently pulled out the script

for tweaking until finally in October 1997, a cast headlined by John de Lancie (Q ofStar Trek),

Jane Carr ofDear Johnfame and Kaitlin Hopkins ofAnother Worldrecorded it.

The radio play is inspired by the film, rather than adapted from it. It is a separate artistic (I hope)

work, just as Joyce'sUlyssesis separate from Homer'sOdyssey.Still, after subsequent viewings

of the original 1919 silent, I am struck with how much of it ended up in the audio version -- a

tribute to its evocative power. Silent film makes good audio -- if you can make people see in the

way that the movie makes people hear.

" . . . a hair-raising romp faithful to old-style radio, a 3-D aural experience stuffed with clopping

horses, weird carnival music, creaking doors and a solid cast headlined by Star Trek alumnus

John de Lancie. Among the best moments are the weird sotto voce mutterings of Cesare, the pale

undead creature at the heart of the cryptic story. One can easily imagine the somnambulist's dire

predictions falling from faintly vibrating powder-blue lips."

The Austin American Statesman Winner: Independent Publishers Award – Audio for best "direct

to audio" production of 1998

[Program information]
ORIGINATION:

The Hollywood Theater of the Ear, Hollywood, California.

DURATION:

Produced in 1997 and released in 1998.

PERSONNEL:

Yuri Rasovsky (scriptwriter, producer, director).

CAST: Jane Carr (Frau Biidl), John de Lancie (Franz), Robertson Dean (Karl), Ed Gilbert (Weiss),

Kaitlin Hopkins (Anna), Tony Jay (Dr. Caligari), James Otis (The Sergeant), Lorna Raver

(Cesare).

EXTANT RECORDINGS:

By Jeff Davis -November 7, 2004

“The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari,” by Yuri Rasovsky (Blackstone Audiobooks; one hour;

one cassette, $14.95. Also available on one CD; $15 or as a download from

www.audible.com; $7.95; full cast recording.)

Yuri Rasovsky may not be a household name, but within the industry of theater and audio theater,

he is the most honored “audio dramatist” in the U.S. He has won two Peabody Awards, a Grammy

Award, two Corporation for Public Broadcasting Awards, two Audio Publisher’s Association Audie

Awards, and the list goes on. He is also a contributing editor of Audiofile magazine. So you can

imagine that when such a talent (or “genius,” by which he is often referred) gets a hold of a classic

art film, the end result should be nothing short of magnificent.

“The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari” is inspired by the historically artistic silent film produced in

Germany in 1919. When it was released internationally it was billed as ‘Europe’s greatest

contribution to modern picture art’ and it remains one of cinema’s landmarks. What Rasovsky has

done with the it is to maintain the macabre story of murder and intrigue and present it in the style

of the old radio plays of the 1930s and 1940s, complete with a Foley Sound Effects Artist.

The story focuses on the main character, a grad student named Franz, expertly portrayed by John

De Lancie, best known as Q on Star Trek. It begins with him recounting the time when a string of

murders occurred in his village during the annual carnival. At that time a mysterious hypnotist,

Dr. Caligari (Tony Jay) arrived with a somnambulist, Cesare (Lorna Raver—who is quite

reminiscent of Peter Lorre). This man, “who is everywhere and nowhere at the same time,” only

awakened from his suspended state at Caligari’s request. When so awakened, Cesare would

predict the future. Franz’s friend Karl (Robertson Dean) could not resist and asked for a

prediction. Surprisingly, Cesare envisioned Karl soon dead. When this prediction came true the

very next day, naturally Dr. Caligari and Cesare were suspected. Several others also ended up

murdered and paranoia soon took over the small town.

Rasovsky’s version is slightly different than the original story, but it does contain the one, or you

may even say two, unexpected twists at the end. The writing and performances are reminiscent of

the classics. The often witty, intelligent dialogue is delivered with precision from these talented

actors. The style seems evocative of Oscar Wilde, had he written mysteries. Why? Because

Rasovsky plays upon the weaknesses of those who seem to have everything - those with status,

love, and happiness. Even they are susceptible of losing it all … including their sanity. One of our

esteemed characters describes his disturbed soul as “a predator crouched in the shadows of my

being.” Franz, whose best friend is murdered, never gives up in his determination to prove

Caligari is the villain, even if it drives him over the edge.

There are just a few flaws in this production. There are times when a number of characters speak

nearly on top of themselves, which makes it hard to determine who is speaking. Also, the

character of the Sargeant (James Otis) seems a little too cartoonish, and so stands out amongst

the more incisive performances of the other characters. One performance that is particularly

enjoyable is that of Frau Bittle. Hers is a small role but well performed. Sadly, she doesn’t get

credit on the package, so the actress remains anonymous.

As you know, it is a horror film from Germany about a sideshow mesmerist who may or may not

be a homicidal maniac. When I started on the radio play, I had seen the film only once and that

perhaps three years earlier. I wrote the first draft in one all-night session, fleshing out the

characters from the schematic hints in the original and creating a milieu for the action from my

memory of the small German town I had spent a year in during the ‘60s, and what I knew of the

culture offin de siecleEurope. The scenes laid themselves out all by themselves. In fact, the whole

thing wrote itself.

I made no attempt to approximate sonically the expressionism -- the skewed sets and turgid

stylization -- of the original. For one thing, radio drama is inherently expressionistic, and for

another, as I said, the whole thing wrote itself. Perhaps because I was performing in Mourning

Becomes Electra at the time, the dialogue came out very O'Neill. However, as I honed the

dialogue, it grew increasingly reminiscent of the symbolist poets who were inspired by Poe --

particularly Rainer Marie Rilke (1875-1926). Somehow this seemed appropriate. In fact, the more

Rilke I put in it, the spookier it got.

I first put my mind to this property in 1972. Since then, I have intermittently pulled out the script

for tweaking until finally in October 1997, a cast headlined by John de Lancie (Q ofStar Trek),

Jane Carr ofDear Johnfame and Kaitlin Hopkins ofAnother Worldrecorded it.

The radio play is inspired by the film, rather than adapted from it. It is a separate artistic (I hope)

work, just as Joyce'sUlyssesis separate from Homer'sOdyssey.Still, after subsequent viewings

of the original 1919 silent, I am struck with how much of it ended up in the audio version -- a

tribute to its evocative power. Silent film makes good audio -- if you can make people see in the

way that the movie makes people hear.