Marriage and children
Corwin was married in 1947 to actress Katherine Locke. They had two children...an adopted son, Anthony Leon, and a daughter, Diane Arlene. Corwin's wife died in 1995.
Religious views
Corwin is Jewish, and his parents observed Judaism. (His father, Sam Corwin, attended holiday services until his death at 110). While not an observant Jew, Corwin has infused much of his work with the ideas of the Hebrew Prophets. One of the prayerbooks of American Reform Judaism,
Shaarei Tefila: Gates of Prayer, contains a portion of the
Prayer from the finale of Corwin's
On a Note of Triumph (see link to full text below).
- Lord God of test-tube and blueprint
- Who jointed molecules of dust and shook them till their name was Adam,
- Who taught worms and stars how they could live together,
- Appear now among the parliaments of conquerors and give instruction to their schemes:
- Measure out new liberties so none shall suffer for his father's color or the credo of his choice:
- Post proofs that brotherhood is not so wild a dream as those who profit by postponing it pretend:
- Sit at the treaty table and convoy the hopes of the little peoples through expected straits,
- And press into the final seal a sign that peace will come for longer than posterities can see ahead,
- That man unto his fellow man shall be a friend forever.
Early career
Corwin worked as a newspaper journalist for the Greenfield Recorder and the Springfield Republican, and later read news over WBZA in Massachusetts. He moved to New York City in 1936 and created a program for independent station WQXR. In 1938, he began working for the CBS Radio Network. CBS scheduled
Norman Corwin's Words Without Music, the first usage of a writer's name in a program title; the series included two of his more famous works,
The Plot to Overthrow Christmas, a fantasy in rhyme, and
They Fly Through The Air, an impassioned reaction to the Spanish Civil War.
SEE...thehy fly through... is about italy bombing ethoptia NOT spanish civil war
In 1941 Corwin was given the timeslot and resources of the Columbia Workshop program for a full six months, under the title
26 By Corwin, which required him to conceive, write, cast, direct and produce a completely new play every seven days.
We Hold These Truths was first broadcast in December 15, 1941, in honor of the 150th anniversary of the United States Bill of Rights. Many radio and movie stars of the day featured, along with an epilogue by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. National Public Radio sponsored a new version of this program in 1991, for the
Bill of Rights bicentennial.
His most famous work is
On a Note of Triumph, a celebration of the Allied victory in Europe, first broadcast on VE Day, May 8, 1945.
Corwin reports being on a train "somewhere near Albuquerque" when news of the end of the European war came to him. He had been planning to produce
On a Note of Triumph as a morale booster for the men overseas. But the war with Germany had ended, and he doubted the network still wished to air it. (Just in case, broadcast historian Erik Barnouw wrote, Corwin had performers ready in both New York City and Los Angeles). Corwin called his network and expressed concern. CBS radio head William Paley sent a message to Corwin on the train .... "the President says, 'now more than ever.' "
With Harry Truman's insistence that it continue, the program went on (from the Los Angeles studios of CBS Radio Station KNX), with Martin Gabel as host/narrator and with William L. Shirer (via cable from New York) re-creating his role as reporter in the Compeigne forest covering the French surrender to Germany. With an audience of 60 million listeners became one of the most famous ever produced on radio.
Corwin wrote a similar program for CBS, Fourteen August, which was broadcast on V-J Day on CBS.
Corwin wrote and directed two plays produced on Broadway,
The Rivalry (1959) and
The World of Carl Sandburg (1960). According to Ray Bradbury, Corwin was responsible for the eventual publication of Bradbury's
The Martian Chronicles.
Composer David Raksin's "reverent orchestral theme" for the 1950 MGM film
The Next Voice You Hear... was later published with original lyrics by Corwin as the hymn "Hasten the Day."
Middle career
Corwin wrote a number of motion picture screenplays, including
The Blue Veil (1951),
Scandal at Scourie (1953),
Lust for Life (1956), and
The Story of Ruth (1961).
In the early 1970s Corwin produced and hosted the television show
Norman Corwin Presents. In 1979 he hosted
Academy Leaders, a weekly showcase for short animated films, such as those produced by the National Film Board of Canada.
Corwin wrote several books, which include
Trivializing America; plus many essays, letters, articles and plays.
Later career
During the 1990s, Corwin returned to radio drama, producing a series of radio plays for National Public Radio. He currently lectures at USC as a visiting professor [1] and is also on the Advisory Board of the National Audio Theatre Festival.