NRR Project: “On a Note of Triumph”
Written, produced, and directed by Norman Corwin
CBS Radio
Broadcast May 8, 1945
57:06
This recording represents two apogees. It denotes the
high-water mark of the American century, and it stands as the one of the last
great works of famed radio producer, director, and writer Norman Corwin.
The defeat of Nazi Germany on May 8, 1945 was an immensely
emotional moment. Six years of war had devastated Europe and turned the United
States from an isolated, sleeping giant into a world power crusading for
democracy. The victory affirmed our values – freedom, inclusion, diversity,
tolerance – and set these principles out as our guiding philosophy, our hope
for the future of the world.
Corwin was an eloquent recorder of the American experience.
In his many broadcasts he articulated contemporary wisdom, as we heard in his
landmark “We Hold These Truths,” which you can read about here.
“On a Note of Triumph” is a companion piece. It shouts to
the world our glee at finally beating Hitler and his rotten gang of criminals
and psychopaths. It articulates our reasons for fighting, describes the good
that is to come, and asks questions about the struggle and our victory.
Corwin constructs here a complex tapestry of voices, led by
the narration of Martin Gabel. The great Bernard Herrmann, who got his start
with radio’s Mercury Theatre, provides a stunning score.
“So they’ve given up! They’re finally done in and the rat is
dead in an alley back of the Wilhelmstrasse. Take a bow, G.I.! Take a bow,
little guy! The superman of tomorrow lies dead at the feet of you common men of
this afternoon! This is it, kid! This is the day! . . . You had what it took
and you gave it . . . seems like free men have done it again!”
The show goes on to outline the general rejoicing resounding
around the world. The tone is grandiose, bombastic, naïve, evangelical – reflecting
the feeling pervasive in the country.
“Somehow the decadent democracies, the bumbling Bolsheviks,
the Saxon softies, were tougher in the end than the brown-shirt bully boys. And
smarter too, for without whipping a priest, burning a book, or slugging a Jew,
without corralling a girl in a brothel or bleeding a child for plasma, far-flung,
ordinary men, unspectacular but free, rousing out of their habits and their
homes, got up early one morning, flexed their muscles, learned as amateurs the manual
of arms, and set across across perilous plains and oceans to whop the bejeepers
out of the professionals.”
What follows, exuberantly, is a paean to the victors and a
final, scornful analysis of the sins of the enemy. It recites the crimes of the
Nazis, and holds up their actions to contempt. Corwin definitively differentiates
the principles of the victors from the values of the defeated. Germany is
thoroughly mocked for its imperial ambitions and its insensate cruelties.
And it asks questions – “Who did we beat? How much did it
cost to beat him? What did we learn? What do we do know now that we didn’t know
before? What will we do now? Could it all happen again?”
The broadcast then purports to answer these questions. Given
the fact that the Allies were still at war with Japan, the job is seen as
unfinished and vigilance and patience is counseled. Isolation is scorned and
international cooperation is promoted. The broadcast ends with hope for the
future.
America had not yet dropped its problematic atomic bombs on
the enemy. For a couple of months, America could see itself as the embodiment
of virtue. Corwin’s work celebrates that exuberant belief in the American way, and
the dream of universal brotherhood.
The National Recording
Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in
the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: The Fred Allen Show.