The Orson Welles Archive at the University of Michigan
This slideshow features some of the photos and documents in the University of Michigan’s collection.
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Heart of Darkness
The U-M collection includes Welles’ own script pages from Heart of Darkness, which appears to be the first screenplay he ever wrote. It was an ambitious undertaking, since adapting Joseph Conrad\’s prose to film was no easy task. (Image courtesy of the Special Collections Library at the University of Michigan.)
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Alienated fan
This handwritten letter, dated Oct. 30, 1938, was addressed to executives at New York’s Mercury Theater and Columbia Broadcasting Corp. from a disgruntled fan who missed the disclaimer that opened Welles’ rado play about the alien invasion at the center of H.G. Wells’ War of the Worlds. The writer states, “I was just about willing to commit suicide. I’m not exaggerating it one bit.” (Image courtesy of the Special Collections Library at the University of Michigan.)
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Family man
This 1945 image features the young father with his two daughters. Chris Welles Feder (right) was the artist’s first child from his marriage to Virginia Nicolson. The infant in his arms, Rebecca Welles Manning, was born of his brief, passionate, and stormy union with the actress Rita Hayworth. (Image courtesy of the Special Collections Library at the University of Michigan.)
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Wedded miss
Welles was in Malaga, Spain, in 1961 when he sent this terse telegram to his partner, Alessandro Tasca. Welles was disappointed that the wedding of Tasca’s daughter would take precedence over their long-planned shoot in Pamplona. According to Welles, Tasca’s unacceptable behavior demonstrated a part-time commitment to their partnership. Several longer letters followed. (Image courtesy of the Special Collections Library at the University of Michigan.)
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Tilting at windmills
Orson Welles was a man of many talents: writer, director, actor, and, as we see here, illustrator. This image renders Welles’ own thoughts regarding costumes for his career-long obsession with Don Quixote, a film that remained unfinished at his death. (Image courtesy of the Special Collections Library at the University of Michigan.)
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Happy holidays
Welles used this whimsical drawing by his wife, Virginia Nicolson, as a Christmas card in 1937 to announce the pending birth of their daughter, Chris. The image includes their cocker spaniel, aptly named Budget. As an adult, Chris Welles Feder would donate the scrapbook containing this item and many other personal artifacts to the University of Michigan for use by historians and scholars. (Image courtesy of the Special Collections Library at the University of Michigan.)
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An autograph to my wife
This early headshot of a young Orson Welles, circa 1935, contains a unique inscription to a very special recipient, his first wife, Virginia Nicolson. It reads: “For Mrs. Orson Welles, whose husband loves her wildly.” (Image courtesy of the Special Collections Library at the University of Michigan.)