Annabel O’Hagan: Stephanie Harper
Annabel O’Hagan: From Pre-War Paradise to Post-Apocalyptic Prime – Our Favorite Vault-Tec Adjacent Socialite!
Annabel O’Hagan: From Pre-War Paradise to Post-Apocalyptic Prime – Our Favorite Vault-Tec Adjacent Socialite!
JOHNNY PEMBERTON: From the Vault to Viral: Comedic Mutation in the Wasteland
RODRIGO LUZZI: The Enigmatic Vault-Tec Voice You Never Knew You Needed (Or Did You?)
DAVE REGISTER: From Juilliard Juggernaut to Vault-Tec’s Unsung (Pre-Ghoul) Hero. A Journey through the Wasteland.
Leslie Uggams: “The S.P.E.C.I.A.L. Legend Vault-Tec Forgot to Freeze”.
From Peak to Post-Apocalyptic Overseer: The Vault-Tec Approved Guide to Nuclear Charisma
Fallout has always excelled at taking music drenched in romance and irony and giving it a darker edge. Few examples are more striking than “Some Enchanted Evening”, performed by The Castells in 1963. Originally a Broadway show tune, the track finds haunting new life in the Fallout TV series—bridging love, beauty, and tragedy in the span of a single scene.
Fallout has a talent for mixing irony with charm, and few songs embody that better than “Swinging on a Star.” First made famous in 1944 by Bing Crosby, this upbeat jazz number slipped into Fallout 76 during its B.E.T.A. phase, only to be quietly patched out before release. Its fleeting presence left a mark on players who were lucky enough to hear it drifting across Appalachia’s ruined hills.
Fallout has always had a knack for resurrecting long-forgotten tracks, giving them new life in the wasteland. While “A Certain Smile” by John Fox and His Orchestra doesn’t appear in the TV series itself, it found a home on the official Music from Fallout playlist—proof that even instrumental melodies can capture the quirky retro-futuristic spirit of the franchise.