Humour this coming weekend in Drama on 3 from David Pownall, 40 years on from his first radio play 'Free Ferry':
Tennyson and Edison - Alfred Lord Tennyson spent half a century mourning his college pal Arthur Hallam and laboured for decades on an epic poetic tribute to him. So, in David Pownall's wry comedy, when inventor and businessman Thomas Edison - a very different kind of genius - asks Tennyson for a short poem to promote his new phonograph, there can only be one choice.
With such an extensive background as a playwright, radio dramatist, screen writer, novelist, short story writer and poet, it isn't easy to categorize Pownall as a writer in just a few words. However, the play on Sunday will concentrate on some of his favourite themes - history, politics and music - and encourage questions about the principal characters.
He is particularly good at unusual pairings. In one of his most famous plays, 'Master Class', the premise was that, in 1948, Stalin and his sidekick Zhdanov had invited the composers Prokofiev and Shostakovich to a soirée. Over numerous draughts of vodka and plenty of false bonhome, they debate the nature of art and its relationship to power, and whether music has any real function in the communist state. 'Master Class' is an extremely funny play, particularly when the protagonists try to produce Stalin's ideal composition and end up creating a cacophonous racket that would shame anyone who really cares for music.
If 'Tennyson and Edison' has similar promise, what we shouldn't expect is historical accuracy. In 'Writing on Wigan Pier', a less than flattering play about George Orwell broadcast on Radio 4 in 2010, Pownall showed that he is more interested in the importance of talking and listening to promote effective communication than he is in reproducing well worn truths.
Tennyson and Edison - Alfred Lord Tennyson spent half a century mourning his college pal Arthur Hallam and laboured for decades on an epic poetic tribute to him. So, in David Pownall's wry comedy, when inventor and businessman Thomas Edison - a very different kind of genius - asks Tennyson for a short poem to promote his new phonograph, there can only be one choice.
With such an extensive background as a playwright, radio dramatist, screen writer, novelist, short story writer and poet, it isn't easy to categorize Pownall as a writer in just a few words. However, the play on Sunday will concentrate on some of his favourite themes - history, politics and music - and encourage questions about the principal characters.
He is particularly good at unusual pairings. In one of his most famous plays, 'Master Class', the premise was that, in 1948, Stalin and his sidekick Zhdanov had invited the composers Prokofiev and Shostakovich to a soirée. Over numerous draughts of vodka and plenty of false bonhome, they debate the nature of art and its relationship to power, and whether music has any real function in the communist state. 'Master Class' is an extremely funny play, particularly when the protagonists try to produce Stalin's ideal composition and end up creating a cacophonous racket that would shame anyone who really cares for music.
If 'Tennyson and Edison' has similar promise, what we shouldn't expect is historical accuracy. In 'Writing on Wigan Pier', a less than flattering play about George Orwell broadcast on Radio 4 in 2010, Pownall showed that he is more interested in the importance of talking and listening to promote effective communication than he is in reproducing well worn truths.
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