Originally posted by french frank
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The Eternal Breakfast Debate in a New Place
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostI remember John Drummond's being asked by an irate listener on some phone-in programme or other why there was an opera on every Saturday night. His answer, which I can quote in its entirety, was: 'It's called policy'.
BTW his answer to the first question in the 1990 "Call the Controller" included "I like criticism and welcome it, and we wouldn't be here doing this programme if I didn't..." Other times, other controllers.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
"He was imposing, inspirational, impatient, irritating, frighteningly secure in his tastes, ready to denounce anyone who disagreed with him, yet with a deep and attractive vulnerability, which endeared him even to those of us who regularly suffered the verbal lashes of his criticism." - Nicholas Kenyon, plus other quotes. He 'gave offence too readily' - and that was from a friend. A difficult man to work with.
Also Jilly Cooper: "I simply could not put down John Drummond's entertainingly poisonous memoirs, Tainted By Experience (Faber)." I read the book but found the man more off-putting than entertaining.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
There are others who speak warmly of him - including more junior people than Nick Kenyon. You have to remember that a lot of people who work at the Beeb are intensely irritating and would try the patience of a Saint . They are also completely unsackable and know it.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Reading the comments on John Drummind reminded me of similar things said about Sir John Reith, so maybe JD was in the right job after all.
. When eventually it was felt that Reith had to be given a job in the war effort, Churchill said to him 'I don't know how we will get on ; I'm told you are a difficult man to work with' which I think must go down as one of the most unconsciously-ironic remarks of the 20th century.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostReading the comments on John Drummind reminded me of similar things said about Sir John Reith, so maybe JD was in the right job after all.
. When eventually it was felt that Reith had to be given a job in the war effort, Churchill said to him 'I don't know how we will get on ; I'm told you are a difficult man to work with' which I think must go down as one of the most unconsciously-ironic remarks of the 20th century.
Churchill was very far from being some sort of irascible semi-dictator. He was a master politician - perhaps the greatest in our history - in the key skill at winning people round . Not just through oratory though there was plenty of that but through shrewd diplomacy and persuasion , One key text ‘Five Days in London May 1940’ by the Yale historian John Lukacs. The real story of how he resisted demands to come to terms with Hitler - not the travesty that was the film Darkest Hour.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Again like Drummond the reality is more complex than the myth.
Churchill was very far from being some sort of irascible semi-dictator. He was a master politician - perhaps the greatest in our history - in the key skill at winning people round . Not just through oratory though there was plenty of that but through shrewd diplomacy and persuasion , One key text ‘Five Days in London May 1940’ by the Yale historian John Lukacs. The real story of how he resisted demands to come to terms with Hitler - not the travesty that was the film Darkest Hour.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
.... but surely not as awful as Brian Cox's 'Churchill'?
My problem with Darkest Hour is not Oldman’s rather good performance but the inaccuracy of its historical telling . He did not undermine the cabinet by appealing to the party. The party largely hated him .
He also tacitly agreed to overtures through the Swedes to Mussolini perhaps as a way of buying time, Rather than ranting or going on the Tube without any military escort to sound public opinion he subtly persuaded members of the Cabinet and left Halifax isolated. It was absolutely masterly politics and completely beyond our current generation of incompetents. He also managed to get lots of people to fund his extravagant tastes and no one batted an eyelid !
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostEmma Clarke is meeting my approval! No need for Pillar Box Red 24-point caps here!
And wasn't that a great LvB Triple Concerto (one movement only, but hey...)?
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostYou heard part of one movement - you sound like just the kind of listener we're looking for!
I'll pop Beethoven triple / Brahms double concerto CD (Oistrakh, Rostropovich, Richter) on later and listen to the whole of piece.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
The Albert Finney portrayal of the wilderness years got closer . That was a good piece of work …I think Vanessa Redgrave was Clemmie. He got his mixture of gruffness and sentimentality.
My problem with Darkest Hour is not Oldman’s rather good performance but the inaccuracy of its historical telling . He did not undermine the cabinet by appealing to the party. The party largely hated him .
He also tacitly agreed to overtures through the Swedes to Mussolini perhaps as a way of buying time, Rather than ranting or going on the Tube without any military escort to sound public opinion he subtly persuaded members of the Cabinet and left Halifax isolated. It was absolutely masterly politics and completely beyond our current generation of incompetents. He also managed to get lots of people to fund his extravagant tastes and no one batted an eyelid !
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
You heard part of one movement - you sound like just the kind of listener we're looking for!It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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