After Schubert, Dickens 24/7?

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  • eucalyptus44
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 23

    After Schubert, Dickens 24/7?

    I’m privy to some important information being released by the BBC on April 1st that for a ten day period over Christmas 2012 there will be a Dickensian Fest to celebrate his 200th Anniversary. This follows the hugely successful* Spirit of Schubert 24/7 broadcast over eight days in March 2012.

    During this period all normal broadcasts will be suspended Radio 4 and every single book Dickens wrote will be broadcast unabridged. An earlier plan to dramatize each book has been scrapped in favour of using Martin Jarvis and Miriam Margoles as readers: they are entire theatre companies in their own right. Simon Callow will be the continuity man during the week using his rich, thespian tones to give the experience real depth and atmosphere. Some of the less gripping books will be read by Pinky and Perky to enable listeners to get through them in half the time. The weather forecast will be abandoned during the Dickens Fest and the word Fog will be uttered periodically instead.

    Listeners need not be alarmed because MyBBC will be there to help you every minute of the way. There will be regular reminders and trailers to tell you what you are listening to and a stellar group called TeamDickens will be on hand to guide you through this marathon and to untangle some of the more opaque subordinate clauses. Downloadable plot summaries will be readily accessible and a Bereavement Counsellor will be on hand to offer comfort to listeners who become distressed at the many tragedies in the books.

    Much of the week is still in the planning stage and listeners are invited to submit their ideas to this thread. We are delighted that Wilkins Micawber will be hosting a special edition of Money Box Live and his erstwhile friend U. Heep will host a special edition of Law in Action. The BBC Social Affairs Correspondent Gillian Hargreaves will lead a debate which will run through the ten day period entitled Dickens and the Big Society. There will be a Moral Maze edition on Whither Education? with Wackford Squeers and Thomas Gradgrind on the panel. Jenni Murray will host a debate on Female Heroines in Dickens. This feature has been made possible by a generous grant from Tate and Lyle. Over the Festive Period, Delia and Nigella will talk us through the best way to roast a goose and how gruel and saveloys can in fact be delightfully nourishing.

    Listeners will be able to interact with the Great Man via a series of different email addresses to reflect the many residences Dickens used in his lifetime but for the present, listeners may use charlie.gadshill@bbc.co.uk to establish an initial correspondence with him. He will have his own tweet account #wotthedickensisgoingon

    We look forward to further suggestions from members of this Forum.


    *as measured by four positive tweets at #Franzisunwell and six thumbs up signs on the Schubert Facebook page
  • Serial_Apologist
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 37995

    #2
    Originally posted by eucalyptus44 View Post
    I’m privy to some important information being released by the BBC on April 1st that for a ten day period over Christmas 2012 there will be a Dickensian Fest to celebrate his 200th Anniversary. This follows the hugely successful* Spirit of Schubert 24/7 broadcast over eight days in March 2012.

    During this period all normal broadcasts will be suspended Radio 4 and every single book Dickens wrote will be broadcast unabridged. An earlier plan to dramatize each book has been scrapped in favour of using Martin Jarvis and Miriam Margoles as readers: they are entire theatre companies in their own right. Simon Callow will be the continuity man during the week using his rich, thespian tones to give the experience real depth and atmosphere. Some of the less gripping books will be read by Pinky and Perky to enable listeners to get through them in half the time. The weather forecast will be abandoned during the Dickens Fest and the word Fog will be uttered periodically instead.

    Listeners need not be alarmed because MyBBC will be there to help you every minute of the way. There will be regular reminders and trailers to tell you what you are listening to and a stellar group called TeamDickens will be on hand to guide you through this marathon and to untangle some of the more opaque subordinate clauses. Downloadable plot summaries will be readily accessible and a Bereavement Counsellor will be on hand to offer comfort to listeners who become distressed at the many tragedies in the books.

    Much of the week is still in the planning stage and listeners are invited to submit their ideas to this thread. We are delighted that Wilkins Micawber will be hosting a special edition of Money Box Live and his erstwhile friend U. Heep will host a special edition of Law in Action. The BBC Social Affairs Correspondent Gillian Hargreaves will lead a debate which will run through the ten day period entitled Dickens and the Big Society. There will be a Moral Maze edition on Whither Education? with Wackford Squeers and Thomas Gradgrind on the panel. Jenni Murray will host a debate on Female Heroines in Dickens. This feature has been made possible by a generous grant from Tate and Lyle. Over the Festive Period, Delia and Nigella will talk us through the best way to roast a goose and how gruel and saveloys can in fact be delightfully nourishing.

    Listeners will be able to interact with the Great Man via a series of different email addresses to reflect the many residences Dickens used in his lifetime but for the present, listeners may use charlie.gadshill@bbc.co.uk to establish an initial correspondence with him. He will have his own tweet account #wotthedickensisgoingon

    We look forward to further suggestions from members of this Forum.


    *as measured by four positive tweets at #Franzisunwell and six thumbs up signs on the Schubert Facebook page




    (Er, shouldn't that be "Loren Action"?)

    Comment

    • Eine Alpensinfonie
      Host
      • Nov 2010
      • 20578

      #3
      Brilliant.

      Comment

      • ferneyhoughgeliebte
        Gone fishin'
        • Sep 2011
        • 30163

        #4
        Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
        Brilliant.



        ... but don't laugh too much: it isn't that long ago that the very idea of R3 broadcasting 24/7 BachBeethovenMozartTchaikovsky&StravinskySchubert would have caused equal hilarity!
        [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

        Comment

        • Norfolk Born

          #5
          I didn't realize that Monica had written so much.

          Comment

          • Eine Alpensinfonie
            Host
            • Nov 2010
            • 20578

            #6
            Originally posted by Norfolk Born View Post
            I didn't realize that Monica had written so much.
            You mean the great granddaughter, I presume?

            Comment

            • Ferretfancy
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 3487

              #7
              Hard Times indeed! ( The only one I haven't read )

              Comment

              • eucalyptus44
                Full Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 23

                #8
                Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
                You mean the great granddaughter, I presume?
                Oh yes, Monica will be there too guiding us through the week. She's currently undergoing a training course on how to write in Faux cool tweet speke which R3 listeners have come to know and love lately via the Schubert Fest....

                Comment

                • Eine Alpensinfonie
                  Host
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 20578

                  #9
                  Originally posted by eucalyptus44 View Post
                  Oh yes, Monica will be there too guiding us through the week. She's currently undergoing a training course on how to write in Faux cool tweet speke which R3 listeners have come to know and love lately via the Schubert Fest....
                  Difficult, I'm afraid. She died 20 years ago.

                  Comment

                  • eucalyptus44
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 23

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
                    Difficult, I'm afraid. She died 20 years ago.
                    We at the BBC need to help our listeners at every turn so we think out of the box...Schubert has been dead for 183+ years but that hasn't prevented him getting out of his box and tweeting madly over the past week...

                    Comment

                    • Norfolk Born

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
                      Difficult, I'm afraid. She died 20 years ago.
                      She may have died 20 years ago, but the 'Spirit of Monica' (to coin a phrase) surely lives on, as does that of Franz Schubert.

                      Comment

                      • Eine Alpensinfonie
                        Host
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 20578

                        #12
                        Yes, but Monica was not Charles.

                        Comment

                        • Norfolk Born

                          #13
                          Er...I was, like, aware of that.

                          Comment

                          • Eine Alpensinfonie
                            Host
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 20578

                            #14
                            Well of course you were All I meant was that Charles Dickens and Franz Schubert are among the true greats. Monica is more akin to (say) Grace Williams.

                            Comment

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