008 Horror – Old
I know I listen to a lot of ghost stories on Radio 4 and
Radio 4 Extra, and I admire many of them.
That said, I found The Girl Who
Didn’t Want to Be to be one of the most unique I’d heard in awhile. This play from 1978 focuses on the young,
good-looking vVcar (Simon Cadell) and his gusty wife. Their rural village
church was being haunted by the spirit of a young woman who died in a
disastrous motorcycle accident from 1938.
This spirit, Margaret, is slightly dull-witted and really really
horny. She pesters the Vicar to the
point where he wonders if she’s an emissary of Satan. He feels ill-equipped to deal with this kind
of thing and has to turn to the Bishop for help. Fortunately, the Bishop is quite a worldly
man, with a voice and demeanour like Robert Stephens, and helps the Vicar have
a sort of laying-to-rest ceremony, protested by newcomers to the village
(weekenders from London, sort of). This
all comes about because the village church is unique in that it has a
sculptural homage to all the people in the parish who died virgins, the “Virgin
Crowns,” and Margaret—most decidedly not a virgin—has one, which her ghost is
not too happy about. If it all sounds a
bit naff, the writing is actually really good, very natural and not at all
sensationalized. Further, the first time
Margaret manifests in the church while the Vicar is alone, repeating
“Hello? Hello? Hello?” over and over, was one of the most
chilling moments of radio I’ve had in awhile.
The sound design was also refreshingly crisp.
It wasn’t quite clear what was wrong with Kenneth and Sue in
Wishing Well by Sally Warboyes, but
it was profound and disturbing. Unfortunately for Sarah, an avaricious
antiques dealer, her car happened to break down not far from their
B&B. While I can’t say any more
without giving away the plot of this play, originally from 1991 and directed by
Cherry Cookson, be assured it makes for an unsettling listen.
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