I’m trying to get into this earlier rather than later, so
without any further ado . . . the last three months of 2017 in radio drama!
001 Historical Drama – New
There are
sometimes plays that put an ordinary person in the life of a historical person
of some interest—sometimes they work, and sometimes you feel a bit like the
author is indulging in Mary Sue-ism. I
didn’t feel this way with Lying Low by Stephen Wakelam, which was a warm and engaging drama about Janet (Charlotte
Beaumont), a high school student studying literature and French on the south
coast of England in 1959. She works at a
hotel where she meets Samuel Beckett (Adrian Dunbar). She doesn’t start out knowing who he is, but
they have a genuine-feeling relationship (devoid of any creepiness or
tweeness). This is due in part to the
excellence of the performances. I have
never been a big fan of Beckett’s although I know I ought to be. With this portrayal, I felt I could
understand his writing a bit better and empathize. At the time, Janet is dating Billy and dealing
with her autistic brother Timmy, encouraged by her teacher Miss Adams (Claire
Corbett). The older Janet recalls all
this. Lying Low was directed by Gemma Jenkins and also starred Susan
Brown, Charlie Clemmons, Caroline Long, Samuel James, Gary Duncan, David
Sterzzaker, and Philip Fox.
Black Eyed Girls is one of the few
nominees on this year’s BBC Radio Drama Awards that I agree not only should
have been nominated but should definitely win.
This drama made me so sad, it was difficult to keep from crying on
public transport. The story is about Nell
(Sabrina Sandhu) marrying Barry (Samuel James) after becoming pregnant (with
some unknown man’s children). She has
twins, Jeannie (Ailsa McGregor) and Meg (Rosie McGregor), but Barry is a
terrible man. When he loses his job, he
decides to “give away” one of the twins without Nell knowing. He therefore takes Meg to a children’s
home. He warns Jeannie not to ever
mention her sister again, and Meg becomes almost mute. Jeannie is adopted by child psychologist
Joseph Campbell Clark as an experiment; it’s the 1960s and he wants to prove
that if he takes a clever child from a poor background and a broken home, he
can make her succeed just as well as any child born with a silver spoon in its
mouth. Nikki, his wife, isn’t so sure
he’s doing the right thing, as she grows to treat Jeannie as part of the
family. When Nell tries to get Jeannie
back, the nuns won’t tell her where Jeannie has gone. Barry tells Meg that Jeannie has died, and
Joseph (misled by the nuns) tells Jeannie that she doesn’t have a sister, that
Meg is a figment of her imagination. The
rest of their lives are a series of near-misses. The final episode is such a tear-jerker, I
struggled with emotion. I cannot fault
this drama in any way. Written by the
imitable Katie Hims, it also starred Julie Teal, Philip Fox, Sanchia
MacCormack, Charlotte Emmett, Rosie Boore, Tom Forrister, Jessica Turner, and
Carolyn Pickles. It was directed by
Sasha Yevtushenko.
No comments:
Post a Comment