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[personal profile] tealin
I've been very busy, but not the sort of busy that takes a lot of radio to get through. Luckily a weekend spent drawing has coincided with a glut of good programming, so here's another Radio Roundup ...

FUNNY
John Finnemore's Souvenir Programme - I mean, how can you say no. It's like ice cream, with or without slightly-off Disney characters on the side of the van. This episode has an unprecedented number of American accents.
Just a Minute - Mr Finnemore is back in a slightly more recent recording, in which he politely battles three veterans of this classic game of wits and rhetoric.
Facts and Fancies - Armando Iannucci has gone on to fame and (presumably) fortune producing comedy shows for TV, but this is a series of surreal comic essays from before all that, proving he Had It from day one.
Knocker - All the comedic potential of being a door-to-door market researcher.
The Rest is History - History-based comedy panel game, in which guests guess about historical things and an expert tells them what they got right.
The Unbelievable Truth - Fact-based comedy panel game, in which guests spout a stream of lies with some hidden truths, their co-panellists guess what those are, and the host tells them what they got right.
The News Quiz - There isn't anything particularly notable about this episode, just a reminder that the News Quiz is a thing that exists, and as long as it continues to do so, the world won't be all bad.

SERIOUS
Hamlet - I have a Definitive Hamlet so cannot judge any other equitably; however, this radio production isn't bad, so if you don't have my baggage you might really enjoy it.
Julius Caesar - You can hear the above's Hamlet as Marc Antony in this radio adaptation of a play for which I don't have prior baggage, and therefore am comfortable saying is quite good. It expires in just over a week, so listen quickly.
Beware of the Dog - Roald Dahl writes for grownups – a story about a downed airman in WWII and the benefits of joined-up thinking.
The Man Who Was Thursday - If you think ideological radicals blowing people up in public places is a recent phenomenon, check out G.K. Chesterton's rather exciting story about the infiltration of an anarchists' collective in the early 20th century.
Freud vs Jung - A nice in-depth hour-long documentary on the relationship between the famous fathers of psychology.
Habbakuk of Ice - WWII wasn't short of nutty ideas, but I hadn't heard of the battleship made of ice until this radio play came my way.

Date: 2016-05-22 09:58 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] baruyon
I'm curious, who is your Definitive Hamlet? I won't judge at all, I just like being nosey. I kind of want to dub Jamie Parker's portrayal 'batshit Hamlet', though. :P I felt the production was very good. It had great atmosphere.

Date: 2016-05-24 01:05 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] baruyon
Thanks so much for sharing, I'd not heard of this particular production! It's a shame they had to balls up the DVD version. So you actually saw this production performed live? Is it definitive for you because you feel it's the best interpretation of the text or does it just speak to you on another level? (Oops, sorry for all the questions, feel free to ignore me. @_@)
I don't have a Definitive Hamlet of my own, since it isn't my #1 Shakespeare play, but my favourite interpretation thus far is the 1963 Russian film version. I caught it on iPlayer the other day and really enjoyed it. It's... uber Russian, haha. ^^ Innokenty Smoktunovsky's Hamlet is striking and I like how the film literally internalized his soliloquy(s), which I felt helped maintain the film's gloomy magic bubble.

Date: 2016-05-25 12:34 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] baruyon
Oh cool! It really does sound amazing. I know what you mean by actors seeming disconnected from the language and meaning behind it. I mean, it's fully open to interpretation, and yet there's so many recordings of famous actors just reciting sonnets in sexy radio baritone... it seems more like an actor's rite of passage to 'do Shakespeare', rather than a chance to understand the text more deeply and help modern audiences understand it better. Is there any way to watch your Definitive Hamlet? Is it on DVD still? I'm really intrigued now! ^^
Also, did any of the people involved in that production see your fanart of it? It's a shame if they didn't, I looked through the Hamlet tag on your tumblr and I loved your drawings. ^^

The Russian adaptation is up for 7 more days on iPlayer if you still want to catch it: http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b03b7x2r/hamlet
I read afterwards that it was considered by Kenneth Branagh to be the definitive film version and I thought 'uh oh', (because I slept through most of Branagh's Hamlet in high school, oops), but the Russian version has quite a poetic quality (visually and aurally) and it's interesting to hear the lines spoken in Russian. It also takes the Kurosawa approach of using music and sound, nature, weather, passages of silence and so forth to put across a character's state of mind. Probably not the acceptable way of adapting something as famously language-based as a Shakespeare play but I think this is because it's a) a Soviet era film and thus dialogue was cut out, in particular allusions to religion and b) it's Hamlet's story seen through a another country's cultural lens. ^^

Date: 2016-05-27 11:16 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] baruyon
:o Really? That's very kind of you, but I hope it wouldn't mean any time or expense for you or anything!

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