Author:Peter Tinniswood,Full Cast,Mary Wimbush,Stephanie Cole,Judi Dench,Maurice Denham,Billie Whitelaw,Michael Williams
Six masterly BBC radio monologues from renowned playwright Peter Tinniswood - plus his classic comic play The Governor's Consort.
Peter Tinniswood was best known for his popular TV series The Home Front and I Didn't Know You Cared, and award-winning novel A Touch of Daniel. But he was also a prolific writer for radio, where he created a host of wonderful characters - often funny, sometimes poignant and always totally believable.
This compilation brings together six of his finest monologues, as well as his comic play The Governor's Consort. With one exception (I Always Take Long Walks), all these dramas were specially written for the actors who star in them, giving them a special resonance and adding an extra dimension to our enjoyment.
The Packer - Michael Williams stars as Gladwyn Jebb, a man who sees his job as a vocation, his craft as an art - and his lies as truths...
The Governor's Consort- Lady Edith is sailing with her husband to a South Atlantic island of which he's about to become Governor - but the voyage has an invigorating and somewhat earthy effect on her... Starring Mary Wimbush,with John Moffatt, Bernard Hepton and Stephen Thorne.
On the Whole It's Been Jolly Good - Written to mark the actor's diamond jubilee in broadcasting, this witty, moving monologue stars Maurice Denham as ex-MP Sir Plympton Makepeace, reflecting on 60 glorious years in The House.
Verona: A Conspiracy of Parrots - Stephanie Cole stars as the 'slightly elderly' lady whose exotic birds bring her triumphant fulfilment. But can she keep her feathered friends out of the hands of the auctioneer?
I Always Take Long Walks - Cricket widow Enid shares her private thoughts on kitchen units, life with her husband and the men she's loved and lost. Starring Dame Judi Dench as Enid.
The Last Obit - Billie Whitelaw stars as Millicent Doris Clayton, an obituarist living in her own very particular world, in this brilliant black comedy which won the 1998 Edinburgh Festival Fringe First Award.
The Duvet Lady - Wrapped from head to foot in a flowery duvet, Edna recalls her younger days. Will she ever emerge for her evening engagement? Billie Whitelaw stars in this superb one-woman drama.
Production credits
Written by Peter Tinniswood
The Packer
Starring Michael Williams as Gladwyn Jebb
Directed by Enyd Williams
First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 7 April 2000
The Governor's Consort
Lady Edith - Mary Wimbush
Sir Wilfred - John Moffatt
Doctor Spofforth - Bernard Hepton
Captain MacWhirter - Stephen Thorne
Delgado - Keith Drinkel
Chief Engineer - Matthew Morgan
First Officer - James Telfer
Tarleton - Jonathan Adams
Band - Michael Haslam, Judith Herbert and Kevin Street
Directed by Enyd Williams
First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 17 May 1993
On the Whole It's Been Jolly Good
Starring Maurice Denham as Sir Plympton Makepeace
Directed by Enyd Williams
First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 27 April 1998
Verona: A Conspiracy of Parrots
Starring Stephanie Cole as Verona
Directed by Enyd Williams
First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 29 April 1998
I Always Take Long Walks
Starring Dame Judi Dench as Enid
Directed by John Tydeman
First broadcast BBC Radio 3, 4 July 1991
The Duvet Lady
Starring Billie Whitelaw as Edna
Directed by Enyd Williams
First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 14 March 2001
The Last Obit
Starring Billie Whitelaw as Millicent
Directed by Enyd Williams
First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 28 April 1998
An extraordinary encounter with a wildly fascinating and astonishingly ill-known region... This is a wonderful book.
—— Sunday TimesThe ultimate quest for the oddest objects - pianos - in the most unlikely place - Siberia. But Roberts makes it much more than that, an elegant and nuanced journey through literature, through history, through music, murder and incarceration and revolution, through snow and ice and remoteness, to discover the human face of Siberia. I loved this book.
—— Paul TherouxAn impressive exploration of Siberia's terrifying past.
—— GuardianAn exuberant, eccentric journey through Russian vastness, European history and Russian culture, The Lost Pianos of Siberia is a quixotic quest, a picaresque travel adventure and a strange forgotten story, all wrapped into one fascinating book.
—— Simon Sebag-MontefioreWhat shines through in this book is Roberts' genuine, humane affection for and fascination with the people she meets in Siberia.
—— Literary ReviewA stunning example of modern historical travel writing
—— IndependentA richly observed cultural history... thrilling.
—— New StatesmanFascinating account of Siberia’s horrific legacy told with great verve… Roberts is a wonderfully lyrical writer.
—— The ObserverBeautifully written... A unique short history of Russia from Catherine the Great to Putin... A sense of the extraordinary marks every page.
—— History TodayCaptures Siberia's wildness, but favours its enchantments.
—— Times Literary SupplementCourage, patience, erudition and a sympathetic imagination… A travel book of rare quality.
—— Dervla MurphyRoberts achievement is to vividly bring us into a hidden landscape that in an over-travelled world retains its mystique. Through her painterly depiction of the people she encounters, she infuses the epic with the intimate and reveals how sometimes looking is more important than finding
—— Business Post MagazineUtterly absorbing - a wonderful addition to the story of resilience, tragedy and triumph that are the hallmarks of Siberia. Roberts displays an empathy and understanding worthy of this deeply haunted, strangely fascinating land.
—— Benedict AllenRoberts' writing is beguiling.
—— The iA modern-day Freya Stark.
—— TatlerThe Lost Pianos of Siberia is one of those magical books that captures the imagination and draws you into the beauty and majesty of Siberia. Idiosyncratic in style – part travelogue, part history, part detective trail – it is full of wonderful stories about human endurance through adversity and the transformative power of music in the most remote and forgotten outposts of this vast territory. A book to savour and remember.
—— Helen Rappaport, author of THE LAST DAYS OF THE ROMANOVSUtterly fascinating and revealing to anyone who only knows Siberia through its Great Myth as a forgotten, frozen Nowhere.
—— Christopher SomervilleA thrilling adventure to the ends of the earth, where sunlight glitters in the snowdrifts and the strains of the exile's song floats through the air. Pack your suitcases for Siberia - Sophy Roberts' gorgeous prose will summon you there like a smell.
—— Cal Flyn, author of THICKER THAN WATERWhat worlds this book traverses! From gilded recital halls to the haunts of Siberian tigers; from remote penal colonies to volcanic islands in the Bering Sea: I felt as if I had travelled through places I had only dreamed of, following these magical instruments through landscapes and histories so full of tragedy and hope.
—— Daniel Mason, author of THE PIANO TUNERAbsolutely intoxicating. Such vivid detail, rich atmosphere, heartbreak, and elegance. Sophy Roberts melds research and personal experience to trace the paths of political prisoners, convicts, and conscripts determined to find beauty in exile, and track down the regal pianos now scattered in villages, museums, and storehouses across the largest country on earth. Some cherished and some neglected, these pianos tell of the musical colonization of a continent, and their stories sing.
—— Jonathan C. Slaght, author of OWLS OF THE EASTERN ICERomance and tragedy, gulags and tower blocks, princes and oligarchs and of course tigers and pianos, Roberts captures all the wonder and heartbreak of an entire Empire in one feast of a book.
—— Ben Rawlence, author of CITY OF THORNS and RADIO CONGONot-to-be-missed travel.
—— The TabletBeautifully constructed, clear-eyed and generous-spirited.
—— Will Atkins, author of THE MOOR and THE IMMEASURABLE WORLDStories endure in this compelling debut.
—— WanderlustA noble quest to understand the dazzling respect for music embedded in Russian culture.
—— Country LifeAn intoxicating journey into the wilds of Siberia.
—— Stella magazine