BBC

Connections

Connections Author name Sort ascending Excerpt
Performance of text E. H. Young
The actress Gladys Young read aloud on a BBC radio programme an unascribed story about a haunted country house which was apparently by her sister EHY .
Mezei, Kathy, and Chiara Briganti. “’She must be a very good novelist’: Rereading E. H. Young (1880-1949)”. English Studies in Canada, Vol.
27
, No. 3, pp. 303-31.
312
Performance of text E. H. Young
Later stories, like The Grey Mare (17 February 1948) and Cow's Tail (20 September 1950) were also read on the BBC .
Briganti, Chiara, and Kathy Mezei. Domestic Modernism, the Interwar Novel, and E. H. Young. Ashgate.
46
Performance of text E. H. Young
The following year Cape produced a collected edition of EHY 's works, going back as far as Yonder. Miss Mole was reprinted by Virago Press in 1984 (edited by Sally Beauman), and read aloud...
Reception E. H. Young
Though she has had no academic attention until very recently, EHY appealed to a wide readership. Her works remained steadily in print during her lifetime. Writers of blurbs for her covers included E. M. Delafield
Occupation Virginia Woolf
Virginia and Leonard Woolf gave their first broadcast for the BBC —a talk entitled Are Too Many Books Written and Published?
Lee, Hermione. Virginia Woolf. Chatto and Windus.
565
Textual Production Virginia Woolf
VW broadcast in a BBC series called Words Fail Me a talk with the title Craftsmanship; however, she used her talk to attack the title as wholly inappropriate to the use of words.
Woolf, Virginia. The Death of the Moth. Hogarth Press.
126ff
Occupation Virginia Woolf
VW broadcast again, on her own, in 1937. Part of her broadcast (a reading of her essay Craftsmanship) is in the National Sound Archive of the British Library (M7060). The only extant recording of...
Literary responses Virginia Woolf
Orlando continues to arouse strong positive and negative feeling. Jeanette Winterson 's celebration of it in July 2002 (on a BBC2 programme entitled Art That Shook the World) as one of the great turning...
Textual Production Jeanette Winterson
The television adaptation of JW 's first novel, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, was transmitted in three episodes on BBC Television ; the script was published the same year.
Winterson, Jeanette. Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit: Adapted from her novel by Jeanette Winterson. Pandora.
cast list
Literary responses Ethel Wilson
The reviews in England were positive. Seán O'Faoláin wrote in the BBC journal the Listener that The Equations of Love exemplified how English ought to be written, and called EWone of the most charming...
Employer Antonia White
AW worked for the BBC . At the end of this time she was sacked on grounds of her visible disgust with its routine of death & stagnation.
Dunn, Jane. Antonia White: A Life. Jonathan Cape.
275
Dunn, Jane. Antonia White: A Life. Jonathan Cape.
250, 275
Who Was Who. A. and C. Black.
Material Conditions of Writing Antonia White
AW was given three weeks to produce a booklet about her employer, the BBC : BBC at War.
Dunn, Jane. Antonia White: A Life. Jonathan Cape.
271
Friends, Associates Antonia White
While working for the Special Operations ExecutivePolitical Intelligence Department , AW met Graham Greene , Simone Weil , and Kathleen Raine .
Chitty, Susan. Now To My Mother. Weidenfeld and Nicholson.
137
Early in the war, as she gradually moved closer to the Church, she wrote...
Employer Rebecca West
Food production was important during the Second World War, and the couple did their bit in this respect. They also provided a home for wartime refugees. During the war RW worked with the BBC ...
Textual Production Mary Wesley
It appeared exactly a year after she had finished the first draft (working title Period Piece) and put away the manuscript (written in ink on paper of A4 size, with lines but without margins)...

Timeline

21 November 1748: John Cleland published the first volume of...

Writing climate item

21 November 1748

John Cleland published the first volume of his soft-porn novelFanny Hill.

14 November 1922: Daily wireless (radio) broadcasting began...

National or international item

14 November 1922

Daily wireless (radio) broadcasting began in Britain from the London station of the British Broadcasting Company (later the British Broadcasting Corporation ).

14 November 1922: Daily wireless (radio) broadcasting began...

National or international item

14 November 1922

Daily wireless (radio) broadcasting began in Britain from the London station of the British Broadcasting Company (later the British Broadcasting Corporation ).

5 December 1922: Children's Hour was first broadcast on the...

Building item

5 December 1922

Children's Hour was first broadcast on the BBC .

24 December 1922: The first play written for radio, Phyllis...

Building item

24 December 1922

The first play written for radio, Phyllis Twigg 's The Truth About Father Christmas, was broadcast in the UK by the BBC .

13 February 1923: The BBC opened a radio station at Cardiff,...

Building item

13 February 1923

The BBC opened a radio station at Cardiff, Wales; it made its first broadcast in Welsh on 8 November.

2 May 1923: Under the supervision of Margaret Bondfield...

Building item

2 May 1923

Under the supervision of Margaret Bondfield and the Women's Advisory Committee , the BBC 's radio programme Women's Hour began its two-year run.

11 July 1923: With a radio programme about film, the BBC...

Building item

11 July 1923

With a radio programme about film, the BBC began its first broadcasts of arts criticism.

28 September 1923: The BBC released the first issue of the Radio...

Building item

28 September 1923

The BBC released the first issue of the Radio Times, a weekly publication providing information and programme listings.

31 December 1923: The chimes of Big Ben were first broadcast...

Building item

31 December 1923

The chimes of Big Ben were first broadcast on the BBC to usher in the New Year.

31 January 1924: The BBC presented the first broadcast story,...

Writing climate item

31 January 1924

The BBC presented the first broadcast story, by A. J. Alan (pseudonym of Leslie H. Lambert ).

5 February 1924: The BBC began broadcasting the Greenwich...

National or international item

5 February 1924

The BBC began broadcasting the Greenwich time signal.

6 March 1924: The BBC presented the first broadcast poetry...

Writing climate item

6 March 1924

The BBC presented the first broadcast poetry reading, by the poet John Drinkwater .

4 April 1924: The BBC began its national radio broadcasts...

National or international item

4 April 1924

The BBC began its national radio broadcasts to schools, with an item by Sir Walford Davies .

23 April 1924: The British Empire Exhibition opened at Wembley...

Building item

23 April 1924

The British Empire Exhibition opened at Wembley with a speech by King George V —his first broadcast speech on the BBC .

Texts

BBC Handbook: 1960. BBC, 1960, http://U of A HSS HE 8690 B86.
The Listener. BBC.
Aiken, Joan, and Quentin Blake. Arabel’s Raven. BBC, 1972.
Brophy, Brigid. Pussy Owl. BBC, 1976.
Westcott, Kathryn. “The Day the World Lit Up”. BBC News, BBC.
White, Antonia. BBC at War. BBC, 1942.