Jump to content

Toby Swift: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Bigdelboy (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
(16 intermediate revisions by 12 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|British radio director (active 1999–2011)}}
'''Toby Swift''' is a [[radio drama]] director and [[radio producer|producer]] for [[BBC Radio]]. His numerous credits include the crime dramas ''[[The Recall Man]]'' and ''[[Trueman and Riley]]''. He also directs contemporary and periodic radio dramas.
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
'''Toby Swift''' is a [[radio drama]] director and [[radio producer|producer]] for [[BBC Radio]]. His numerous credits, from 1999 to 2011, include the crime dramas ''[[The Recall Man]]'' and ''[[Trueman and Riley]]''. He also directs contemporary and periodic radio dramas.


He won the ''[[Prix Italia]] for Adapted Drama'' in 2004 for ''M'', and again in 2005 for ''My Arm'' and for a third time in 2007 for ''Metropolis''.<ref name=PrixItalia>[http://www.prixitalia.rai.it/2010/pdf/WINNERS_1949-2010.pdf Prix Italia, Winners 1949 - 2010, RAI] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131022124024/http://www.prixitalia.rai.it/2010/pdf/WINNERS_1949-2010.pdf |date=2013-10-22 }}</ref> ''The Loop'' won a ''Bronze [[Sony Radio Academy Award]]'' for ''Best Drama Production'' in 2010.
He won the ''[[Prix Italia]] for Adapted Drama'' in 2004 for ''M'', and again in 2005 for ''My Arm'' and for a third time in 2007 for ''Metropolis''.<ref name=PrixItalia>[http://www.prixitalia.rai.it/2010/pdf/WINNERS_1949-2010.pdf Prix Italia, Winners 1949 - 2010, RAI] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131022124024/http://www.prixitalia.rai.it/2010/pdf/WINNERS_1949-2010.pdf |date=2013-10-22 }}</ref> ''The Loop'' won a ''Bronze [[Sony Radio Academy Award]]'' for ''Best Drama Production'' in 2010.
Line 11: Line 13:
! style="background: #CCCCCC;" | Author
! style="background: #CCCCCC;" | Author
! style="background: #CCCCCC;" | Cast
! style="background: #CCCCCC;" | Cast
! style="background: #CCCCCC;" | Synopsis<br>Awards
! style="background: #CCCCCC;" | Synopsis<br />Awards
! style="background: #CCCCCC;" | Station<br>Series
! style="background: #CCCCCC;" | Station<br />Series
<!-- Template for additional rows – make a copy of the following seven lines and insert in correct chronological order below, keeping this template blank
<!-- Template for additional rows – make a copy of the following seven lines and insert in correct chronological order below, keeping this template blank
|- id=""
|- id=""
Line 25: Line 27:
| 20 January 1999
| 20 January 1999
| ''Goodbye Moses''
| ''Goodbye Moses''
| [[Jennie Buckman]]
| Jennie Buckman
| [[Andrew Rajan]], [[Dominic Carter (actor)|Dominic Carter]], [[Angela Wynter]], [[Giles Fagan]] and [[Elizabeth Conboy]]
| Andrew Rajan, [[Dominic Carter (actor)|Dominic Carter]], [[Angela Wynter]], Giles Fagan and Elizabeth Conboy
| As London swelters in a heatwave, Moses Perkes, a Trinidadian ghost, embarks on a quest to find his killers.
| As London swelters in a heatwave, Moses Perkes, a Trinidadian ghost, embarks on a quest to find his killers.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qrzz BBC – Afternoon Play]</ref>
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qrzz BBC – Afternoon Play]</ref>
Line 33: Line 35:
| ''For The Love Of Strangers''
| ''For The Love Of Strangers''
| Susan Stern
| Susan Stern
| [[Kathryn Hunt]], [[Robin Bowerman]] and [[Brigit Forsyth]]
| [[Kathryn Hunt]], Robin Bowerman and [[Brigit Forsyth]]
| Amidst the chaos of a family weekend, Jayne stumbles upon a dark and little-known episode in [[York]]'s rich history – the 12th-century massacre of the city's Jewish population.
| Amidst the chaos of a family weekend, Jayne stumbles upon a dark and little-known episode in [[York]]'s rich history – the 12th-century massacre of the city's Jewish population.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
|- id="Vital Signs"
|- id="Vital Signs"
| 13 September 1999 – 8 October 1999
| 13 September 1999 – 8 October 1999
| ''Vital Signs''<ref group=Note>Episodes 1–10 directed by [[Kate Rowland]], 11–20 directed by Toby Swift</ref>
| ''Vital Signs''<ref group=Note>Episodes 1–10 directed by Kate Rowland, 11–20 directed by Toby Swift</ref>
| [[Sarah Woods]] and [[Peter Straughan]]
| Sarah Woods and [[Peter Straughan]]
| [[Rachel Davies]], [[Gillian Hanna]], [[Derek Walmsley]] and [[Keith Drinkel]]
| [[Rachel Davies]], [[Gillian Hanna]], Derek Walmsley and [[Keith Drinkel]]
| Carol Weaver, chief executive of the Nightingale NHS Trust, balances a difficult home life with complex issues of millennium planning.
| Carol Weaver, chief executive of the Nightingale NHS Trust, balances a difficult home life with complex issues of millennium planning.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Woman's Hour Drama]]<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qy2s BBC – Woman's Hour Drama]</ref>
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Woman's Hour Drama]]<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qy2s BBC – Woman's Hour Drama]</ref>
Line 54: Line 56:
| 8 September 2000
| 8 September 2000
| ''[[The Salt March]]''
| ''[[The Salt March]]''
| [[Nasser Memarzia]]
| Nasser Memarzia
| [[Paul Bhattacharjee]], [[Josephine Welcome]] and [[Kulvinder Ghir]]
| [[Paul Bhattacharjee]], Josephine Welcome and [[Kulvinder Ghir]]
| On 12 March 1930, Gandhi and 78 volunteers set out from Sabarmati Ashram to walk the 240 miles to Dandi in protest at the British-imposed salt laws. This bid to unite the Indian independence movement meant some difficult decisions for those in the villages en route.
| On 12 March 1930, Gandhi and 78 volunteers set out from Sabarmati Ashram to walk the 240 miles to Dandi in protest at the British-imposed salt laws. This bid to unite the Indian independence movement meant some difficult decisions for those in the villages en route.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 61: Line 63:
| 14 September 2000
| 14 September 2000
| ''Pot Shot''
| ''Pot Shot''
| [[Jennie Buckman]]
| Jennie Buckman
| [[Katy Cavanagh]] and [[Jonathan Coy]]
| [[Katy Cavanagh]] and [[Jonathan Coy]]
| Hannah and Martin are trying for a baby. Unfortunately Hannah is trying rather harder than Martin whose behaviour becomes ever more strange the further down the road to fertility treatment the couple goes.
| Hannah and Martin are trying for a baby. Unfortunately Hannah is trying rather harder than Martin whose behaviour becomes ever more strange the further down the road to fertility treatment the couple goes.
Line 83: Line 85:
| ''Fallen''
| ''Fallen''
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[Owen Teale]], [[Francine Morgan]], [[Robert Pugh]] and [[Steven Meo]]
| [[Owen Teale]], Francine Morgan, [[Robert Pugh]] and [[Steven Meo]]
| Raymond Thomas quickly rose to become the youngest bank manager in South Wales. But then he had an affair, stole money, lost his job and went to jail. Can his family and the town accept him back, after he has so betrayed their trust?
| Raymond Thomas quickly rose to become the youngest bank manager in South Wales. But then he had an affair, stole money, lost his job and went to jail. Can his family and the town accept him back, after he has so betrayed their trust?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 89: Line 91:
| 16 March 2001
| 16 March 2001
| ''Ecce Homo – Behold The Man!''
| ''Ecce Homo – Behold The Man!''
| [[David Napthine]]
| David Napthine
| [[Paul Bown]], [[Helen Atkinson Wood]], [[Philip Whitchurch]] and [[Rachel Atkins]]
| [[Paul Bown]], [[Helen Atkinson Wood]], [[Philip Whitchurch]] and Rachel Atkins
| Comedy in which Birmingham decides to appoint a philosopher-in-residence in a bid to improve its intellectual standing. From the moment when free thinker Diogenes Walker steps through the door, chaos envelops City Hall.
| Comedy in which Birmingham decides to appoint a philosopher-in-residence in a bid to improve its intellectual standing. From the moment when free thinker Diogenes Walker steps through the door, chaos envelops City Hall.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
Line 103: Line 105:
| 17 June 2001
| 17 June 2001
| ''The Conquest of the South''
| ''The Conquest of the South''
| [[:de:Manfred Karge|Manfred Karge]] adapted by [[Anthony Vivis]], from the translation by [[Anthony Vivis]] and [[Tinch Minter]]<br>Music by Simon Fraser
| [[:de:Manfred Karge|Manfred Karge]] adapted by Anthony Vivis, from the translation by Anthony Vivis and Tinch Minter<br />Music by Simon Fraser
| [[Matthew Dunster]], [[James Weaver (actor)|James Weaver]], [[Ralf Little]], [[Andrew Lancel]], [[Katy Cavanagh]], [[Nicholas Gleaves]], [[Lucy Akhurst]] and [[John Lightbody]]
| [[Matthew Dunster]], James Weaver, [[Ralf Little]], [[Andrew Lancel]], [[Katy Cavanagh]], [[Nicholas Gleaves]], [[Lucy Akhurst]] and John Lightbody
| Four of society's rejects seek to escape the depressing emptiness of their lives by acting out Amundsen's famous expedition to the South Pole.
| Four of society's rejects seek to escape the depressing emptiness of their lives by acting out Amundsen's famous expedition to the South Pole.
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
|- id="Steven Appleby's Normal Life"
|- id="Steven Appleby's Normal Life"
| 8 August 2001 – 12 September 2001<ref group=Note>Although episode 6 was scheduled for 12 September 2001 its first broadcast may have been pre-empted by news coverage of [[September 11 attacks|world events]] and postponed until 31 July 2002</ref>
| 8 August 2001 – 12 September 2001<ref group=Note>Although episode 6 was scheduled for 12 September 2001 its first broadcast may have been pre-empted by news coverage of [[September 11 attacks|world events]] and postponed until 31 July 2002</ref>
| ''Steven Appleby's Normal Life''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00slsl0 BBC – ''Steven Appleby's Normal Life'']</ref><br>(Six episodes)
| ''Steven Appleby's Normal Life''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00slsl0 BBC – ''Steven Appleby's Normal Life'']</ref><br />(Six episodes)
| [[Steven Appleby]]
| [[Steven Appleby]]
| [[Paul McCrink]], [[Rachel Atkins]], [[Nigel Betts]] and [[Rosalind Paul]]
| Paul McCrink, Rachel Atkins, [[Nigel Betts]] and Rosalind Paul
| Cartoonist Steven Appleby takes an abnormal look at everyday life.
| Cartoonist Steven Appleby takes an abnormal look at everyday life.
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
Line 124: Line 126:
| 27 November 2001
| 27 November 2001
| ''The Present''
| ''The Present''
| [[Jackie Pavlenko]]
| Jackie Pavlenko
| [[Kathryn Hunt]], [[Alice Gardiner]], [[Christine Brennan (actress)|Christine Brennan]], [[Jim Millea]], [[James Swanton]]
| [[Kathryn Hunt]], Alice Gardiner, Christine Brennan, [[Jim Millea]], James Swanton
| Eva's life is a chaotic whirl of missed appointments and mad dashes as she tries to keep up with the demands of her children, her work and her withering social life.
| Eva's life is a chaotic whirl of missed appointments and mad dashes as she tries to keep up with the demands of her children, her work and her withering social life.
But only when she starts to keep a diary does the real problem emerge.
But only when she starts to keep a diary does the real problem emerge.
Line 132: Line 134:
| 7 December 2001
| 7 December 2001
| ''[[The Recall Man#Episodes|Doctor Joe Aston Investigates]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00kjsmw BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Doctor Joe Aston Investigates'']</ref>
| ''[[The Recall Man#Episodes|Doctor Joe Aston Investigates]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00kjsmw BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Doctor Joe Aston Investigates'']</ref>
| [[David Napthine]]
| David Napthine
| [[Jeremy Swift]], [[Rosie Cavaliero]], [[Carolyn Pickles]], [[Colin MacLachlan]], [[Paul Brennen]] and [[Sue Scott Davison]]
| [[Jeremy Swift]], [[Rosie Cavaliero]], [[Carolyn Pickles]], Colin MacLachlan, Paul Brennen and Sue Scott Davison
| Scientist Grace Hayle and her boss were working alone in the laboratory. Now he's dead and she's the only suspect in a murder case. She claims to have no memory of what happened and there's little evidence to go on. Forensic psychologist Dr Joe Aston, an expert in "recovered memory", attempts to uncover the truth.
| Scientist Grace Hayle and her boss were working alone in the laboratory. Now he's dead and she's the only suspect in a murder case. She claims to have no memory of what happened and there's little evidence to go on. Forensic psychologist Dr Joe Aston, an expert in "recovered memory", attempts to uncover the truth.
<br>This single play later developed into ''[[The Recall Man]]'' series.
<br />This single play later developed into ''[[The Recall Man]]'' series.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
|- id="The Condition of the Virgin"
|- id="The Condition of the Virgin"
Line 148: Line 150:
| ''[[Trueman and Riley|Trueman]]''<!--<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/ BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Trueman'']</ref>-->
| ''[[Trueman and Riley|Trueman]]''<!--<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/ BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Trueman'']</ref>-->
| [[Brian B Thompson]]
| [[Brian B Thompson]]
| [[Robert Daws]], [[Duncan Preston]], [[Polly Hemingway]], [[Katy Cavanagh]], [[Richard Lintern]] and [[Sandra Clark (actress)|Sandra Clark]]
| [[Robert Daws]], [[Duncan Preston]], Polly Hemingway, [[Katy Cavanagh]], [[Richard Lintern]] and Sandra Clark
| Was the murder of a student a drug wars killing, or are more sinister forces at work? The investigation falls to Trueman, a former high-flying detective.
| Was the murder of a student a drug wars killing, or are more sinister forces at work? The investigation falls to Trueman, a former high-flying detective.
<br>This single play later developed into the ''[[Trueman and Riley]]'' series.
<br />This single play later developed into the ''[[Trueman and Riley]]'' series.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
|- id="The King's Coiner"
|- id="The King's Coiner"
Line 156: Line 158:
| ''The King's Coiner''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/insight/downloads/scripts/the_kings_coiner.pdf ''The King's Coiner'' – A radio drama by Philip Palmer (script)]</ref>
| ''The King's Coiner''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/insight/downloads/scripts/the_kings_coiner.pdf ''The King's Coiner'' – A radio drama by Philip Palmer (script)]</ref>
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[Ian McDiarmid]], [[Katy Cavanagh]], [[Barnaby Kay]], [[Jeremy Swift]], [[Freddie Annobil-Dodoo]], [[Peter Marinker]] and [[Colin Adrian]]
| [[Ian McDiarmid]], [[Katy Cavanagh]], [[Barnaby Kay]], [[Jeremy Swift]], Freddie Annobil-Dodoo, Peter Marinker and Colin Adrian
| True life detective drama about [[Isaac Newton]]. By the 1690s Isaac Newton, already the world's greatest mathematician, was hungry for a new challenge and became Warden of the [[Royal Mint]]. His pursuit of [[London]]'s most notorious counterfeiter, [[William Chaloner]], confirmed him as a man prepared to go to any lengths to solve a problem.
| True life detective drama about [[Isaac Newton]]. By the 1690s Isaac Newton, already the world's greatest mathematician, was hungry for a new challenge and became Warden of the [[Royal Mint]]. His pursuit of [[London]]'s most notorious counterfeiter, [[William Chaloner]], confirmed him as a man prepared to go to any lengths to solve a problem.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 162: Line 164:
| 13 September 2002
| 13 September 2002
| ''Man with Travel Hairdryer''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/insight/downloads/scripts/travel_hairdryer.pdf ''Man with Travel Hairdryer'' – A radio play by Katie Hims (script)]</ref>
| ''Man with Travel Hairdryer''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/insight/downloads/scripts/travel_hairdryer.pdf ''Man with Travel Hairdryer'' – A radio play by Katie Hims (script)]</ref>
| [[Katie Hims]]
| Katie Hims
|
|
| The lives of many people are changed forever after an unarmed man is mistakenly shot dead by a police officer.
| The lives of many people are changed forever after an unarmed man is mistakenly shot dead by a police officer.
Line 170: Line 172:
| ''Tricycles''
| ''Tricycles''
| [[Colin Teevan]]
| [[Colin Teevan]]
| [[Laura Hughes (actress)|Laura Hughes]], [[Conleth Hill]], [[Cathy White]], [[Abigail McGibbon]], [[Nikki Doherty]], [[Darran Williams]], [[Packy Lee]], [[Hannah R Gordon]], [[Dario Angelone]], [[Richard Dormer]], [[Roger Jennings]], [[Stella McCusker]] and [[Oisin Teevan]]
| Laura Hughes, [[Conleth Hill]], Cathy White, Abigail McGibbon, Nikki Doherty, Darran Williams, Packy Lee, Hannah R Gordon, Dario Angelone, [[Richard Dormer]], Roger Jennings, Stella McCusker and Oisin Teevan
| Colin Teevan's impressionistic and fast-moving drama dips in and out of everyday lives in Belfast to create a picture of a city and its people as they seek to make their modest dreams a reality.
| Colin Teevan's impressionistic and fast-moving drama dips in and out of everyday lives in Belfast to create a picture of a city and its people as they seek to make their modest dreams a reality.
A suspected meningitis outbreak turns lives and routines on their head, perhaps for years to come.
A suspected meningitis outbreak turns lives and routines on their head, perhaps for years to come.
Line 178: Line 180:
| ''Full English''
| ''Full English''
| [[Brian B Thompson]]
| [[Brian B Thompson]]
| [[Ray Burdis]], [[Sheyla Shehovich]], [[Bruce Byron]], [[Sharon Duce]] and Ewan Bailey
| [[Ray Burdis]], Sheyla Shehovich, [[Bruce Byron]], [[Sharon Duce]] and Ewan Bailey
| Terry and Inna meet through a Russian internet dating agency. When she visits him in London, they are both in for some surprises. She's expecting opportunity and prosperity, but it doesn't always work out like that.
| Terry and Inna meet through a Russian internet dating agency. When she visits him in London, they are both in for some surprises. She's expecting opportunity and prosperity, but it doesn't always work out like that.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 185: Line 187:
| ''[[M (1931 film)|M]]''<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2003/feb/09/featuresreview.review5 ''Be afraid. Listen to Radio 3'', The Observer, 9 February 2003]</ref>
| ''[[M (1931 film)|M]]''<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2003/feb/09/featuresreview.review5 ''Be afraid. Listen to Radio 3'', The Observer, 9 February 2003]</ref>
| [[Thea von Harbou]] and [[Fritz Lang]] adapted by [[Peter Straughan]]
| [[Thea von Harbou]] and [[Fritz Lang]] adapted by [[Peter Straughan]]
| [[John Lightbody]], [[Kevin McKidd]], [[Nicholas Woodeson]], [[Mark Lewis Jones]], [[Jonathan Tafler]], [[Gilly Tompkins]], Ewan Bailey, [[Peter Marinker]], [[Michael Wildman]], [[Clare Corbett]], [[Ben Crowe]], [[Rebecca Manley]], [[Cressida Whyte]], [[Emily Button]], [[Gregg Prentice]], [[Ruby Stokes]] and [[Jack Durrant (actor)|Jack Durrant]]
| John Lightbody, [[Kevin McKidd]], [[Nicholas Woodeson]], [[Mark Lewis Jones]], Jonathan Tafler, Gilly Tompkins, Ewan Bailey, Peter Marinker, [[Michael Wildman]], [[Clare Corbett]], Ben Crowe, Rebecca Manley, Cressida Whyte, Emily Button, Gregg Prentice, Ruby Stokes and Jack Durrant
| Berlin is gripped with fear as a murderer preys on the city's children against a backdrop of political turbulence and rising criminality.<br>[[Fritz Lang]]'s [[M (1931 film)|cinema classic]] has been voted the most important German film of all-time in its home country.<br>[[Peter Straughan]]'s kaleidoscopic adaptation exploits the emphasis Lang placed on sound in his first steps beyond the silent movie era.<br><br>Won the ''[[Prix Italia]] for Adapted Drama'' in 2004.<ref name=PrixItalia/>
| Berlin is gripped with fear as a murderer preys on the city's children against a backdrop of political turbulence and rising criminality.<br />[[Fritz Lang]]'s [[M (1931 film)|cinema classic]] has been voted the most important German film of all time in its home country.<br />[[Peter Straughan]]'s kaleidoscopic adaptation exploits the emphasis Lang placed on sound in his first steps beyond the silent movie era.<br /><br />Won the ''[[Prix Italia]] for Adapted Drama'' in 2004.<ref name=PrixItalia/>
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnwj BBC – Drama on 3]</ref>
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnwj BBC – Drama on 3]</ref>
|- id="Steven Appleby's Normal Life (Series 2)"
|- id="Steven Appleby's Normal Life (Series 2)"
| 19 February 2003 – 26 March 2003
| 19 February 2003 – 26 March 2003
| ''Steven Appleby's Normal Life (Series 2)''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00slsj5 BBC – ''Steven Appleby's Normal Life (Series 2)'']</ref><br>(Six episodes)
| ''Steven Appleby's Normal Life (Series 2)''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00slsj5 BBC – ''Steven Appleby's Normal Life (Series 2)'']</ref><br />(Six episodes)
| [[Steven Appleby]]
| [[Steven Appleby]]
| [[Paul McCrink]], [[Rachel Atkins]], [[Nigel Betts]] and [[Rosalind Paul]]
| Paul McCrink, Rachel Atkins, [[Nigel Betts]] and Rosalind Paul
| Cartoonist Steven Appleby takes an abnormal look at everyday life.
| Cartoonist Steven Appleby takes an abnormal look at everyday life.
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
Line 199: Line 201:
| ''Creamie''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/thewire/pip/d0fca BBC – The Wire – ''Creamie'']</ref>
| ''Creamie''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/thewire/pip/d0fca BBC – The Wire – ''Creamie'']</ref>
| [[Luke Sutherland]]
| [[Luke Sutherland]]
| [[Clive Russell]], [[Sophie Okonedo]], [[Matthew Dunster]], [[Indira Varma]], [[Nicola Stapleton]] and [[Derek Ezenagu]]
| [[Clive Russell]], [[Sophie Okonedo]], [[Matthew Dunster]], [[Indira Varma]], [[Nicola Stapleton]] and Derek Ezenagu
| As Glasgow cop Tony finds a surveillance operation unravelling spectacularly, his thoughts return to last summer and a turbulent reunion with the daughter he'd only seen once since her birth.
| As Glasgow cop Tony finds a surveillance operation unravelling spectacularly, his thoughts return to last summer and a turbulent reunion with the daughter he'd only seen once since her birth.
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
Line 206: Line 208:
| ''At the Beach''
| ''At the Beach''
| [[Tom Kelly (Ireland)|Tom Kelly]]
| [[Tom Kelly (Ireland)|Tom Kelly]]
| [[Gerard Horan]], [[Glyn Grimstead]], [[Ben Tibber]], [[Joseph Tremain]] and [[Ray Lonnen]]
| [[Gerard Horan]], Glyn Grimstead, Ben Tibber, [[Joseph Tremain]] and [[Ray Lonnen]]
| Thirty years after they were last there, childhood friends Roy and Danny journey back to the remote beach where they shared an experience, and a secret, that has shaped their lives ever since.
| Thirty years after they were last there, childhood friends Roy and Danny journey back to the remote beach where they shared an experience, and a secret, that has shaped their lives ever since.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 220: Line 222:
| ''A Fire in the West''
| ''A Fire in the West''
| [[Michael Butt]]
| [[Michael Butt]]
| [[Ken Sharrock]], [[Kate Fitzgerald]], [[Lucy Akhurst]] and [[David K S Tse]]
| Ken Sharrock, [[Kate Fitzgerald]], [[Lucy Akhurst]] and David K S Tse
| Ciera Thomas set herself alight outside the Ministry of Defence, apparently in protest at a recent arms deal.
| Ciera Thomas set herself alight outside the Ministry of Defence, apparently in protest at a recent arms deal.
There were no warnings, no final farewells.
There were no warnings, no final farewells.
Line 228: Line 230:
| 31 October 2003
| 31 October 2003
| ''[[The Recall Man#Episodes|Making Waves]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00kk5q9 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Making Waves'']</ref>
| ''[[The Recall Man#Episodes|Making Waves]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00kk5q9 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Making Waves'']</ref>
| [[David Napthine]]
| David Napthine
| [[Jeremy Swift]], [[Paul Brennen]], [[Andrew Harrison (actor)|Andrew Harrison]], [[James Gaddas]] and [[Elizabeth Carling]]
| [[Jeremy Swift]], Paul Brennen, [[Andrew Harrison (actor)|Andrew Harrison]], [[James Gaddas]] and [[Elizabeth Carling]]
| A diver suddenly remembers what he thinks was a murder. Forensic psychologist Dr Joe Aston must try to make sense of his confused memory of that night. When the case reaches court, they both face tough sessions in the witness box.
| A diver suddenly remembers what he thinks was a murder. Forensic psychologist Dr Joe Aston must try to make sense of his confused memory of that night. When the case reaches court, they both face tough sessions in the witness box.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 235: Line 237:
| 25 November 2003
| 25 November 2003
| ''Wild Lunch''
| ''Wild Lunch''
| [[Katie Hims]]
| Katie Hims
| Claudia Harrison, [[Ben Miles]], [[Richenda Carey]], [[Ian Masters (actor)|Ian Masters]], [[Stephen Critchlow]], [[Tracey Wiles]] and [[Kenny Blyth]]
| Claudia Harrison, [[Ben Miles]], [[Richenda Carey]], Ian Masters, [[Stephen Critchlow]], [[Tracey Wiles]] and Kenny Blyth
| A terribly civilised English lunch party gradually disintegrates on the day a man is hanged by an unspecified government. Even when the world is falling apart around them, there are those who will cling to the reality which suits them.
| A terribly civilised English lunch party gradually disintegrates on the day a man is hanged by an unspecified government. Even when the world is falling apart around them, there are those who will cling to the reality which suits them.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 242: Line 244:
| 14 December 2003
| 14 December 2003
| ''[[Serjeant Musgrave's Dance]]''
| ''[[Serjeant Musgrave's Dance]]''
| [[John Arden]]<br>Original music by Simon Fraser
| [[John Arden]]<br />Original music by Simon Fraser
| [[Iain Glen]], [[Shaun Dooley]], [[Paul Copley]], [[Edward Hogg]], [[Carolyn Pickles]], [[James Weaver (actor)|James Weaver]], [[Roger Walker (actor)|Roger Walker]], [[Katy Cavanagh]], [[John Banks (actor)|John Banks]], [[Paul Rider]], [[Jeremy Swift]], [[John Davitt]] and [[Nick Malinowski]]
| [[Iain Glen]], [[Shaun Dooley]], [[Paul Copley]], [[Edward Hogg]], [[Carolyn Pickles]], James Weaver, [[Roger Walker (actor)|Roger Walker]], [[Katy Cavanagh]], John Banks, Paul Rider, [[Jeremy Swift]], John Davitt and Nick Malinowski
| Four soldiers arrive in a strike-bound mining town intent on convincing its inhabitants that the violence and killing being perpetrated across the colonies in their name is wrong.
| Four soldiers arrive in a strike-bound mining town intent on convincing its inhabitants that the violence and killing being perpetrated across the colonies in their name is wrong.
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3
|- id="The Ipcress File"
|- id="The Ipcress File"
| 17 January 2004
| 17 January 2004
| ''[[The Ipcress File]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2003/11_november/27/radio4_quarter1_drama.pdf BBC – Saturday Play – ''The Ipcress File'']</ref><ref>[http://www.thestage.co.uk/features/feature.php/246/radio-review-drama ''Radio review – Drama'', Moira Petty, The Stage, 19 January 2004]</ref>
| ''[[The IPCRESS File]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2003/11_november/27/radio4_quarter1_drama.pdf BBC – Saturday Play – ''The Ipcress File'']</ref><ref>[http://www.thestage.co.uk/features/feature.php/246/radio-review-drama ''Radio review – Drama'', Moira Petty, The Stage, 19 January 2004]</ref>
| [[Len Deighton]] dramatised by [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]
| [[Len Deighton]] dramatised by [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]
| [[Ian Hart]], [[James Laurenson]], [[Jonathan Coy]], [[Fenella Woolgar]], [[Peter Marinker]], [[Jamie Bamber]], [[Kerry Shale]], [[Adam Tedder]], [[Rachel Atkins]], [[John Sharian]], [[Raad Rawi]] and [[Declan Wilson]]
| [[Ian Hart]], [[James Laurenson]], [[Jonathan Coy]], [[Fenella Woolgar]], Peter Marinker, [[Jamie Bamber]], [[Kerry Shale]], [[Adam Tedder]], Rachel Atkins, [[John Sharian]], Raad Rawi and Declan Wilson
| [[Len Deighton]]'s gripping cold war thriller became a popular icon of British cinema.
| [[Len Deighton]]'s gripping cold war thriller became a popular icon of British cinema.
[[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]'s dramatisation re-discovers the novel and its unnamed and defiantly non-establishment narrator as his new job in the intelligence service ensnares him in a plot to brainwash scientists and trade them across the iron curtain.
[[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]'s dramatisation re-discovers the novel and its unnamed and defiantly non-establishment narrator as his new job in the intelligence service ensnares him in a plot to brainwash scientists and trade them across the iron curtain.
Line 264: Line 266:
| 23 April 2004
| 23 April 2004
| ''The Lights''
| ''The Lights''
| [[Mark Tuohy]]
| Mark Tuohy
| [[Luke Hamill]], [[Cal MacAninch]], [[Clare Cathcart]], [[Marion Bailey]], [[John Banks (actor)|John Banks]], [[Becky Hindley]] and [[Narinder Samra]]
| Luke Hamill, [[Cal MacAninch]], [[Clare Cathcart]], [[Marion Bailey]], John Banks, [[Becky Hindley]] and Narinder Samra
| Paul and Liam used to be best mates.
| Paul and Liam used to be best mates.
Perhaps by the end of their weekend in Blackpool they'll have learnt to have a laugh together again.
Perhaps by the end of their weekend in Blackpool they'll have learnt to have a laugh together again.
Line 273: Line 275:
| 5 June 2004
| 5 June 2004
| ''The Long Wait''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2004/05_may/14/dday_radio.shtml BBC – Press Office – D-Day radio – ''The Long Wait'']</ref>
| ''The Long Wait''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2004/05_may/14/dday_radio.shtml BBC – Press Office – D-Day radio – ''The Long Wait'']</ref>
| [[Sarah Daniels]], based on a story by [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]
| [[Sarah Daniels (playwright)|Sarah Daniels]], based on a story by [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]
|
|
| In [[Normandy]] on 5 June 1944, Nicole is getting ready to go out with her German boyfriend, despite the nightly air raids. A German army band is throwing a jazz concert in a hall in Caen when the singer, Mitzi, is called away on urgent business by Father Pierre. He is the blind, elderly padre who realises that his cover as a double agent has been blown, just as coded messages are coming through to the French resistance that the invasion is about to happen.
| In [[Normandy]] on 5 June 1944, Nicole is getting ready to go out with her German boyfriend, despite the nightly air raids. A German army band is throwing a jazz concert in a hall in Caen when the singer, Mitzi, is called away on urgent business by Father Pierre. He is the blind, elderly padre who realises that his cover as a double agent has been blown, just as coded messages are coming through to the French resistance that the invasion is about to happen.
Line 280: Line 282:
| 1 July 2004
| 1 July 2004
| ''My Arm''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/thewire/pip/kal86 BBC – The Wire – ''My Arm'']</ref>
| ''My Arm''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/thewire/pip/kal86 BBC – The Wire – ''My Arm'']</ref>
| [[Tim Crouch]]<br>soundscape by [[Chris Dorley-Brown]]
| [[Tim Crouch]]<br />soundscape by [[Chris Dorley-Brown]]
| [[Tim Crouch]] and [[Owen Crouch]]
| [[Tim Crouch]] and Owen Crouch
| 'At the age of ten, for want of anything more meaningful to do, I put my arm above my head and kept it there.<br>Now thirty years on, I'm so full of meaning, it's killing me.'<br>This is a study of bloody-mindedness, modern art and how the things we do when we're ten stick with us for life.<br><br>Won the ''[[Prix Italia]] for Adapted Drama'' in 2005.<ref name=PrixItalia/>
| 'At the age of ten, for want of anything more meaningful to do, I put my arm above my head and kept it there.<br />Now thirty years on, I'm so full of meaning, it's killing me.'<br />This is a study of bloody-mindedness, modern art and how the things we do when we're ten stick with us for life.<br /><br />Won the ''[[Prix Italia]] for Adapted Drama'' in 2005.<ref name=PrixItalia/>
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
|- id="How Many Miles to Basra?"
|- id="How Many Miles to Basra?"
Line 295: Line 297:
| ''Lifestyles of the Trapped and Cabbaged''<!--<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/ BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Lifestyles of the Trapped and Cabbaged'']</ref>-->
| ''Lifestyles of the Trapped and Cabbaged''<!--<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/ BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Lifestyles of the Trapped and Cabbaged'']</ref>-->
| [[Roy Boulter]]
| [[Roy Boulter]]
| [[Paul Bown]], [[Jeff Rawle]] and [[Wai-Keat Lau]]
| [[Paul Bown]], [[Jeff Rawle]] and Wai-Keat Lau
| Two holidaying accountants leave their wives in the lurch when they manage to get trapped in a Shanghai warehouse for days. Never have the social lives of the Cheshire set seemed so important.
| Two holidaying accountants leave their wives in the lurch when they manage to get trapped in a Shanghai warehouse for days. Never have the social lives of the Cheshire set seemed so important.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 302: Line 304:
| ''Steven Appleby's Normal Christmas''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00wtb2s BBC – ''Steven Appleby's Normal Christmas'']</ref>
| ''Steven Appleby's Normal Christmas''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00wtb2s BBC – ''Steven Appleby's Normal Christmas'']</ref>
| [[Steven Appleby]]
| [[Steven Appleby]]
| [[Paul McCrink]], [[Rosalind Paul]], [[Nigel Betts]], Ewan Bailey and [[Rachel Atkins]]
| Paul McCrink, Rosalind Paul, [[Nigel Betts]], Ewan Bailey and Rachel Atkins
| A Christmas special of Steven Appleby's Normal Life, in which Steven meets Father Christmas and his unfaithful wife, and finds out about legal problems regarding the toys the elves make.
| A Christmas special of Steven Appleby's Normal Life, in which Steven meets Father Christmas and his unfaithful wife, and finds out about legal problems regarding the toys the elves make.
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
Line 308: Line 310:
| 27 December 2004
| 27 December 2004
| ''Boxing Clever''
| ''Boxing Clever''
| [[Mike Yeaman]]
| Mike Yeaman
| [[Thelma Barlow]], [[Jeremy Swift]], [[Edward Hogg]], [[Helen Longworth]] and [[Paul McCrink]]
| [[Thelma Barlow]], [[Jeremy Swift]], [[Edward Hogg]], [[Helen Longworth]] and Paul McCrink
| Wily pensioner Amy may be at the front of the queue for the Boxing Day sales, but she's going to have to work hard to get the better of the rival bargain hunters camping overnight outside Marshall's department store.
| Wily pensioner Amy may be at the front of the queue for the Boxing Day sales, but she's going to have to work hard to get the better of the rival bargain hunters camping overnight outside Marshall's department store.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
|- id="The Great Pursuit"
|- id="The Great Pursuit"
| 16 March 2005 – 6 April 2005
| 16 March 2005 – 6 April 2005
| ''[[The Great Pursuit]]''<br>(Four episodes)
| ''[[The Great Pursuit]]''<br />(Four episodes)
| [[Tom Sharpe]] dramatised by [[Ryan Craig (playwright)|Ryan Craig]]
| [[Tom Sharpe]] dramatised by [[Ryan Craig (playwright)|Ryan Craig]]
| [[Mark Heap]], [[Laurel Lefkow]], [[Adam Godley]], [[John Guerrasio]], [[Sandra Dickinson]], Nicholas Boulton, [[Susan Engel]], [[Susan Jameson]], [[Emily Wachter]], [[Kerry Shale]], [[Hugh Dickson (actor)|Hugh Dickson]], [[Robert Hastie (actor)|Robert Hastie]] and [[Alex Tregear]]
| [[Mark Heap]], Laurel Lefkow, [[Adam Godley]], [[John Guerrasio]], [[Sandra Dickinson]], Nicholas Boulton, [[Susan Engel]], [[Susan Jameson]], Emily Wachter, [[Kerry Shale]], Hugh Dickson, Robert Hastie and Alex Tregear
| Anarchic satire about literary agent [[Frederick Frensic]].
| Anarchic satire about literary agent Frederick Frensic.
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]]
|- id="Family Cover"
|- id="Family Cover"
Line 323: Line 325:
| ''Family Cover''
| ''Family Cover''
| [[Jonathan Holloway (playwright)|Jonathan Holloway]]
| [[Jonathan Holloway (playwright)|Jonathan Holloway]]
| [[Polly Walker]], [[Martin Wenner]], [[Katia Linden]], [[Jonas Finlay]], [[Kim Romer]], [[Jon Glover]], [[Leagh Conwell]] and [[Thomas Brown-Lowe]]
| [[Polly Walker]], Martin Wenner, Katia Linden, Jonas Finlay, Kim Romer, [[Jon Glover]], Leagh Conwell and Thomas Brown-Lowe
| A family holiday to Sweden goes tragically wrong when Alisdair McNair is found dead at a remote beauty spot.
| A family holiday to Sweden goes tragically wrong when Alisdair McNair is found dead at a remote beauty spot.
In shock, miles from home and with her two young sons in tow, Emma is alarmed to find herself the subject of the police investigation that follows.
In shock, miles from home and with her two young sons in tow, Emma is alarmed to find herself the subject of the police investigation that follows.
Line 330: Line 332:
| 5 May 2005
| 5 May 2005
| ''Stone Baby''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/thewire/pip/8j7ue BBC – The Wire – ''Stone Baby'']</ref>
| ''Stone Baby''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/thewire/pip/8j7ue BBC – The Wire – ''Stone Baby'']</ref>
| [[Sean Buckley (writer)|Sean Buckley]]
| Sean Buckley
| [[Louis Dunsford]], [[Edna Doré]], [[Carl Prekopp]], [[Chenade la Roy John]], [[Alex Matten]], [[Joseph Tremain]], [[Richard Katz (actor)|Richard Katz]], [[Susan Jameson]], Nicholas Boulton and [[Hugh Dickson (actor)|Hugh Dickson]]
| Louis Dunsford, [[Edna Doré]], [[Carl Prekopp]], Chenade la Roy John, Alex Matten, [[Joseph Tremain]], Richard Katz, [[Susan Jameson]], Nicholas Boulton and Hugh Dickson
| Xavier has no brothers or sisters or mates at school. But he's got a bump. Something inside. Someone. He feels it move; hears its tiny heart beat in tandem with his.
| Xavier has no brothers or sisters or mates at school. But he's got a bump. Something inside. Someone. He feels it move; hears its tiny heart beat in tandem with his.
It's true and real and mine and... stop blowing smoke in my face! It's very bad for his health.
It's true and real and mine and... stop blowing smoke in my face! It's very bad for his health.
Line 339: Line 341:
| ''Angel Heights''
| ''Angel Heights''
| [[Brian B Thompson]]
| [[Brian B Thompson]]
| [[Robert Daws]], [[Duncan Preston]], [[Michael Cochrane]], [[Gerard McDermott]] and [[Sammy Dobson]]
| [[Robert Daws]], [[Duncan Preston]], [[Michael Cochrane]], Gerard McDermott and [[Sammy Dobson]]
| A young stable jockey has been killed by a horse in what appears to have been an accident.
| A young stable jockey has been killed by a horse in what appears to have been an accident.
When Trueman and Riley come sniffing round, they discover a corner of the horse racing world riddled with double-dealing: a trainer who deliberately runs horses over the wrong distance to bring down their handicap before landing a betting coup when they go over the right trip; a telephone tipster who gives one tip on his recorded message and a different one to his special clients; stable lads prepared to give inside information in return for favours.
When Trueman and Riley come sniffing round, they discover a corner of the horse racing world riddled with double-dealing: a trainer who deliberately runs horses over the wrong distance to bring down their handicap before landing a betting coup when they go over the right trip; a telephone tipster who gives one tip on his recorded message and a different one to his special clients; stable lads prepared to give inside information in return for favours.
Line 348: Line 350:
| ''Blame''
| ''Blame''
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[Caroline Catz]], [[Ann Mitchell]], [[Tanya Franks]], [[Gerard Horan]], [[Mark Lewis Jones]] and [[Harry Myers (actor)|Harry Myers]]
| [[Caroline Catz]], [[Ann Mitchell]], [[Tanya Franks]], [[Gerard Horan]], [[Mark Lewis Jones]] and Harry Myers
|
|
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
Line 355: Line 357:
| ''The Orchid Grower''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/dramaon3/pip/1zf62 BBC – Drama on 3 – ''The Orchid Grower'']</ref>
| ''The Orchid Grower''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/dramaon3/pip/1zf62 BBC – Drama on 3 – ''The Orchid Grower'']</ref>
| [[Sebastian Baczkiewicz]] based on an idea by [[Tom Mangold]]
| [[Sebastian Baczkiewicz]] based on an idea by [[Tom Mangold]]
| [[Kenneth Welsh]], [[John Cleland]], [[Michael Murphy (BBC radio actor)|Michael Murphy]], [[Leo Vernik]], [[Emma Campbell]], [[Greg Ellwand]], [[Rod Wilson]], [[John Robinson (BBC radio actor)|John Robinson]], [[Tara Samuels]], [[Chuck Shamata]], [[Michael Caruana]], [[Patrick McManus (actor)|Patrick McManus]], Barry Flatman, [[Jonathan Higgins (actor)|Jonathan Higgins]] and [[Gerry Mendicino]]
| [[Kenneth Welsh]], [[John Cleland]], Michael Murphy, Leo Vernik, Emma Campbell, Greg Ellwand, [[Rod Wilson]], John Robinson, Tara Samuels, [[Chuck Shamata]], Michael Caruana, Patrick McManus, Barry Flatman, Jonathan Higgins and [[Gerry Mendicino]]
| In 1964, KGB officer Yuri Nosenko defected to the US in what should have been a major coup for the CIA.
| In 1964, KGB officer Yuri Nosenko defected to the US in what should have been a major coup for the CIA.
[[Sebastian Baczkiewicz]] tells the incredible story of Nosenko's four years of torture and imprisonment without trial as civil war raged within the CIA over his bona fides.
[[Sebastian Baczkiewicz]] tells the incredible story of Nosenko's four years of torture and imprisonment without trial as civil war raged within the CIA over his bona fides.
Line 362: Line 364:
| 26 September 2005
| 26 September 2005
| ''[[The Recall Man#Episodes|Taken By Surprise]]''<!--<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/ BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Taken By Surprise'']</ref>-->
| ''[[The Recall Man#Episodes|Taken By Surprise]]''<!--<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/ BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Taken By Surprise'']</ref>-->
| [[David Napthine]]
| David Napthine
| [[Jeremy Swift]], [[Paul Brennen]], [[Andrew Harrison (actor)|Andrew Harrison]], [[James Gaddas]] and [[Elizabeth Carling]]
| [[Jeremy Swift]], Paul Brennen, [[Andrew Harrison (actor)|Andrew Harrison]], [[James Gaddas]] and [[Elizabeth Carling]]
| A financial adviser is abducted and only released when his employer pays the ransom. Forensic psychologist Dr Joe Aston resorts to unorthodox methods to secure a positive identification of the main suspect.
| A financial adviser is abducted and only released when his employer pays the ransom. Forensic psychologist Dr Joe Aston resorts to unorthodox methods to secure a positive identification of the main suspect.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 369: Line 371:
| 23 November 2005
| 23 November 2005
| ''The Waterbucks''
| ''The Waterbucks''
| [[Adrian Penketh]]
| Adrian Penketh
| [[Geoffrey Streatfeild]], [[Tracy Wiles]], [[Mike Sengelow]], [[Hannah Storey]], [[Chooi Beh]] and [[Matthew Paris (actor)|Matthew Paris]]
| [[Geoffrey Streatfeild]], [[Tracy Wiles]], Mike Sengelow, Hannah Storey, Chooi Beh and Matthew Paris
| Hong Kong, 1997. Justin has been riding out the last few months of British rule before the handover to China. This is not the only change he is forced to confront over the course of a tense 24 hours that will turn his life upside down forever.
| Hong Kong, 1997. Justin has been riding out the last few months of British rule before the handover to China. This is not the only change he is forced to confront over the course of a tense 24 hours that will turn his life upside down forever.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 376: Line 378:
| 29 November 2005
| 29 November 2005
| ''French Sex at the Wilmslow Rex''
| ''French Sex at the Wilmslow Rex''
| [[Peter Vickers]]
| Peter Vickers
| [[Jason Done]], [[Helen Longworth]], [[Scarlett Perdereau]], [[Pearce Quigley]], [[Colleen Prendergast]], [[Gerard McDermott]], [[Harry Myers (actor)|Harry Myers]] and [[John Cummins (actor)|John Cummins]]
| [[Jason Done]], [[Helen Longworth]], Scarlett Perdereau, [[Pearce Quigley]], Colleen Prendergast, Gerard McDermott, Harry Myers and John Cummins
| In 1962, Bernard's innocent attempt to have the French new wave film 'Jules et Jim' shown at the local cinema leads to him being branded a pervert and an adulterer. The ensuing row also puts a strain on his marriage to Helen.
| In 1962, Bernard's innocent attempt to have the French new wave film 'Jules et Jim' shown at the local cinema leads to him being branded a pervert and an adulterer. The ensuing row also puts a strain on his marriage to Helen.
A comic love story that captures a moment just before the 'swinging sixties' had begun to 'swing'.
A comic love story that captures a moment just before the 'swinging sixties' had begun to 'swing'.
Line 385: Line 387:
| ''Comeback''
| ''Comeback''
| [[Luke Sutherland]]
| [[Luke Sutherland]]
| [[Richard Ridings]], [[Desmond McNamara]], [[Stephanie Fearon]], [[Tanya Franks]], [[Richard Katz (actor)|Richard Katz]], [[Harry Myers (actor)|Harry Myers]] and [[Everal A Walsh]]
| [[Richard Ridings]], [[Desmond McNamara]], [[Stephanie Fearon]], [[Tanya Franks]], Richard Katz, Harry Myers and Everal A Walsh
| Wrestling man-mountain King Magnitude is on the comeback trail at the age of 60. It may be 20 years since his glory days but he's determined to show the world he's still got what it takes. What he doesn't expect is to be floored by a 15-year-old girl.
| Wrestling man-mountain King Magnitude is on the comeback trail at the age of 60. It may be 20 years since his glory days but he's determined to show the world he's still got what it takes. What he doesn't expect is to be floored by a 15-year-old girl.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
Line 391: Line 393:
| 17 January 2006
| 17 January 2006
| ''Once a Friend''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0076wly BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Once a Friend'']</ref>
| ''Once a Friend''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0076wly BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Once a Friend'']</ref>
| [[Stephen Phelps]]
| Stephen Phelps
| [[Jamie Foreman]], [[Gerard McDermott]], [[Joseph Tremain]], [[Steven Williams (British actor)|Steven Williams]] and [[Ella Smith (actress)|Ella Smith]]
| [[Jamie Foreman]], Gerard McDermott, [[Joseph Tremain]], Steven Williams and [[Ella Smith (actress)|Ella Smith]]
| John and Leo, inseparable in childhood, meet for the first time in 30 years. Will Leo's need to rake over the past prevent them from rekindling their friendship?
| John and Leo, inseparable in childhood, meet for the first time in 30 years. Will Leo's need to rake over the past prevent them from rekindling their friendship?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 398: Line 400:
| 10 March 2006
| 10 March 2006
| ''After the Affair''
| ''After the Affair''
| [[Michael Butt]]
| Michael Butt
| [[Claire Rushbrook]], [[Daniela Denby-Ashe]], [[Simon Grover]] and [[Christopher Fox (actor)|Christopher Fox]]
| [[Claire Rushbrook]], [[Daniela Denby-Ashe]], [[Simon Grover]] and [[Christopher Fox (actor)|Christopher Fox]]
| In the complex and messy world of an extra marital affair with all its exaggerated highs and lows, two couples are left facing a future they hadn't anticipated, and since Sarah and Janey are sisters, the sense of betrayal runs deep.
| In the complex and messy world of an extra marital affair with all its exaggerated highs and lows, two couples are left facing a future they hadn't anticipated, and since Sarah and Janey are sisters, the sense of betrayal runs deep.
Line 406: Line 408:
| ''[[Metropolis (1927 film)|Metropolis]]''<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/media/2006/mar/27/radio.broadcasting Radio review, Elisabeth Mahoney, The Guardian, 27 March 2006]</ref>
| ''[[Metropolis (1927 film)|Metropolis]]''<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/media/2006/mar/27/radio.broadcasting Radio review, Elisabeth Mahoney, The Guardian, 27 March 2006]</ref>
| [[Thea von Harbou]] and [[Fritz Lang]] adapted by [[Peter Straughan]]
| [[Thea von Harbou]] and [[Fritz Lang]] adapted by [[Peter Straughan]]
| [[Edward Hogg]], [[Tracy Wiles]], [[Damian Lynch (actor)|Damian Lynch]] and [[Peter Marinker]]
| [[Edward Hogg]], [[Tracy Wiles]], Damian Lynch and Peter Marinker
| [[Thea von Harbou]]'s novel became husband [[Fritz Lang]]'s [[Metropolis (1927 film)|1927 silent movie classic]].<br>Its terrifying vision of the future was born in an age of booming heavy industry. [[Peter Straughan]]'s new version finds its hero, F T Fredersen, caught up in a nightmarish world all too recognisably drawn from the one we find ourselves in today.<br><br>Won the ''[[Prix Italia]] for Adapted Drama'' in 2007.<ref name=PrixItalia/>
| [[Thea von Harbou]]'s novel became husband [[Fritz Lang]]'s [[Metropolis (1927 film)|1927 silent movie classic]].<br />Its terrifying vision of the future was born in an age of booming heavy industry. [[Peter Straughan]]'s new version finds its hero, F T Fredersen, caught up in a nightmarish world all too recognisably drawn from the one we find ourselves in today.<br /><br />Won the ''[[Prix Italia]] for Adapted Drama'' in 2007.<ref name=PrixItalia/>
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
|- id="Headwrecked, Shanghaied and Shipless"
|- id="Headwrecked, Shanghaied and Shipless"
Line 413: Line 415:
| ''Headwrecked, Shanghaied and Shipless''<!--<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/ BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Headwrecked, Shanghaied and Shipless'']</ref>-->
| ''Headwrecked, Shanghaied and Shipless''<!--<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/ BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Headwrecked, Shanghaied and Shipless'']</ref>-->
| [[Roy Boulter]]
| [[Roy Boulter]]
| [[Gabrielle Glaister]], [[Katherine Dow Blyton]], [[Liz Sutherland]] and [[Wai-Keat Lau]]
| [[Gabrielle Glaister]], Katherine Dow Blyton, Liz Sutherland and Wai-Keat Lau
| Two holidaying Cheshire housewives hit Shanghai and come off second best. Will they ever be reunited with their husbands? And where are they anyway?
| Two holidaying Cheshire housewives hit Shanghai and come off second best. Will they ever be reunited with their husbands? And where are they anyway?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 420: Line 422:
| ''The Conversation''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0076yyq BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Conversation'']</ref>
| ''The Conversation''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0076yyq BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Conversation'']</ref>
|
|
| [[Harry Towb]] and [[Jonathan Tafler]]
| [[Harry Towb]] and Jonathan Tafler
| Dramatic reconstruction of a conversation between Trevor Friedman and [[Roman Halter]], whose fathers were Jewish slave labourers in Poland and then Germany.
| Dramatic reconstruction of a conversation between Trevor Friedman and [[Roman Halter]], whose fathers were Jewish slave labourers in Poland and then Germany.
Trevor knew almost nothing of his father's extraordinary story until 24 years after his death.
Trevor knew almost nothing of his father's extraordinary story until 24 years after his death.
Line 427: Line 429:
| 13 October 2006
| 13 October 2006
| ''Walking the Line''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00770l7 BBC – Friday Play – ''Walking the Line'']</ref>
| ''Walking the Line''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00770l7 BBC – Friday Play – ''Walking the Line'']</ref>
| [[Stephen Phelps]]
| Stephen Phelps
| [[Andy Nyman]], [[Ralph Ineson]], [[Saikat Ahamed]] and [[Sam Dale]]
| [[Andy Nyman]], [[Ralph Ineson]], [[Saikat Ahamed]] and Sam Dale
| A prison officer finds himself caught between a vulnerable young prisoner and a senior colleague who believes that his job is to discipline and control and no more. Then the separate worlds of home and work start to overlap.
| A prison officer finds himself caught between a vulnerable young prisoner and a senior colleague who believes that his job is to discipline and control and no more. Then the separate worlds of home and work start to overlap.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
Line 434: Line 436:
| 21 October 2006
| 21 October 2006
| ''Cry Hungary''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00770qk BBC – Saturday Play – ''Cry Hungary'']</ref>
| ''Cry Hungary''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00770qk BBC – Saturday Play – ''Cry Hungary'']</ref>
| [[Paul Viragh]]
| Paul Viragh
| [[Lee Ingleby]], [[Naomi Frederick]], [[Christopher Fox (actor)|Christopher Fox]], [[Larry Lamb (actor)|Larry Lamb]], [[Mark Straker]], [[Joseph Kloska]], [[Sam Dale]], [[Paul Richard Biggin]] and [[Emma Noakes]]
| [[Lee Ingleby]], [[Naomi Frederick]], [[Christopher Fox (actor)|Christopher Fox]], [[Larry Lamb (actor)|Larry Lamb]], Mark Straker, [[Joseph Kloska]], Sam Dale, Paul Richard Biggin and Emma Noakes
| In October 1956, thousands of Hungarians rise up against the oppressive Soviet-backed government. Peter, a chosen son of the working classes, arrives in Budapest to study at the university. He falls in love with Eva, a committed communist. When Peter becomes involved in the demonstrations, Eva finds her loyalties severely tested.
| In October 1956, thousands of Hungarians rise up against the oppressive Soviet-backed government. Peter, a chosen son of the working classes, arrives in Budapest to study at the university. He falls in love with Eva, a committed communist. When Peter becomes involved in the demonstrations, Eva finds her loyalties severely tested.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Saturday Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Saturday Play]]
Line 441: Line 443:
| 18 December 2006
| 18 December 2006
| ''This Is My Car Park''
| ''This Is My Car Park''
| [[Mark Tuohy]]
| Mark Tuohy
| Adam Kotz, [[Pippa Haywood]], [[Emma Noakes]] and [[Steve Edwards (actor)|Steve Edwards]]
| Adam Kotz, [[Pippa Haywood]], Emma Noakes and Steve Edwards
| Luke's brush with the big time has left him bruised and sleeping rough in a scruffy London car park.
| Luke's brush with the big time has left him bruised and sleeping rough in a scruffy London car park.
But why does he refuse to set foot outside it? Two locals strike up a friendship with him, but is it enough to restore his faith in humanity?
But why does he refuse to set foot outside it? Two locals strike up a friendship with him, but is it enough to restore his faith in humanity?
Line 449: Line 451:
| 18 February 2007
| 18 February 2007
| ''Hooligan Nights''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/dramaon3/pip/v2mxv BBC – Drama on 3 – ''Hooligan Nights'']</ref>
| ''Hooligan Nights''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/dramaon3/pip/v2mxv BBC – Drama on 3 – ''Hooligan Nights'']</ref>
| [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]<br>Music by [[Mike Woolmans]]
| [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]<br />Music by Mike Woolmans
| [[James Daley (actor)|James Daley]], [[Pamela Banks]], [[Stephen Greif]], [[Carl Prekopp]], [[Gerard Horan]], [[Freddy White]], [[Gerard McDermott]], [[Jamie Borthwick]], [[David O'Dell]], [[Sam Dale]], [[Bethan Walker]], [[Paul Richard Biggin]], [[Joseph Kloska]], [[Emma Noakes]] and [[Saikat Ahamed]]
| James Daley, Pamela Banks, [[Stephen Greif]], [[Carl Prekopp]], [[Gerard Horan]], Freddy White, Gerard McDermott, [[Jamie Borthwick]], David O'Dell, Sam Dale, Bethan Walker, Paul Richard Biggin, [[Joseph Kloska]], Emma Noakes and [[Saikat Ahamed]]
| The brutal world of London gangland in the 1890s is brought vividly to life in an innovative new musical created by writer [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]] and composer Mike Woolmans.
| The brutal world of London gangland in the 1890s is brought vividly to life in an innovative new musical created by writer [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]] and composer Mike Woolmans.
Loosely based on the book by Clarence Rook, it recounts the criminal career of Alf, a self-styled Lambeth hooligan.
Loosely based on the book by Clarence Rook, it recounts the criminal career of Alf, a self-styled Lambeth hooligan.
Line 464: Line 466:
| 28 March 2007
| 28 March 2007
| ''Going for Broke''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00775yx BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Going for Broke'']</ref>
| ''Going for Broke''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00775yx BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Going for Broke'']</ref>
| [[Mike Yeaman]]
| Mike Yeaman
| [[Les Dennis]], [[Felicity Montagu]], [[Sam Dale]], [[Christine Kavanagh]] and [[Jasmine Callan]]
| [[Les Dennis]], [[Felicity Montagu]], Sam Dale, [[Christine Kavanagh]] and Jasmine Callan
| With debts rising and their pension scheme in meltdown, Colin and Marion set out to milk the system for all it's worth. But will the price they pay be more than they bargained for?
| With debts rising and their pension scheme in meltdown, Colin and Marion set out to milk the system for all it's worth. But will the price they pay be more than they bargained for?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 471: Line 473:
| 5 June 2007
| 5 June 2007
| ''Clear Air Turbulence''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007ng3k BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Clear Air Turbulence'']</ref>
| ''Clear Air Turbulence''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007ng3k BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Clear Air Turbulence'']</ref>
| [[Dana Fainaru]]
| Dana Fainaru
| [[Tara Fitzgerald]], [[Aidan McArdle]], [[David Thorpe (actor)|David Thorpe]], [[Ashley Madekwe]], [[Ian Masters (actor)|Ian Masters]], [[Sandra James-Young]], [[Rachel Bavidge]], [[John Dougall (actor)|John Dougall]], [[Jasmine Callan]] and [[Anthony Glennon]]
| [[Tara Fitzgerald]], [[Aidan McArdle]], David Thorpe, [[Ashley Madekwe]], Ian Masters, Sandra James-Young, Rachel Bavidge, [[John Dougall (actor)|John Dougall]], Jasmine Callan and [[Anthony Glennon]]
| Mel's idyllic existence is turned upside-down when she suddenly stops sleeping.
| Mel's idyllic existence is turned upside-down when she suddenly stops sleeping.
As the sprawling nights become filled in increasingly risky fashion, a would-be accomplice demands to join in the nocturnal adventures.
As the sprawling nights become filled in increasingly risky fashion, a would-be accomplice demands to join in the nocturnal adventures.
Line 479: Line 481:
| 13 June 2007
| 13 June 2007
| ''A Man Cut in Slices''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007ng7k BBC – Afternoon Play – ''A Man Cut in Slices'']</ref>
| ''A Man Cut in Slices''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007ng7k BBC – Afternoon Play – ''A Man Cut in Slices'']</ref>
| [[Adrian Penketh]]
| Adrian Penketh
| [[Raymond Coulthard]], [[John Guerrasio]], [[John Dougall (actor)|John Dougall]], [[Colin Stinton]], [[Tom Clarke-Hill]], [[Walter Lewis (actor)|Walter Lewis]], [[Bonnie Engstrom]], [[Jasmine Callan]], [[Anthony Glennon]] and [[Rachel Bavidge]]
| [[Raymond Coulthard]], [[John Guerrasio]], [[John Dougall (actor)|John Dougall]], [[Colin Stinton]], Tom Clarke-Hill, Walter Lewis, Bonnie Engstrom, Jasmine Callan, [[Anthony Glennon]] and Rachel Bavidge
| Paul Tate goes for a job interview and finds himself on front pages and TV screens across the world. He is unwittingly cast as the symbol of Londoners' defiance in the face of terrorism after an office block is blown up.
| Paul Tate goes for a job interview and finds himself on front pages and TV screens across the world. He is unwittingly cast as the symbol of Londoners' defiance in the face of terrorism after an office block is blown up.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 487: Line 489:
| ''Eye Witness''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/thewire/pip/whhcz BBC – The Wire – ''Eye Witness'']</ref><ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007rwgx BBC – The Wire – ''Eye Witness'']</ref>
| ''Eye Witness''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/thewire/pip/whhcz BBC – The Wire – ''Eye Witness'']</ref><ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007rwgx BBC – The Wire – ''Eye Witness'']</ref>
| [[Tom Kelly (Ireland)|Tom Kelly]]
| [[Tom Kelly (Ireland)|Tom Kelly]]
| [[Michael Smiley]], [[Michael Colgan (actor)|Michael Colgan]], [[JonJo O'Neill]] and [[Ciarán McMenamin]]
| [[Michael Smiley]], [[Michael Colgan (actor)|Michael Colgan]], JonJo O'Neill and [[Ciarán McMenamin]]
| This powerful and intensely personal piece digs deep into the author's brutalising experiences growing up on the streets of Belfast. Will life continue to be seen through the prism of that time, or can he find a future without the burden of the past?
| This powerful and intensely personal piece digs deep into the author's brutalising experiences growing up on the streets of Belfast. Will life continue to be seen through the prism of that time, or can he find a future without the burden of the past?
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
Line 493: Line 495:
| 2 August 2007
| 2 August 2007
| ''Is He Still Breathing?''
| ''Is He Still Breathing?''
| [[Howard Belgard]], co-written with [[Nick Drake (poet)|Nick Drake]]
| Howard Belgard, co-written with [[Nick Drake (poet)|Nick Drake]]
| [[Zita Sattar]], [[Geoffrey Whitehead]], [[Andrew Frame (actor)|Andrew Frame]] and [[Rosalind Paul]]
| [[Zita Sattar]], [[Geoffrey Whitehead]], Andrew Frame and Rosalind Paul
| Sunita loves her job at the ambulance call centre, the camaraderie, the humour and the satisfaction of helping people when they need it most. So why is she leaving?
| Sunita loves her job at the ambulance call centre, the camaraderie, the humour and the satisfaction of helping people when they need it most. So why is she leaving?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 508: Line 510:
| ''Nightingale Sang in Fernhurst Road''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007ylrg BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – ''Nightingale Sang in Fernhurst Road'']</ref>
| ''Nightingale Sang in Fernhurst Road''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007ylrg BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – ''Nightingale Sang in Fernhurst Road'']</ref>
| [[Christopher Matthew]]
| [[Christopher Matthew]]
| [[Christopher Matthew]], [[John Dougall (actor)|John Dougall]], [[Ifan Meredith]], [[Sam Pamphilon]], [[Liza Sadovy]], [[Kim Romer]], [[Martin Hyder]] and [[Piers Stubbs]]
| [[Christopher Matthew]], [[John Dougall (actor)|John Dougall]], Ifan Meredith, Sam Pamphilon, [[Liza Sadovy]], Kim Romer, [[Martin Hyder]] and Piers Stubbs
| [[Christopher Matthew]]'s gently comic tale of life in postwar suburban [[Surrey]].
| [[Christopher Matthew]]'s gently comic tale of life in postwar suburban [[Surrey]].
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Woman's Hour Drama]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Woman's Hour Drama]]
Line 514: Line 516:
| 1 December 2007
| 1 December 2007
| ''Gulf''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b008dmv1 BBC – The Wire – ''Gulf'']</ref>
| ''Gulf''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b008dmv1 BBC – The Wire – ''Gulf'']</ref>
| [[Mark Kotting]]
| Mark Kotting
| [[Steven Hartley]], [[Ann Mitchell]], [[Ben Onwukwe]], [[Emma Noakes]], [[Tilly Vosburgh]], [[Simon Treves]] and [[Peter Marinker]]
| [[Steven Hartley]], [[Ann Mitchell]], [[Ben Onwukwe]], Emma Noakes, [[Tilly Vosburgh]], [[Simon Treves]] and Peter Marinker
| Crazy golf takes on a whole new meaning in this fiery portrait of a family in meltdown, as 30 years of smouldering tensions finally reach their flashpoint.
| Crazy golf takes on a whole new meaning in this fiery portrait of a family in meltdown, as 30 years of smouldering tensions finally reach their flashpoint.
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
Line 521: Line 523:
| 3 February 2008
| 3 February 2008
| ''The Devil Was Here Yesterday''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b008w010 BBC – Drama on 3 – ''The Devil Was Here Yesterday'']</ref>
| ''The Devil Was Here Yesterday''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b008w010 BBC – Drama on 3 – ''The Devil Was Here Yesterday'']</ref>
| [[Colin Teevan]]<br>Original music by [[Nikola Kodjabashia]]
| [[Colin Teevan]]<br />Original music by Nikola Kodjabashia
| [[Owen Teale]], [[Haydn Gwynne]], [[Greg Hicks]], [[Stephen Greif]], [[Clare Higgins]], [[Rufus Wright]], [[Alex Lanipekun]], [[Nadine Marshall]], [[Martin Hyder]], [[Nancy Crane]] and [[Laura Molyneux]]
| [[Owen Teale]], [[Haydn Gwynne]], [[Greg Hicks]], [[Stephen Greif]], [[Clare Higgins]], [[Rufus Wright]], [[Alex Lanipekun]], [[Nadine Marshall]], [[Martin Hyder]], Nancy Crane and Laura Molyneux
| Will civil servant Simon deliver the report the evidence appears to support or the report the minister seems to want the evidence to support?
| Will civil servant Simon deliver the report the evidence appears to support or the report the minister seems to want the evidence to support?
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3
Line 529: Line 531:
| ''[[The City Speaks]]: Broken Chain''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b009fxc2 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The City Speaks: Broken Chain'']</ref><ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/arts/thecityspeaks.shtml BBC – Arts and Drama – ''The City Speaks: Broken Chain'']</ref>
| ''[[The City Speaks]]: Broken Chain''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b009fxc2 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The City Speaks: Broken Chain'']</ref><ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/arts/thecityspeaks.shtml BBC – Arts and Drama – ''The City Speaks: Broken Chain'']</ref>
| [[Mark Norfolk]]
| [[Mark Norfolk]]
| [[Jeffery Kissoon]], [[Jimmy Akingbola]], [[Sheri-An Davis]] and [[Troy Glasgow]]
| [[Jeffery Kissoon]], [[Jimmy Akingbola]], Sheri-An Davis and [[Troy Glasgow]]
| Short radio drama based on [[Peter Ackroyd]]'s specially commissioned short story in which the Virgin Mary makes an appearance in the City of London.
| Short radio drama based on [[Peter Ackroyd]]'s specially commissioned short story in which the Virgin Mary makes an appearance in the City of London.
On the day Bert is released from prison, Leon takes him to see the Virgin.
On the day Bert is released from prison, Leon takes him to see the Virgin.
Line 537: Line 539:
| ''Dropping Bombs''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00bz4cm BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Dropping Bombs'']</ref>
| ''Dropping Bombs''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00bz4cm BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Dropping Bombs'']</ref>
| [[Paul Cotter]]
| [[Paul Cotter]]
| [[Rosemary Leach]], [[Nigel Anthony]], [[Ivan Kaye]], [[Susan Engel]], [[Kenneth Collard]] and [[Dan Starkey (actor)|Dan Starkey]]
| [[Rosemary Leach]], [[Nigel Anthony]], [[Ivan Kaye]], [[Susan Engel]], Kenneth Collard and [[Dan Starkey (actor)|Dan Starkey]]
| Sixty five years after a bungled bombing raid, a former RAF pilot, with wife and son in tow, makes the long drive to Germany to deliver an apology.
| Sixty five years after a bungled bombing raid, a former RAF pilot, with wife and son in tow, makes the long drive to Germany to deliver an apology.
The trip turns out to be explosive for all concerned.
The trip turns out to be explosive for all concerned.
Line 544: Line 546:
| 6 July 2008
| 6 July 2008
| ''[[Piper Alpha]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cdbpc BBC – Drama on 3 – ''Piper Alpha'']</ref>
| ''[[Piper Alpha]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cdbpc BBC – Drama on 3 – ''Piper Alpha'']</ref>
| [[Stephen Phelps]]
| Stephen Phelps
| Ewan Bailey, [[Nigel Betts]], [[Kenny Blyth]], [[Mark Bonnar]], [[Liam Brennan]], [[Stephen Critchlow]], [[Ben Crowe]], [[Nyasha Hatendi]], [[Chris Pavlo]], [[Roshan R Rohatgi]], [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]], [[Dan Starkey (actor)|Dan Starkey]], [[John Kay Steel]] and Joan Walker
| Ewan Bailey, [[Nigel Betts]], Kenny Blyth, [[Mark Bonnar]], [[Liam Brennan (actor)|Liam Brennan]], [[Stephen Critchlow]], Ben Crowe, [[Nyasha Hatendi]], [[Chris Pavlo]], Roshan R Rohatgi, [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]], [[Dan Starkey (actor)|Dan Starkey]], John Kay Steel and Joan Walker
| On 6 July 1988, a North Sea oil rig was destroyed by a series of explosions and a massive fire, resulting in the death of 167 men.
| On 6 July 1988, a North Sea oil rig was destroyed by a series of explosions and a massive fire, resulting in the death of 167 men.
Based on [[William Cullen, Baron Cullen of Whitekirk|Lord Cullen]]'s Public Inquiry, the play chronicles the disaster minute-by-minute as it happened 20 years ago.
Based on [[William Cullen, Baron Cullen of Whitekirk|Lord Cullen]]'s Public Inquiry, the play chronicles the disaster minute-by-minute as it happened 20 years ago.
Line 553: Line 555:
| ''One Chord Wonders: Parallel Lines''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cl1q6 BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: Parallel Lines'']</ref>
| ''One Chord Wonders: Parallel Lines''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cl1q6 BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: Parallel Lines'']</ref>
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Doon Mackichan]], [[Siân Reeves]], [[Rosie Cavaliero]], [[Ivan Kaye]], [[Paul Viragh]], [[Joseph Tremain]], [[Sarah Bedi]], [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]] and [[Ben Crowe]]
| [[Doon Mackichan]], [[Siân Reeves]], [[Rosie Cavaliero]], [[Ivan Kaye]], Paul Viragh, [[Joseph Tremain]], Sarah Bedi, [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]] and Ben Crowe
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]'s series of plays about the punk generation 30 years on begins with the story of Julie, the singer in an ageing Blondie tribute band.<br>An invitation to the reunion of the audience at an Adverts gig in 1977 brings some skeletons dancing from the cupboard.
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]'s series of plays about the punk generation 30 years on begins with the story of Julie, the singer in an ageing Blondie tribute band.<br />An invitation to the reunion of the audience at an Adverts gig in 1977 brings some skeletons dancing from the cupboard.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
|- id="One Chord Wonders: Blitzkrieg Bop"
|- id="One Chord Wonders: Blitzkrieg Bop"
Line 560: Line 562:
| ''One Chord Wonders: Blitzkrieg Bop''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cj915 BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: Blitzkrieg Bop'']</ref>
| ''One Chord Wonders: Blitzkrieg Bop''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cj915 BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: Blitzkrieg Bop'']</ref>
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Pauline Quirke]], Adam Kotz, [[Manjinder Virk]], [[Ivan Kaye]], [[Ben Crowe]], [[Harry Myers (actor)|Harry Myers]], [[Sanjay Shelat]], [[Stephen Critchlow]] and [[Amy Enticknap]]
| [[Pauline Quirke]], Adam Kotz, [[Manjinder Virk]], [[Ivan Kaye]], Ben Crowe, Harry Myers, Sanjay Shelat, [[Stephen Critchlow]] and Amy Enticknap
| In 1977, self-styled Mo Motormouth was writing a punk fanzine.<br>She now presents the travel news for a radio station.<br>An attempt to relaunch her ailing career brings some unwelcome attention from her livelier listeners.
| In 1977, self-styled Mo Motormouth was writing a punk fanzine.<br />She now presents the travel news for a radio station.<br />An attempt to relaunch her ailing career brings some unwelcome attention from her livelier listeners.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
|- id="One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned"
|- id="One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned"
Line 567: Line 569:
| ''One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cmb4z BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned'']</ref><ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/insight/downloads/scripts/damned_damned_damned.pdf ''One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned'' – A radio play by Frank Cottrell Boyce (script)]</ref>
| ''One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cmb4z BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned'']</ref><ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/insight/downloads/scripts/damned_damned_damned.pdf ''One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned'' – A radio play by Frank Cottrell Boyce (script)]</ref>
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Richard Ridings]], [[Lloyd Thomas (actor)|Lloyd Thomas]], [[Chris Pavlo]], [[Richie Campbell (actor)|Richie Campbell]], [[Paul Richard Biggin]], [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]] and [[Ben Crowe]]
| [[Richard Ridings]], Lloyd Thomas, [[Chris Pavlo]], [[Richie Campbell (actor)|Richie Campbell]], Paul Richard Biggin, [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]] and Ben Crowe
| Hard man Mick's career in the music business imploded after a brush with an over-enthusiastic fan.
| Hard man Mick's career in the music business imploded after a brush with an over-enthusiastic fan.
Now in prison, can he find salvation in his treasured memories of 'that night' in 1977?
Now in prison, can he find salvation in his treasured memories of 'that night' in 1977?
Line 575: Line 577:
| ''One Chord Wonders: This is the Modern World''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cqj2b BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: This is the Modern World'']</ref>
| ''One Chord Wonders: This is the Modern World''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00cqj2b BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: This is the Modern World'']</ref>
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Danny Webb (actor)|Danny Webb]], [[Stephanie Leonidas]], [[Ann Beach]], [[Carl Prekopp]], [[John Biggins (actor)|John Biggins]], [[Alex Tregear]], [[John Cummins (actor)|John Cummins]], [[Sam Dale]] and [[Liz Sutherland]]
| [[Danny Webb (actor)|Danny Webb]], [[Stephanie Leonidas]], [[Ann Beach]], [[Carl Prekopp]], John Biggins, Alex Tregear, John Cummins, Sam Dale and Liz Sutherland
| Earth toilet pioneer and former 'anarcho-punk' Muttley is living in an eco-commune in Wales with his teenage daughter, Lineel, when an invitation to the reunion turns up. Lineel is desperate to find out more about her late mother's previous life in Camberley. Muttley reluctantly agrees to accompany her on a pilgrimage back to his home town...on foot. There Lineel learns the unlikely truth about her parents' past, as well as getting an abrupt introduction to life in the 'real world' beyond the confines of the commune.
| Earth toilet pioneer and former 'anarcho-punk' Muttley is living in an eco-commune in Wales with his teenage daughter, Lineel, when an invitation to the reunion turns up. Lineel is desperate to find out more about her late mother's previous life in Camberley. Muttley reluctantly agrees to accompany her on a pilgrimage back to his home town...on foot. There Lineel learns the unlikely truth about her parents' past, as well as getting an abrupt introduction to life in the 'real world' beyond the confines of the commune.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
Line 582: Line 584:
| ''One Chord Wonders: Television's Over''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00ctlqf BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: Television's Over'']</ref>
| ''One Chord Wonders: Television's Over''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00ctlqf BBC – Friday Play – ''One Chord Wonders: Television's Over'']</ref>
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Kristopher Milnes]], [[Freddy White]], [[Gerard Horan]], [[Fenella Woolgar]], [[Leanne Rowe]], [[James Daley (actor)|James Daley]], [[Ben Crowe]], [[John Hasler]], [[Amy Enticknap]], [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]], [[Dan Starkey (actor)|Dan Starkey]], [[Nyasha Hatendi]], [[Sarah Bedi]], Joan Walker and [[Tim James (actor)|Tim James]]
| Kristopher Milnes, Freddy White, [[Gerard Horan]], [[Fenella Woolgar]], [[Leanne Rowe]], James Daley, Ben Crowe, [[John Hasler]], Amy Enticknap, [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]], [[Dan Starkey (actor)|Dan Starkey]], [[Nyasha Hatendi]], Sarah Bedi, Joan Walker and Tim James
| March, 1977. Punk rock is rumoured to be arriving in suburban Surrey. Is anarchy about to overwhelm civilized society or is this salvation for the bored teenagers of Camberley?
| March, 1977. Punk rock is rumoured to be arriving in suburban Surrey. Is anarchy about to overwhelm civilized society or is this salvation for the bored teenagers of Camberley?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
Line 588: Line 590:
| 1 September 2008
| 1 September 2008
| ''[[Peter Lorre]] vs [[Eugene Weingand|Peter Lorre]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00d6nds BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Peter Lorre vs Peter Lorre'']</ref>
| ''[[Peter Lorre]] vs [[Eugene Weingand|Peter Lorre]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00d6nds BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Peter Lorre vs Peter Lorre'']</ref>
| [[Michael Butt]]
| Michael Butt
| [[Stephen Greif]], [[Peter Marinker]], [[Helen Longworth]], [[Kenneth Collard]], [[Nathan Osgood]], [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]], [[Kerry Shale]] and [[John Chancer]]
| [[Stephen Greif]], Peter Marinker, [[Helen Longworth]], Kenneth Collard, Nathan Osgood, [[John Rowe (actor)|John Rowe]], [[Kerry Shale]] and John Chancer
| Towards the end of his unique career, movie star [[Peter Lorre]] found himself at the centre of a strange legal case. Incorporating verbatim extracts from the court transcripts, Michael Butt's play wonders what was going through Lorre's troubled mind as he fought to protect his name.
| Towards the end of his unique career, movie star [[Peter Lorre]] found himself at the centre of a strange legal case. Incorporating verbatim extracts from the court transcripts, Michael Butt's play wonders what was going through Lorre's troubled mind as he fought to protect his name.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 596: Line 598:
| ''[[On the Beach (novel)|On The Beach]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00f5vt4 BBC – Classic Serial – ''On The Beach'']</ref>
| ''[[On the Beach (novel)|On The Beach]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00f5vt4 BBC – Classic Serial – ''On The Beach'']</ref>
| [[Nevil Shute]] dramatised by [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]
| [[Nevil Shute]] dramatised by [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]
| [[Richard Dillane]], Claudia Harrison, [[William Hope (actor)|William Hope]], [[Indira Varma]], [[James Gordon-Mitchell]], [[Jonathan Tafler]], [[Inam Mirza]], [[Stephen Critchlow]], [[Chris Pavlo]], [[Dan Starkey (actor)|Dan Starkey]], [[Jill Cardo]], [[Robert Lonsdale]] and [[Gunnar Cauthery]]
| [[Richard Dillane]], Claudia Harrison, [[William Hope (actor)|William Hope]], [[Indira Varma]], James Gordon-Mitchell, Jonathan Tafler, Inam Mirza, [[Stephen Critchlow]], [[Chris Pavlo]], [[Dan Starkey (actor)|Dan Starkey]], Jill Cardo, [[Robert Lonsdale]] and Gunnar Cauthery
| In the aftermath of a nuclear war, a deadly radioactive cloud is moving slowly towards Australia, one of few places on Earth where life still exists.
| In the aftermath of a nuclear war, a deadly radioactive cloud is moving slowly towards Australia, one of few places on Earth where life still exists.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Classic Serial]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Classic Serial]]
Line 603: Line 605:
| ''Flaw in the Motor, Dust in the Blood''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00fl092 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Flaw in the Motor, Dust in the Blood'']</ref>
| ''Flaw in the Motor, Dust in the Blood''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00fl092 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Flaw in the Motor, Dust in the Blood'']</ref>
| [[Trevor Preston]]
| [[Trevor Preston]]
| [[Rory Kinnear]], [[Susan Engel]], [[Fenella Woolgar]], [[Janice Acquah]], [[Paul Rider]], [[Jonathan Tafler]], [[Manjeet Mann]] and [[Inam Mirza]]
| [[Rory Kinnear]], [[Susan Engel]], [[Fenella Woolgar]], Janice Acquah, Paul Rider, Jonathan Tafler, [[Manjeet Mann]] and Inam Mirza
| Exploration of life with bipolar disorder.
| Exploration of life with bipolar disorder.
When Thomas dreams, he's in the world of the crime thriller; his daily life is rather less glamorous.
When Thomas dreams, he's in the world of the crime thriller; his daily life is rather less glamorous.
Line 611: Line 613:
| ''Success Story''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00hvgbt BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Success Story'']</ref>
| ''Success Story''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00hvgbt BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Success Story'']</ref>
| [[Brett Goldstein]]
| [[Brett Goldstein]]
| [[Geoffrey Streatfeild]], [[Caroline Catz]], [[Sasha Pick]] and [[Laurel Lefkow]]
| [[Geoffrey Streatfeild]], [[Caroline Catz]], Sasha Pick and Laurel Lefkow
| When Ray's low-budget film is picked up by a major studio his dreams of Hollywood start to become a reality. Then, holed up in a hotel room doing endless publicity interviews, he finds the past coming back to bite him.
| When Ray's low-budget film is picked up by a major studio his dreams of Hollywood start to become a reality. Then, holed up in a hotel room doing endless publicity interviews, he finds the past coming back to bite him.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 624: Line 626:
| 1 June 2009
| 1 June 2009
| ''The Tent''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00knv8n BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Tent'']</ref>
| ''The Tent''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00knv8n BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Tent'']</ref>
| [[Tom Green (writer)|Tom Green]]
| Tom Green
| [[Siân Reeves]], [[Jeremy Swift]], [[Joanna Scanlan]] and [[Janice Acquah]]
| [[Siân Reeves]], [[Jeremy Swift]], [[Joanna Scanlan]] and Janice Acquah
| Gavin and Fay bravely attempt to plan their long-overdue wedding. It could be in a 19th-century 'medieval' castle or it could be the zoo, but it definitely won't be the church.
| Gavin and Fay bravely attempt to plan their long-overdue wedding. It could be in a 19th-century 'medieval' castle or it could be the zoo, but it definitely won't be the church.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 632: Line 634:
| ''The Art of Deception''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00l3bgx BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – ''The Art of Deception'']</ref>
| ''The Art of Deception''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00l3bgx BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – ''The Art of Deception'']</ref>
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[David Schofield (actor)|David Schofield]], [[Indira Varma]], [[Matt Addis]], [[Jonathan Keeble]], [[Belinda Lang]], [[John Biggins (actor)|John Biggins]], [[Malcolm Tierney]], [[Philip Fox (actor)|Philip Fox]] and [[Benjamin Askew]]
| [[David Schofield (actor)|David Schofield]], [[Indira Varma]], Matt Addis, Jonathan Keeble, [[Belinda Lang]], John Biggins, [[Malcolm Tierney]], [[Philip Fox (actor)|Philip Fox]] and Benjamin Askew
| Notorious art forger Daniel Ballantyne, newly released from prison but now dying, agrees to help art critic Jessica Brown to write a book about forgery.
| Notorious art forger Daniel Ballantyne, newly released from prison but now dying, agrees to help art critic Jessica Brown to write a book about forgery.
So begins a game of cat-and-mouse that will have deadly consequences.
So begins a game of cat-and-mouse that will have deadly consequences.
Line 639: Line 641:
| 29 June 2009
| 29 June 2009
| ''Accomplices''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00lbn9t BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Accomplices'']</ref>
| ''Accomplices''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00lbn9t BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Accomplices'']</ref>
| [[Simon Passmore]]
| Simon Passmore
| Claudia Harrison, [[Emily Joyce]], [[Stephen Hogan]], [[Lizzy Watts]] and [[Paul Rider]]
| Claudia Harrison, [[Emily Joyce]], [[Stephen Hogan]], Lizzy Watts and Paul Rider
| What would you be prepared to do to escape the grind of a life going relentlessly downhill? For former City lawyer Alice, the price is getting higher by the minute.
| What would you be prepared to do to escape the grind of a life going relentlessly downhill? For former City lawyer Alice, the price is getting higher by the minute.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 646: Line 648:
| 11 August 2009
| 11 August 2009
| ''The Mouse House''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00lybnv BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Mouse House'']</ref>
| ''The Mouse House''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00lybnv BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Mouse House'']</ref>
| [[Adrian Penketh]]
| Adrian Penketh
| Adam Kotz, [[Raquel Cassidy]], [[Nicholas Gleaves]], [[Giles Fagan]] and [[Stephen Hogan]]
| Adam Kotz, [[Raquel Cassidy]], [[Nicholas Gleaves]], Giles Fagan and [[Stephen Hogan]]
| Wannabe cultural terrorist Mike is determined to make a splash; make a statement; make more of his life. But has he got what it takes to pull it off and light up the skies above London?
| Wannabe cultural terrorist Mike is determined to make a splash; make a statement; make more of his life. But has he got what it takes to pull it off and light up the skies above London?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 653: Line 655:
| 18 September 2009
| 18 September 2009
| ''The Milk Race''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00mlxfk BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Milk Race'']</ref>
| ''The Milk Race''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00mlxfk BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Milk Race'']</ref>
| [[Mark Tuohy]]
| Mark Tuohy
| [[Ivan Kaye]], [[Amarjit Bassan]], [[Kate Binchy]], [[Mairead Conneely]], [[Melissa Advani]], [[Stephen Hogan]], [[David Hargreaves (actor)|David Hargreaves]], [[Kate Layden]], [[Piers Wehner]], [[Rhys Jennings]], [[Tessa Nicholson]] and [[Emerald O'Hanrahan]]
| [[Ivan Kaye]], Amarjit Bassan, Kate Binchy, Mairead Conneely, Melissa Advani, [[Stephen Hogan]], [[David Hargreaves (actor)|David Hargreaves]], Kate Layden, Piers Wehner, Rhys Jennings, Tessa Nicholson and [[Emerald O'Hanrahan]]
| Two west London milkmen race each other to Bognor Pier in their milk floats to decide which of them wins exclusive rights to their local round.
| Two west London milkmen race each other to Bognor Pier in their milk floats to decide which of them wins exclusive rights to their local round.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 660: Line 662:
| 21 October 2009
| 21 October 2009
| ''Those Hard to Reach Places''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00n8b3n BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Those Hard to Reach Places'']</ref>
| ''Those Hard to Reach Places''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00n8b3n BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Those Hard to Reach Places'']</ref>
| [[Daniel Thurman]]
| Daniel Thurman
| [[Geoffrey Whitehead]], [[Anne Reid]], [[Janet Dibley]], [[Piers Wehner]] and [[Emerald O'Hanrahan]]
| [[Geoffrey Whitehead]], [[Anne Reid]], [[Janet Dibley]], Piers Wehner and [[Emerald O'Hanrahan]]
| 'Cleaner...only dirtier' is a slogan unlikely to be used by your average domestic cleaner. But Rita is anything but your average domestic cleaner; as an unfortunate former mayor is about to discover.
| 'Cleaner...only dirtier' is a slogan unlikely to be used by your average domestic cleaner. But Rita is anything but your average domestic cleaner; as an unfortunate former mayor is about to discover.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 667: Line 669:
| 16 November 2009
| 16 November 2009
| ''Forty-Three Fifty-Nine - Wake''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00nv7j7 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Forty-Three Fifty-Nine - Wake'']</ref><ref>[http://www.comedy.co.uk/guide/radio/forty_three_fifty_nine_wake/details The British Comedy Guide - Radio - ''Forty Three, Fifty Nine: Wake'']</ref>
| ''Forty-Three Fifty-Nine - Wake''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00nv7j7 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Forty-Three Fifty-Nine - Wake'']</ref><ref>[http://www.comedy.co.uk/guide/radio/forty_three_fifty_nine_wake/details The British Comedy Guide - Radio - ''Forty Three, Fifty Nine: Wake'']</ref>
| [[Katie Hims]]
| Katie Hims
| [[Claire Rushbrook]], [[Rachel Davies]], [[John Lightbody]], [[Emily Beecham]], [[Tom Meredith]], [[Kate Fitzgerald]] and [[David Webber]]
| [[Claire Rushbrook]], [[Rachel Davies]], John Lightbody, [[Emily Beecham]], Tom Meredith, [[Kate Fitzgerald]] and David Webber
| The story of Jess' day trip to kiss her dead first love, Danny, goodbye. One lie leads to another and, before they know it, Jess and her mother Avril are in a real pickle.
| The story of Jess' day trip to kiss her dead first love, Danny, goodbye. One lie leads to another and, before they know it, Jess and her mother Avril are in a real pickle.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 675: Line 677:
| ''The Loop''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00nvtzn BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Loop'']</ref>
| ''The Loop''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00nvtzn BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Loop'']</ref>
| [[Nick Perry (writer)|Nick Perry]]
| [[Nick Perry (writer)|Nick Perry]]
| [[Ivan Kaye]], [[Edward Hogg]], [[Peter Marinker]], [[Rhys Jennings]], [[Emerald O'Hanrahan]] and [[Melissa Advani]]
| [[Ivan Kaye]], [[Edward Hogg]], Peter Marinker, Rhys Jennings, [[Emerald O'Hanrahan]] and Melissa Advani
| When a young boy toys with his dad's mobile phone, middle-aged Englishman Nick Perry finds himself speaking to a young stranger called Jim in New York - in 1959. As they talk, they discover that they are both writers: Nick is struggling with his first radio play and Jim's just started on an ambitious new TV show, The Twilight Zone.<br><br>Bronze [[Sony Award]] – Best Drama Production 2010
| When a young boy toys with his dad's mobile phone, middle-aged Englishman Nick Perry finds himself speaking to a young stranger called Jim in New York - in 1959. As they talk, they discover that they are both writers: Nick is struggling with his first radio play and Jim's just started on an ambitious new TV show, The Twilight Zone.<br /><br />Bronze [[Sony Award]] – Best Drama Production 2010
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
|- id="The Hairy Ape"
|- id="The Hairy Ape"
Line 682: Line 684:
| ''[[The Hairy Ape]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00p69gm BBC – Drama on 3 – ''The Hairy Ape'']</ref>
| ''[[The Hairy Ape]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00p69gm BBC – Drama on 3 – ''The Hairy Ape'']</ref>
| [[Eugene O'Neill]]
| [[Eugene O'Neill]]
| [[Dominic West]], [[Shaun Dingwall]], [[Jim Norton (Irish actor)|Jim Norton]], [[Sasha Pick]], [[Annabelle Dowler]], [[John Guerrasio]], [[John Kay Steel]], [[Joe Montana]], [[Matt Addis]], [[David Hargreaves (actor)|David Hargreaves]], [[Stephen Hogan]], [[Benjamin Askew]] and [[Philip Fox (actor)|Philip Fox]]
| [[Dominic West]], [[Shaun Dingwall]], [[Jim Norton (Irish actor)|Jim Norton]], Sasha Pick, [[Annabelle Dowler]], [[John Guerrasio]], John Kay Steel, [[Joe Montana]], Matt Addis, [[David Hargreaves (actor)|David Hargreaves]], [[Stephen Hogan]], Benjamin Askew and [[Philip Fox (actor)|Philip Fox]]
| Classic American expressionist drama from 1921. The play tells the tragic tale of Yank, a stoker whose whole world is turned upside down when a young heiress ventures into the engine room of a transatlantic ocean liner.
| Classic American expressionist drama from 1921. The play tells the tragic tale of Yank, a stoker whose whole world is turned upside down when a young heiress ventures into the engine room of a transatlantic ocean liner.
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3
Line 688: Line 690:
| 10 April 2010
| 10 April 2010
| ''The Believers''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00rv6nd BBC – Saturday Play – ''The Believers'']</ref>
| ''The Believers''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00rv6nd BBC – Saturday Play – ''The Believers'']</ref>
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]<br>Original music by [[Carl Hunter]] and [[Mel Bowen]]
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]<br />Original music by [[Carl Hunter]] and Mel Bowen
| [[Ray Quinn]], [[Samantha Robinson (English actress)|Samantha Robinson]], [[Kieran Lynn]], [[John Biggins (actor)|John Biggins]], [[Rufus Wright]], [[Gary Bleasdale]], [[Alison Pettitt]], [[Joanna Monro]], [[David Seddon]], [[Laura Molyneux]], [[Jill Cardo]] and [[Keely Beresford]]
| [[Ray Quinn]], [[Samantha Robinson (English actress)|Samantha Robinson]], Kieran Lynn, John Biggins, [[Rufus Wright]], [[Gary Bleasdale]], Alison Pettitt, [[Joanna Monro]], [[David Seddon]], Laura Molyneux, Jill Cardo and Keely Beresford
| Liverpool, 1963. The Merseybeat boom is about to take off. And with it, The Believers, a Christian pop band determined to spread the Word. If only they were all singing from the same hymn sheet.
| Liverpool, 1963. The Merseybeat boom is about to take off. And with it, The Believers, a Christian pop band determined to spread the Word. If only they were all singing from the same hymn sheet.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Saturday Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Saturday Play]]
Line 695: Line 697:
| 30 April 2010
| 30 April 2010
| ''The Weighing Room''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00s3hrm BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Weighing Room'']</ref>
| ''The Weighing Room''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00s3hrm BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The Weighing Room'']</ref>
| [[Justin Hopper]]
| Justin Hopper
| [[Lloyd Hutchinson]], [[Michael Legge (actor)|Michael Legge]], [[James Weaver (actor)|James Weaver]], [[Paul Rider]], [[David Seddon]], [[Alison Pettitt]], [[Nigel Hastings]], [[Joanna Monro]], [[Bruce Alexander (actor)|Bruce Alexander]], [[Michael Shelford]] and [[Keely Beresford]]
|Lloyd Hutchinson, [[Michael Legge (actor)|Michael Legge]], James Weaver, Paul Rider, [[David Seddon]], Alison Pettitt, Nigel Hastings, [[Joanna Monro]], [[Bruce Alexander (actor)|Bruce Alexander]], Michael Shelford and Keely Beresford
| Noel is a jump jockey anxious to get his career back on track after a spell on the sidelines. Just what does it take to survive in the demanding and dangerous world of National Hunt racing?
| Noel is a jump jockey anxious to get his career back on track after a spell on the sidelines. Just what does it take to survive in the demanding and dangerous world of National Hunt racing?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 702: Line 704:
| 10 July 2010
| 10 July 2010
| ''Going to Ground''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00syrn5 BBC – Saturday Play – ''Going to Ground'']</ref>
| ''Going to Ground''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00syrn5 BBC – Saturday Play – ''Going to Ground'']</ref>
| [[Simon Passmore]]
| Simon Passmore
| [[Ivan Kaye]], [[Anthony Flanagan]], [[Rupert Evans]], [[Guy Henry (actor)|Guy Henry]], [[Joshua Jenkin]], [[Alison Pettitt]], [[Christine Kavanagh]] and [[Sam Dale]]
| [[Ivan Kaye]], [[Anthony Flanagan]], [[Rupert Evans]], [[Guy Henry (actor)|Guy Henry]], Joshua Jenkin, Alison Pettitt, [[Christine Kavanagh]] and Sam Dale
| 1940, Kent. England is on full alert in anticipation of a German invasion. As church bells sound the alarm, a secret resistance unit springs into action. Whatever happens, none of them expects to see their families again.
| 1940, Kent. England is on full alert in anticipation of a German invasion. As church bells sound the alarm, a secret resistance unit springs into action. Whatever happens, none of them expects to see their families again.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Saturday Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Saturday Play]]
Line 710: Line 712:
| ''[[No Highway]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00tf9nr BBC – Classic Serial – ''No Highway'']</ref>
| ''[[No Highway]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00tf9nr BBC – Classic Serial – ''No Highway'']</ref>
| [[Nevil Shute]] dramatised by [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]
| [[Nevil Shute]] dramatised by [[Mike Walker (radio dramatist)|Mike Walker]]
| [[William Beck (actor)|William Beck]], [[Alison Pettitt]], [[Paul Ritter (actor)|Paul Ritter]], [[Naomi Frederick]], [[Fenella Woolgar]], [[Lauren Mote]], [[Tony Bell (actor)|Tony Bell]], [[William Hope (actor)|William Hope]], [[Jude Akuwudike]], [[Sean Baker (actor)|Sean Baker]], [[Sam Dale]], [[Michael Shelford]], [[David Seddon]] and [[Christine Kavanagh]]
| [[William Beck (actor)|William Beck]], Alison Pettitt, [[Paul Ritter (actor)|Paul Ritter]], [[Naomi Frederick]], [[Fenella Woolgar]], [[Lauren Mote]], Tony Bell, [[William Hope (actor)|William Hope]], [[Jude Akuwudike]], Sean Baker, Sam Dale, Michael Shelford, [[David Seddon]] and [[Christine Kavanagh]]
| 1948. The future of Britain's transatlantic aviation industry rests on the success of a new plane - the Rutland Reindeer. One has crashed already and an eccentric government scientist believes more will follow. The race is on to prove his theory before Reindeers start to fell from the sky.
| 1948. The future of Britain's transatlantic aviation industry rests on the success of a new plane - the Rutland Reindeer. One has crashed already and an eccentric government scientist believes more will follow. The race is on to prove his theory before Reindeers start to fell from the sky.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Classic Serial]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Classic Serial]]
Line 716: Line 718:
| 22 September 2010
| 22 September 2010
| ''For Ever England''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00tt5wc BBC – Afternoon Play – ''For Ever England'']</ref>
| ''For Ever England''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00tt5wc BBC – Afternoon Play – ''For Ever England'']</ref>
| [[Tom Green (writer)|Tom Green]]
| Tom Green
| [[Gerard Horan]], [[Claire Harry]], [[Tracie Bennett]], [[Alison Pettitt]] and [[Carl Rice]]
| [[Gerard Horan]], Claire Harry, [[Tracie Bennett]], Alison Pettitt and [[Carl Rice]]
| Now living abroad, Steve discovers his estranged son Matt has been killed serving in Afghanistan. He returns to England anxious to do the right thing. But how do you begin to grieve for a child you never really knew?
| Now living abroad, Steve discovers his estranged son Matt has been killed serving in Afghanistan. He returns to England anxious to do the right thing. But how do you begin to grieve for a child you never really knew?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 724: Line 726:
| ''The Art of Deception''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00wp4x6 BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – ''The Art of Deception'']</ref>
| ''The Art of Deception''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00wp4x6 BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – ''The Art of Deception'']</ref>
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[Philip Palmer]]
| [[David Schofield (actor)|David Schofield]], [[Hattie Morahan]], [[Matt Addis]], [[Harry Myers (actor)|Harry Myers]], [[Stephen Greif]], [[Pandora Colin]], [[Jude Akuwudike]], [[Sally Orrock]] and [[Iain Batchelor]]
| [[David Schofield (actor)|David Schofield]], [[Hattie Morahan]], Matt Addis, Harry Myers, [[Stephen Greif]], Pandora Colin, [[Jude Akuwudike]], Sally Orrock and Iain Batchelor
| Two years after faking his own death, notorious art forger and conman Daniel Ballantyne re-emerges to resume his cat and mouse game with biographer Jessica Brown.
| Two years after faking his own death, notorious art forger and conman Daniel Ballantyne re-emerges to resume his cat and mouse game with biographer Jessica Brown.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Woman's Hour Drama]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Woman's Hour Drama]]
Line 730: Line 732:
| 21 January 2011
| 21 January 2011
| ''[[La Peau de Chagrin|The Wild Ass's Skin Reloaded]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00xj18k BBC – Friday Play – ''The Wild Ass's Skin Reloaded'']</ref>
| ''[[La Peau de Chagrin|The Wild Ass's Skin Reloaded]]''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00xj18k BBC – Friday Play – ''The Wild Ass's Skin Reloaded'']</ref>
| [[Honoré de Balzac]] adapted by [[Adrian Penketh]]
| [[Honoré de Balzac]] adapted by Adrian Penketh
| [[Elliot Cowan]], [[Naomi Frederick]], [[Don Gilet]], [[Chris Porter (actor)|Chris Porter]], [[Inam Mirza]], [[Lloyd Thomas (actor)|Lloyd Thomas]], [[Sally Orrock]], [[Jude Akuwudike]] and [[Christine Kavanagh]]
| [[Elliot Cowan]], [[Naomi Frederick]], [[Don Gilet]], Chris Porter, Inam Mirza, Lloyd Thomas, Sally Orrock, [[Jude Akuwudike]] and [[Christine Kavanagh]]
| Balzac's classic novel is relocated to contemporary London. Rupert, an unemployed investment banker, is distracted from his suicidal despair by a magic skin which can grant his every wish. Inevitably, there is a price to pay.
| Balzac's classic novel is relocated to contemporary London. Rupert, an unemployed investment banker, is distracted from his suicidal despair by a magic skin which can grant his every wish. Inevitably, there is a price to pay.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
| [[BBC Radio 4]] Friday Play
Line 737: Line 739:
| 6 February 2011
| 6 February 2011
| ''Massistonia''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00y6ggj BBC – Drama on 3 – ''Massistonia'']</ref>
| ''Massistonia''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00y6ggj BBC – Drama on 3 – ''Massistonia'']</ref>
| [[Colin Teevan]]<br>Original music by [[Nikola Kodjabashia]]
| [[Colin Teevan]]<br />Original music by Nikola Kodjabashia
| [[Darren Boyd]], [[Nikola Kodjabashia]], Ewan Bailey, [[Sasha C. Damjanovski]], [[Dolya Gavanski]], [[Ivan Marevich]], [[Iain Batchelor]] and [[Leah Brotherhead]]
| [[Darren Boyd]], Nikola Kodjabashia, Ewan Bailey, Sasha C. Damjanovski, [[Dolya Gavanski]], Ivan Marevich, Iain Batchelor and Leah Brotherhead
| A tale of Western hubris and Eastern European manipulation of the system, 'Massistonia' follows an English theatre director and his creative team as they try to mount an international touring production of 'Alcmaeon in Corinth'. He embarks on the project with little idea of the forces about to be unleashed against him.
| A tale of Western hubris and Eastern European manipulation of the system, 'Massistonia' follows an English theatre director and his creative team as they try to mount an international touring production of 'Alcmaeon in Corinth'. He embarks on the project with little idea of the forces about to be unleashed against him.
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3
| [[BBC Radio 3]] Drama on 3
Line 745: Line 747:
| ''Small Acts of Kindness''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00zdl22 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Small Acts of Kindness'']</ref>
| ''Small Acts of Kindness''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00zdl22 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''Small Acts of Kindness'']</ref>
| [[Trevor Preston]]
| [[Trevor Preston]]
| [[Stephen Greif]], [[Ann Beach]], [[Susan Penhaligon]], [[Joanna Monro]], [[Sean Baker (actor)|Sean Baker]], [[Gethin Anthony]], [[Sally Orrock]] and [[Christine Kavanagh]]
| [[Stephen Greif]], [[Ann Beach]], [[Susan Penhaligon]], [[Joanna Monro]], Sean Baker, [[Gethin Anthony]], Sally Orrock and [[Christine Kavanagh]]
| In the late 1950s Charlie was a violent and uncontrollable entrant to art school. His teacher changed the course of his life. In his late sixties his mentor's death shifts everything once more.
| In the late 1950s Charlie was a violent and uncontrollable entrant to art school. His teacher changed the course of his life. In his late sixties his mentor's death shifts everything once more.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 751: Line 753:
| 8 June 2011
| 8 June 2011
| ''The 40 Year Twitch''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b011pkg2 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The 40 Year Twitch'']</ref><ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/radio4/2011/06/afternoon_play_the_40_year_twi.html BBC – Radio 4 and 4 Extra Blog: Afternoon Play: ''The 40 Year Twitch'' by Daniel Thurman]</ref>
| ''The 40 Year Twitch''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b011pkg2 BBC – Afternoon Play – ''The 40 Year Twitch'']</ref><ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/radio4/2011/06/afternoon_play_the_40_year_twi.html BBC – Radio 4 and 4 Extra Blog: Afternoon Play: ''The 40 Year Twitch'' by Daniel Thurman]</ref>
| [[Daniel Thurman]]
| Daniel Thurman
| [[Paula Wilcox]], [[Philip Jackson (actor)|Philip Jackson]], [[Anne Reid]] and [[Brian Bowles (actor)|Brian Bowles]]
| [[Paula Wilcox]], [[Philip Jackson (actor)|Philip Jackson]], [[Anne Reid]] and Brian Bowles
| When Yvonne loses her job at the age of 64, she starts to fear that husband Neil's devotion to birding - birdwatching to the uninitiated - is actually all about escaping her and their humdrum life together. Thus begins a somewhat overenthusiastic pursuit of the truth as she trains her binoculars firmly on Neil's every move. Can best friend Wendy bring her back to earth?
| When Yvonne loses her job at the age of 64, she starts to fear that husband Neil's devotion to birding - birdwatching to the uninitiated - is actually all about escaping her and their humdrum life together. Thus begins a somewhat overenthusiastic pursuit of the truth as she trains her binoculars firmly on Neil's every move. Can best friend Wendy bring her back to earth?
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Afternoon Play]]
Line 759: Line 761:
| ''Life After Life''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00jnf09 BBC – BBC World Drama – ''Life After Life'']</ref>
| ''Life After Life''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00jnf09 BBC – BBC World Drama – ''Life After Life'']</ref>
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Frank Cottrell Boyce]]
| [[Gbemi Ikumelo]], [[Don Gilet|Don Gilèt]], [[Damian Lynch (actor)|Damian Lynch]], [[Elaine Claxton]], [[Susie Riddell]], [[Alex Tregear]], [[Carl Prekopp]] and [[Gerard McDermott]]
| Gbemi Ikumelo, [[Don Gilet|Don Gilèt]], Damian Lynch, Elaine Claxton, Susie Riddell, Alex Tregear, [[Carl Prekopp]] and Gerard McDermott
| Miranda was undergoing what should have been a routine operation.<br>Now she finds herself 'on the other side', but whatever notions of what the future might hold beyond her life on Earth Miranda may have had, they were certainly not like this.<br>It's not even her afterlife, it's Toby's and he's in control.<br>Inspired by the ways that internet users are increasingly responding to death online, Frank Cottrell Boyce's comic drama follows Miranda as she tries to make sense of the strange cyberworld she has been sucked into.
| Miranda was undergoing what should have been a routine operation.<br />Now she finds herself 'on the other side', but whatever notions of what the future might hold beyond her life on Earth Miranda may have had, they were certainly not like this.<br />It's not even her afterlife, it's Toby's and he's in control.<br />Inspired by the ways that internet users are increasingly responding to death online, Frank Cottrell Boyce's comic drama follows Miranda as she tries to make sense of the strange cyberworld she has been sucked into.
| [[BBC World Service]] BBC World Drama<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0043kb2 BBC – BBC World Drama]</ref>
| [[BBC World Service]] BBC World Drama<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0043kb2 BBC – BBC World Drama]</ref>
|- id="September in the Rain"
|- id="September in the Rain"
Line 766: Line 768:
| ''September in the Rain''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0144pw7 BBC – Saturday Play – ''September in the Rain'']</ref><ref>[http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/33067/godbers-to-reprise-marital-drama-for-radio-4 ''Godbers to reprise marital drama for Radio 4 debut'', Matthew Hemley, The Stage, 28 July 2011]</ref><ref>[http://www.thestage.co.uk/features/feature.php/33429/radio-drama ''Radio – Drama'', Moira Petty, The Stage, 7 September 2011]</ref>
| ''September in the Rain''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0144pw7 BBC – Saturday Play – ''September in the Rain'']</ref><ref>[http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/33067/godbers-to-reprise-marital-drama-for-radio-4 ''Godbers to reprise marital drama for Radio 4 debut'', Matthew Hemley, The Stage, 28 July 2011]</ref><ref>[http://www.thestage.co.uk/features/feature.php/33429/radio-drama ''Radio – Drama'', Moira Petty, The Stage, 7 September 2011]</ref>
| [[John Godber]]
| [[John Godber]]
| [[John Godber]] and [[Jane Godber]]
| [[John Godber]] and Jane Godber
| Jack and Liz are in Blackpool for one last time. [[John Godber]]'s classic stage play tells the touching and funny story of a marriage through a lifetime of holidays together.
| Jack and Liz are in Blackpool for one last time. [[John Godber]]'s classic stage play tells the touching and funny story of a marriage through a lifetime of holidays together.
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Saturday Play]]
| [[BBC Radio 4]] [[Saturday Play]]
Line 772: Line 774:
| 15 October 2011
| 15 October 2011
| ''The Last Executioner''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b015ygnr BBC – The Wire – ''The Last Executioner'']</ref>
| ''The Last Executioner''<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b015ygnr BBC – The Wire – ''The Last Executioner'']</ref>
| [[Peter-Jakob Kelting]]
| Peter-Jakob Kelting
| [[Paul Copley]], [[Ralph Ineson]], [[Bryan Dick]], [[Simon Bubb]] and [[Kenneth Collard]]
| [[Paul Copley]], [[Ralph Ineson]], [[Bryan Dick]], Simon Bubb and Kenneth Collard
| Switzerland, 1938. Triple murderer Paul Irniger has been sentenced to death. Over 120 men have spontaneously applied to be his executioner. Based on research by a psychiatrist at the time, Peter-Jakob Kelting's play imagines 5 of the applicants competing for the job.
| Switzerland, 1938. Triple murderer Paul Irniger has been sentenced to death. Over 120 men have spontaneously applied to be his executioner. Based on research by a psychiatrist at the time, Peter-Jakob Kelting's play imagines 5 of the applicants competing for the job.
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
| [[BBC Radio 3]] The Wire
Line 787: Line 789:
|-
|-
|}
|}
'''Notes:'''<br><references group=Note/>
'''Notes:'''<br /><references group=Note/>


'''Sources:'''
'''Sources:'''
Line 797: Line 799:


{{DEFAULTSORT:Swift, Toby}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Swift, Toby}}
[[Category:BBC Radio drama directors]]
[[Category:Radio directors]]
[[Category:BBC radio producers]]
[[Category:BBC radio producers]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]

Latest revision as of 16:45, 3 November 2024

Toby Swift is a radio drama director and producer for BBC Radio. His numerous credits, from 1999 to 2011, include the crime dramas The Recall Man and Trueman and Riley. He also directs contemporary and periodic radio dramas.

He won the Prix Italia for Adapted Drama in 2004 for M, and again in 2005 for My Arm and for a third time in 2007 for Metropolis.[1] The Loop won a Bronze Sony Radio Academy Award for Best Drama Production in 2010.

Radio plays

[edit]
Radio Plays Directed or Produced by Toby Swift
Date first broadcast Play Author Cast Synopsis
Awards
Station
Series
20 January 1999 Goodbye Moses Jennie Buckman Andrew Rajan, Dominic Carter, Angela Wynter, Giles Fagan and Elizabeth Conboy As London swelters in a heatwave, Moses Perkes, a Trinidadian ghost, embarks on a quest to find his killers. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play[2]
12 July 1999 For The Love Of Strangers Susan Stern Kathryn Hunt, Robin Bowerman and Brigit Forsyth Amidst the chaos of a family weekend, Jayne stumbles upon a dark and little-known episode in York's rich history – the 12th-century massacre of the city's Jewish population. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
13 September 1999 – 8 October 1999 Vital Signs[Note 1] Sarah Woods and Peter Straughan Rachel Davies, Gillian Hanna, Derek Walmsley and Keith Drinkel Carol Weaver, chief executive of the Nightingale NHS Trust, balances a difficult home life with complex issues of millennium planning. BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour Drama[3]
30 June 2000 Gin and Rum Philip Palmer Caroline Catz and Philip Whitchurch Every weekday Judy and Bob meet on the roof of a London office block for their lunch break.

This romantic ghost story scratches beneath the surface of two lonely lives, offering a tantalising glimpse of the secrets of the city.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
8 September 2000 The Salt March Nasser Memarzia Paul Bhattacharjee, Josephine Welcome and Kulvinder Ghir On 12 March 1930, Gandhi and 78 volunteers set out from Sabarmati Ashram to walk the 240 miles to Dandi in protest at the British-imposed salt laws. This bid to unite the Indian independence movement meant some difficult decisions for those in the villages en route. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
14 September 2000 Pot Shot Jennie Buckman Katy Cavanagh and Jonathan Coy Hannah and Martin are trying for a baby. Unfortunately Hannah is trying rather harder than Martin whose behaviour becomes ever more strange the further down the road to fertility treatment the couple goes. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
8 December 2000 Soap Gets In Your Eyes Brian B Thompson Michelle Holmes, Peter-Hugo Daly and Duncan Preston Danny is the chief storyliner on the nation's best-loved soap. It is his life, and he is even engaged to its wholesome leading lady. But when a new, hard-nosed, ratings-chasing producer arrives, his cosy life is turned upside down. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play[4]
29 December 2000 The League of Gentlemen John Boland adapted for radio by Mike Walker Jonathan Coy, Raymond Coulthard and Adam Kotz A decade after the end of the Second World War, ex-major Gregory Hemmings recruits a team of disgraced former army officers to undertake a daring raid on a central London bank. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
23 January 2001 Fallen Philip Palmer Owen Teale, Francine Morgan, Robert Pugh and Steven Meo Raymond Thomas quickly rose to become the youngest bank manager in South Wales. But then he had an affair, stole money, lost his job and went to jail. Can his family and the town accept him back, after he has so betrayed their trust? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
16 March 2001 Ecce Homo – Behold The Man! David Napthine Paul Bown, Helen Atkinson Wood, Philip Whitchurch and Rachel Atkins Comedy in which Birmingham decides to appoint a philosopher-in-residence in a bid to improve its intellectual standing. From the moment when free thinker Diogenes Walker steps through the door, chaos envelops City Hall. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
28 April 2001 City of Spades Colin MacInnes adapted by Biyi Bandele Chiwetel Ejiofor, Raymond Coulthard, Ray Fearon and Clare Corbett Nigerian immigrant Johnny finds himself caught up in the new ethnic subculture in 50s London. BBC Radio 4 Saturday Play[5]
17 June 2001 The Conquest of the South Manfred Karge adapted by Anthony Vivis, from the translation by Anthony Vivis and Tinch Minter
Music by Simon Fraser
Matthew Dunster, James Weaver, Ralf Little, Andrew Lancel, Katy Cavanagh, Nicholas Gleaves, Lucy Akhurst and John Lightbody Four of society's rejects seek to escape the depressing emptiness of their lives by acting out Amundsen's famous expedition to the South Pole. BBC Radio 4
8 August 2001 – 12 September 2001[Note 2] Steven Appleby's Normal Life[6]
(Six episodes)
Steven Appleby Paul McCrink, Rachel Atkins, Nigel Betts and Rosalind Paul Cartoonist Steven Appleby takes an abnormal look at everyday life. BBC Radio 4
30 September 2001 – 7 October 2001 The Faerie Queene Edmund Spenser dramatised by Philip Palmer Simon Russell Beale and Holly Aird Inventive dramatisation of Edmund Spenser's towering Elizabethan epic poem. BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial[7]
27 November 2001 The Present Jackie Pavlenko Kathryn Hunt, Alice Gardiner, Christine Brennan, Jim Millea, James Swanton Eva's life is a chaotic whirl of missed appointments and mad dashes as she tries to keep up with the demands of her children, her work and her withering social life.

But only when she starts to keep a diary does the real problem emerge.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
7 December 2001 Doctor Joe Aston Investigates[8] David Napthine Jeremy Swift, Rosie Cavaliero, Carolyn Pickles, Colin MacLachlan, Paul Brennen and Sue Scott Davison Scientist Grace Hayle and her boss were working alone in the laboratory. Now he's dead and she's the only suspect in a murder case. She claims to have no memory of what happened and there's little evidence to go on. Forensic psychologist Dr Joe Aston, an expert in "recovered memory", attempts to uncover the truth.


This single play later developed into The Recall Man series.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
4 January 2002 The Condition of the Virgin Boothby Graffoe Jason Isaacs and Nicholas McGaughey Theological satire about a statue which shows some odd changes. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
17 April 2002 Trueman Brian B Thompson Robert Daws, Duncan Preston, Polly Hemingway, Katy Cavanagh, Richard Lintern and Sandra Clark Was the murder of a student a drug wars killing, or are more sinister forces at work? The investigation falls to Trueman, a former high-flying detective.


This single play later developed into the Trueman and Riley series.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
23 April 2002 The King's Coiner[9] Philip Palmer Ian McDiarmid, Katy Cavanagh, Barnaby Kay, Jeremy Swift, Freddie Annobil-Dodoo, Peter Marinker and Colin Adrian True life detective drama about Isaac Newton. By the 1690s Isaac Newton, already the world's greatest mathematician, was hungry for a new challenge and became Warden of the Royal Mint. His pursuit of London's most notorious counterfeiter, William Chaloner, confirmed him as a man prepared to go to any lengths to solve a problem. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
13 September 2002 Man with Travel Hairdryer[10] Katie Hims The lives of many people are changed forever after an unarmed man is mistakenly shot dead by a police officer. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
7 November 2002 Tricycles Colin Teevan Laura Hughes, Conleth Hill, Cathy White, Abigail McGibbon, Nikki Doherty, Darran Williams, Packy Lee, Hannah R Gordon, Dario Angelone, Richard Dormer, Roger Jennings, Stella McCusker and Oisin Teevan Colin Teevan's impressionistic and fast-moving drama dips in and out of everyday lives in Belfast to create a picture of a city and its people as they seek to make their modest dreams a reality.

A suspected meningitis outbreak turns lives and routines on their head, perhaps for years to come.

BBC Radio 3 The Wire[11]
19 December 2002 Full English Brian B Thompson Ray Burdis, Sheyla Shehovich, Bruce Byron, Sharon Duce and Ewan Bailey Terry and Inna meet through a Russian internet dating agency. When she visits him in London, they are both in for some surprises. She's expecting opportunity and prosperity, but it doesn't always work out like that. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
2 February 2003 M[12] Thea von Harbou and Fritz Lang adapted by Peter Straughan John Lightbody, Kevin McKidd, Nicholas Woodeson, Mark Lewis Jones, Jonathan Tafler, Gilly Tompkins, Ewan Bailey, Peter Marinker, Michael Wildman, Clare Corbett, Ben Crowe, Rebecca Manley, Cressida Whyte, Emily Button, Gregg Prentice, Ruby Stokes and Jack Durrant Berlin is gripped with fear as a murderer preys on the city's children against a backdrop of political turbulence and rising criminality.
Fritz Lang's cinema classic has been voted the most important German film of all time in its home country.
Peter Straughan's kaleidoscopic adaptation exploits the emphasis Lang placed on sound in his first steps beyond the silent movie era.

Won the Prix Italia for Adapted Drama in 2004.[1]
BBC Radio 3 Drama on 3[13]
19 February 2003 – 26 March 2003 Steven Appleby's Normal Life (Series 2)[14]
(Six episodes)
Steven Appleby Paul McCrink, Rachel Atkins, Nigel Betts and Rosalind Paul Cartoonist Steven Appleby takes an abnormal look at everyday life. BBC Radio 4
1 May 2003 Creamie[15] Luke Sutherland Clive Russell, Sophie Okonedo, Matthew Dunster, Indira Varma, Nicola Stapleton and Derek Ezenagu As Glasgow cop Tony finds a surveillance operation unravelling spectacularly, his thoughts return to last summer and a turbulent reunion with the daughter he'd only seen once since her birth. BBC Radio 3 The Wire
11 July 2003 At the Beach Tom Kelly Gerard Horan, Glyn Grimstead, Ben Tibber, Joseph Tremain and Ray Lonnen Thirty years after they were last there, childhood friends Roy and Danny journey back to the remote beach where they shared an experience, and a secret, that has shaped their lives ever since. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
9 September 2003 Madonna's Plumber Christopher Matthew Robert Daws and Ted Robbins Nigel Breezer, the self-styled plumber to the stars and star among plumbers, takes a tortuous trip to a film premiere in a courtesy limo giving him ample opportunity to give us the benefit of an insider's view of the famous and not-so-famous, as well as a few tricks of the trade. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
15 September 2003 A Fire in the West Michael Butt Ken Sharrock, Kate Fitzgerald, Lucy Akhurst and David K S Tse Ciera Thomas set herself alight outside the Ministry of Defence, apparently in protest at a recent arms deal.

There were no warnings, no final farewells. Three years later those left behind, her father, mother, sister, and a former boyfriend, bear witness to a shocking event, as they continue to try to make sense of what happened.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
31 October 2003 Making Waves[16] David Napthine Jeremy Swift, Paul Brennen, Andrew Harrison, James Gaddas and Elizabeth Carling A diver suddenly remembers what he thinks was a murder. Forensic psychologist Dr Joe Aston must try to make sense of his confused memory of that night. When the case reaches court, they both face tough sessions in the witness box. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
25 November 2003 Wild Lunch Katie Hims Claudia Harrison, Ben Miles, Richenda Carey, Ian Masters, Stephen Critchlow, Tracey Wiles and Kenny Blyth A terribly civilised English lunch party gradually disintegrates on the day a man is hanged by an unspecified government. Even when the world is falling apart around them, there are those who will cling to the reality which suits them. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
14 December 2003 Serjeant Musgrave's Dance John Arden
Original music by Simon Fraser
Iain Glen, Shaun Dooley, Paul Copley, Edward Hogg, Carolyn Pickles, James Weaver, Roger Walker, Katy Cavanagh, John Banks, Paul Rider, Jeremy Swift, John Davitt and Nick Malinowski Four soldiers arrive in a strike-bound mining town intent on convincing its inhabitants that the violence and killing being perpetrated across the colonies in their name is wrong. BBC Radio 3 Drama on 3
17 January 2004 The IPCRESS File[17][18] Len Deighton dramatised by Mike Walker Ian Hart, James Laurenson, Jonathan Coy, Fenella Woolgar, Peter Marinker, Jamie Bamber, Kerry Shale, Adam Tedder, Rachel Atkins, John Sharian, Raad Rawi and Declan Wilson Len Deighton's gripping cold war thriller became a popular icon of British cinema.

Mike Walker's dramatisation re-discovers the novel and its unnamed and defiantly non-establishment narrator as his new job in the intelligence service ensnares him in a plot to brainwash scientists and trade them across the iron curtain.

BBC Radio 4 Saturday Play
18 February 2004 The Travels of Marco Polo Philip Palmer Conleth Hill and Paul Rhys Marco Polo's famous and controversial book was written in a prison in Genoa at the end of the 13th century. It became one of the most popular in Europe, despite the common view that it was full of extravagant invention. Perhaps this account of Marco's relationship with the sceptical cellmate who wrote it all down involves a little invention too? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
23 April 2004 The Lights Mark Tuohy Luke Hamill, Cal MacAninch, Clare Cathcart, Marion Bailey, John Banks, Becky Hindley and Narinder Samra Paul and Liam used to be best mates.

Perhaps by the end of their weekend in Blackpool they'll have learnt to have a laugh together again. But it won't be easy not least because they've barely seen each other since the accident that changed their lives.

BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
5 June 2004 The Long Wait[19] Sarah Daniels, based on a story by Mike Walker In Normandy on 5 June 1944, Nicole is getting ready to go out with her German boyfriend, despite the nightly air raids. A German army band is throwing a jazz concert in a hall in Caen when the singer, Mitzi, is called away on urgent business by Father Pierre. He is the blind, elderly padre who realises that his cover as a double agent has been blown, just as coded messages are coming through to the French resistance that the invasion is about to happen. BBC Radio 4
1 July 2004 My Arm[20] Tim Crouch
soundscape by Chris Dorley-Brown
Tim Crouch and Owen Crouch 'At the age of ten, for want of anything more meaningful to do, I put my arm above my head and kept it there.
Now thirty years on, I'm so full of meaning, it's killing me.'
This is a study of bloody-mindedness, modern art and how the things we do when we're ten stick with us for life.

Won the Prix Italia for Adapted Drama in 2005.[1]
BBC Radio 3 The Wire
11 July 2004 How Many Miles to Basra?[21][22][23] Colin Teevan Michelle Fairley and Cal MacAninch Set in Iraq in April 2003, a new drama exploring the aftermath of a fictional incident at a checkpoint near Basra. BBC Radio 3 Drama on 3
6 December 2004 Lifestyles of the Trapped and Cabbaged Roy Boulter Paul Bown, Jeff Rawle and Wai-Keat Lau Two holidaying accountants leave their wives in the lurch when they manage to get trapped in a Shanghai warehouse for days. Never have the social lives of the Cheshire set seemed so important. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
23 December 2004 Steven Appleby's Normal Christmas[24] Steven Appleby Paul McCrink, Rosalind Paul, Nigel Betts, Ewan Bailey and Rachel Atkins A Christmas special of Steven Appleby's Normal Life, in which Steven meets Father Christmas and his unfaithful wife, and finds out about legal problems regarding the toys the elves make. BBC Radio 4
27 December 2004 Boxing Clever Mike Yeaman Thelma Barlow, Jeremy Swift, Edward Hogg, Helen Longworth and Paul McCrink Wily pensioner Amy may be at the front of the queue for the Boxing Day sales, but she's going to have to work hard to get the better of the rival bargain hunters camping overnight outside Marshall's department store. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
16 March 2005 – 6 April 2005 The Great Pursuit
(Four episodes)
Tom Sharpe dramatised by Ryan Craig Mark Heap, Laurel Lefkow, Adam Godley, John Guerrasio, Sandra Dickinson, Nicholas Boulton, Susan Engel, Susan Jameson, Emily Wachter, Kerry Shale, Hugh Dickson, Robert Hastie and Alex Tregear Anarchic satire about literary agent Frederick Frensic. BBC Radio 4
8 April 2005 Family Cover Jonathan Holloway Polly Walker, Martin Wenner, Katia Linden, Jonas Finlay, Kim Romer, Jon Glover, Leagh Conwell and Thomas Brown-Lowe A family holiday to Sweden goes tragically wrong when Alisdair McNair is found dead at a remote beauty spot.

In shock, miles from home and with her two young sons in tow, Emma is alarmed to find herself the subject of the police investigation that follows.

BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
5 May 2005 Stone Baby[25] Sean Buckley Louis Dunsford, Edna Doré, Carl Prekopp, Chenade la Roy John, Alex Matten, Joseph Tremain, Richard Katz, Susan Jameson, Nicholas Boulton and Hugh Dickson Xavier has no brothers or sisters or mates at school. But he's got a bump. Something inside. Someone. He feels it move; hears its tiny heart beat in tandem with his.

It's true and real and mine and... stop blowing smoke in my face! It's very bad for his health.

BBC Radio 3 The Wire
15 July 2005 Angel Heights Brian B Thompson Robert Daws, Duncan Preston, Michael Cochrane, Gerard McDermott and Sammy Dobson A young stable jockey has been killed by a horse in what appears to have been an accident.

When Trueman and Riley come sniffing round, they discover a corner of the horse racing world riddled with double-dealing: a trainer who deliberately runs horses over the wrong distance to bring down their handicap before landing a betting coup when they go over the right trip; a telephone tipster who gives one tip on his recorded message and a different one to his special clients; stable lads prepared to give inside information in return for favours. Can Trueman penetrate this closed world and discover the truth behind Emma Slater's death?

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
12 August 2005 Blame Philip Palmer Caroline Catz, Ann Mitchell, Tanya Franks, Gerard Horan, Mark Lewis Jones and Harry Myers BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
11 September 2005 The Orchid Grower[26] Sebastian Baczkiewicz based on an idea by Tom Mangold Kenneth Welsh, John Cleland, Michael Murphy, Leo Vernik, Emma Campbell, Greg Ellwand, Rod Wilson, John Robinson, Tara Samuels, Chuck Shamata, Michael Caruana, Patrick McManus, Barry Flatman, Jonathan Higgins and Gerry Mendicino In 1964, KGB officer Yuri Nosenko defected to the US in what should have been a major coup for the CIA.

Sebastian Baczkiewicz tells the incredible story of Nosenko's four years of torture and imprisonment without trial as civil war raged within the CIA over his bona fides.

BBC Radio 3 Drama on 3
26 September 2005 Taken By Surprise David Napthine Jeremy Swift, Paul Brennen, Andrew Harrison, James Gaddas and Elizabeth Carling A financial adviser is abducted and only released when his employer pays the ransom. Forensic psychologist Dr Joe Aston resorts to unorthodox methods to secure a positive identification of the main suspect. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
23 November 2005 The Waterbucks Adrian Penketh Geoffrey Streatfeild, Tracy Wiles, Mike Sengelow, Hannah Storey, Chooi Beh and Matthew Paris Hong Kong, 1997. Justin has been riding out the last few months of British rule before the handover to China. This is not the only change he is forced to confront over the course of a tense 24 hours that will turn his life upside down forever. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
29 November 2005 French Sex at the Wilmslow Rex Peter Vickers Jason Done, Helen Longworth, Scarlett Perdereau, Pearce Quigley, Colleen Prendergast, Gerard McDermott, Harry Myers and John Cummins In 1962, Bernard's innocent attempt to have the French new wave film 'Jules et Jim' shown at the local cinema leads to him being branded a pervert and an adulterer. The ensuing row also puts a strain on his marriage to Helen.

A comic love story that captures a moment just before the 'swinging sixties' had begun to 'swing'.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
2 December 2005 Comeback Luke Sutherland Richard Ridings, Desmond McNamara, Stephanie Fearon, Tanya Franks, Richard Katz, Harry Myers and Everal A Walsh Wrestling man-mountain King Magnitude is on the comeback trail at the age of 60. It may be 20 years since his glory days but he's determined to show the world he's still got what it takes. What he doesn't expect is to be floored by a 15-year-old girl. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
17 January 2006 Once a Friend[27] Stephen Phelps Jamie Foreman, Gerard McDermott, Joseph Tremain, Steven Williams and Ella Smith John and Leo, inseparable in childhood, meet for the first time in 30 years. Will Leo's need to rake over the past prevent them from rekindling their friendship? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
10 March 2006 After the Affair Michael Butt Claire Rushbrook, Daniela Denby-Ashe, Simon Grover and Christopher Fox In the complex and messy world of an extra marital affair with all its exaggerated highs and lows, two couples are left facing a future they hadn't anticipated, and since Sarah and Janey are sisters, the sense of betrayal runs deep. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
24 March 2006 Metropolis[28] Thea von Harbou and Fritz Lang adapted by Peter Straughan Edward Hogg, Tracy Wiles, Damian Lynch and Peter Marinker Thea von Harbou's novel became husband Fritz Lang's 1927 silent movie classic.
Its terrifying vision of the future was born in an age of booming heavy industry. Peter Straughan's new version finds its hero, F T Fredersen, caught up in a nightmarish world all too recognisably drawn from the one we find ourselves in today.

Won the Prix Italia for Adapted Drama in 2007.[1]
BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
13 June 2006 Headwrecked, Shanghaied and Shipless Roy Boulter Gabrielle Glaister, Katherine Dow Blyton, Liz Sutherland and Wai-Keat Lau Two holidaying Cheshire housewives hit Shanghai and come off second best. Will they ever be reunited with their husbands? And where are they anyway? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
30 June 2006 The Conversation[29] Harry Towb and Jonathan Tafler Dramatic reconstruction of a conversation between Trevor Friedman and Roman Halter, whose fathers were Jewish slave labourers in Poland and then Germany.

Trevor knew almost nothing of his father's extraordinary story until 24 years after his death.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
13 October 2006 Walking the Line[30] Stephen Phelps Andy Nyman, Ralph Ineson, Saikat Ahamed and Sam Dale A prison officer finds himself caught between a vulnerable young prisoner and a senior colleague who believes that his job is to discipline and control and no more. Then the separate worlds of home and work start to overlap. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
21 October 2006 Cry Hungary[31] Paul Viragh Lee Ingleby, Naomi Frederick, Christopher Fox, Larry Lamb, Mark Straker, Joseph Kloska, Sam Dale, Paul Richard Biggin and Emma Noakes In October 1956, thousands of Hungarians rise up against the oppressive Soviet-backed government. Peter, a chosen son of the working classes, arrives in Budapest to study at the university. He falls in love with Eva, a committed communist. When Peter becomes involved in the demonstrations, Eva finds her loyalties severely tested. BBC Radio 4 Saturday Play
18 December 2006 This Is My Car Park Mark Tuohy Adam Kotz, Pippa Haywood, Emma Noakes and Steve Edwards Luke's brush with the big time has left him bruised and sleeping rough in a scruffy London car park.

But why does he refuse to set foot outside it? Two locals strike up a friendship with him, but is it enough to restore his faith in humanity?

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
18 February 2007 Hooligan Nights[32] Mike Walker
Music by Mike Woolmans
James Daley, Pamela Banks, Stephen Greif, Carl Prekopp, Gerard Horan, Freddy White, Gerard McDermott, Jamie Borthwick, David O'Dell, Sam Dale, Bethan Walker, Paul Richard Biggin, Joseph Kloska, Emma Noakes and Saikat Ahamed The brutal world of London gangland in the 1890s is brought vividly to life in an innovative new musical created by writer Mike Walker and composer Mike Woolmans.

Loosely based on the book by Clarence Rook, it recounts the criminal career of Alf, a self-styled Lambeth hooligan.

BBC Radio 3 Drama on 3
12 March 2007 – 15 March 2007 Trueman and Riley[33] Brian B Thompson Robert Daws and Duncan Preston Drama series about two bickering detectives. The stories are set in Leeds where Trueman and Riley solve a case in each episode. BBC Radio 7
28 March 2007 Going for Broke[34] Mike Yeaman Les Dennis, Felicity Montagu, Sam Dale, Christine Kavanagh and Jasmine Callan With debts rising and their pension scheme in meltdown, Colin and Marion set out to milk the system for all it's worth. But will the price they pay be more than they bargained for? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
5 June 2007 Clear Air Turbulence[35] Dana Fainaru Tara Fitzgerald, Aidan McArdle, David Thorpe, Ashley Madekwe, Ian Masters, Sandra James-Young, Rachel Bavidge, John Dougall, Jasmine Callan and Anthony Glennon Mel's idyllic existence is turned upside-down when she suddenly stops sleeping.

As the sprawling nights become filled in increasingly risky fashion, a would-be accomplice demands to join in the nocturnal adventures.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
13 June 2007 A Man Cut in Slices[36] Adrian Penketh Raymond Coulthard, John Guerrasio, John Dougall, Colin Stinton, Tom Clarke-Hill, Walter Lewis, Bonnie Engstrom, Jasmine Callan, Anthony Glennon and Rachel Bavidge Paul Tate goes for a job interview and finds himself on front pages and TV screens across the world. He is unwittingly cast as the symbol of Londoners' defiance in the face of terrorism after an office block is blown up. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
7 July 2007 Eye Witness[37][38] Tom Kelly Michael Smiley, Michael Colgan, JonJo O'Neill and Ciarán McMenamin This powerful and intensely personal piece digs deep into the author's brutalising experiences growing up on the streets of Belfast. Will life continue to be seen through the prism of that time, or can he find a future without the burden of the past? BBC Radio 3 The Wire
2 August 2007 Is He Still Breathing? Howard Belgard, co-written with Nick Drake Zita Sattar, Geoffrey Whitehead, Andrew Frame and Rosalind Paul Sunita loves her job at the ambulance call centre, the camaraderie, the humour and the satisfaction of helping people when they need it most. So why is she leaving? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
10 August 2007 Breaking Point[39][40] Philip Palmer Elliot Cowan, Naomi Frederick, Bertie Carvel, Simon Treves and John Dougall The effect of a man's recruitment to military intelligence rub off as his married life becomes a brutal game of cat and mouse. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
10 September 2007 – 14 September 2007 Nightingale Sang in Fernhurst Road[41] Christopher Matthew Christopher Matthew, John Dougall, Ifan Meredith, Sam Pamphilon, Liza Sadovy, Kim Romer, Martin Hyder and Piers Stubbs Christopher Matthew's gently comic tale of life in postwar suburban Surrey. BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour Drama
1 December 2007 Gulf[42] Mark Kotting Steven Hartley, Ann Mitchell, Ben Onwukwe, Emma Noakes, Tilly Vosburgh, Simon Treves and Peter Marinker Crazy golf takes on a whole new meaning in this fiery portrait of a family in meltdown, as 30 years of smouldering tensions finally reach their flashpoint. BBC Radio 3 The Wire
3 February 2008 The Devil Was Here Yesterday[43] Colin Teevan
Original music by Nikola Kodjabashia
Owen Teale, Haydn Gwynne, Greg Hicks, Stephen Greif, Clare Higgins, Rufus Wright, Alex Lanipekun, Nadine Marshall, Martin Hyder, Nancy Crane and Laura Molyneux Will civil servant Simon deliver the report the evidence appears to support or the report the minister seems to want the evidence to support? BBC Radio 3 Drama on 3
19 March 2008 The City Speaks: Broken Chain[44][45] Mark Norfolk Jeffery Kissoon, Jimmy Akingbola, Sheri-An Davis and Troy Glasgow Short radio drama based on Peter Ackroyd's specially commissioned short story in which the Virgin Mary makes an appearance in the City of London.

On the day Bert is released from prison, Leon takes him to see the Virgin.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
10 June 2008 Dropping Bombs[46] Paul Cotter Rosemary Leach, Nigel Anthony, Ivan Kaye, Susan Engel, Kenneth Collard and Dan Starkey Sixty five years after a bungled bombing raid, a former RAF pilot, with wife and son in tow, makes the long drive to Germany to deliver an apology.

The trip turns out to be explosive for all concerned.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
6 July 2008 Piper Alpha[47] Stephen Phelps Ewan Bailey, Nigel Betts, Kenny Blyth, Mark Bonnar, Liam Brennan, Stephen Critchlow, Ben Crowe, Nyasha Hatendi, Chris Pavlo, Roshan R Rohatgi, John Rowe, Dan Starkey, John Kay Steel and Joan Walker On 6 July 1988, a North Sea oil rig was destroyed by a series of explosions and a massive fire, resulting in the death of 167 men.

Based on Lord Cullen's Public Inquiry, the play chronicles the disaster minute-by-minute as it happened 20 years ago.

BBC Radio 3 Drama on 3
11 July 2008 One Chord Wonders: Parallel Lines[48] Frank Cottrell Boyce Doon Mackichan, Siân Reeves, Rosie Cavaliero, Ivan Kaye, Paul Viragh, Joseph Tremain, Sarah Bedi, John Rowe and Ben Crowe Frank Cottrell Boyce's series of plays about the punk generation 30 years on begins with the story of Julie, the singer in an ageing Blondie tribute band.
An invitation to the reunion of the audience at an Adverts gig in 1977 brings some skeletons dancing from the cupboard.
BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
18 July 2008 One Chord Wonders: Blitzkrieg Bop[49] Frank Cottrell Boyce Pauline Quirke, Adam Kotz, Manjinder Virk, Ivan Kaye, Ben Crowe, Harry Myers, Sanjay Shelat, Stephen Critchlow and Amy Enticknap In 1977, self-styled Mo Motormouth was writing a punk fanzine.
She now presents the travel news for a radio station.
An attempt to relaunch her ailing career brings some unwelcome attention from her livelier listeners.
BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
25 July 2008 One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned[50][51] Frank Cottrell Boyce Richard Ridings, Lloyd Thomas, Chris Pavlo, Richie Campbell, Paul Richard Biggin, John Rowe and Ben Crowe Hard man Mick's career in the music business imploded after a brush with an over-enthusiastic fan.

Now in prison, can he find salvation in his treasured memories of 'that night' in 1977?

BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
1 August 2008 One Chord Wonders: This is the Modern World[52] Frank Cottrell Boyce Danny Webb, Stephanie Leonidas, Ann Beach, Carl Prekopp, John Biggins, Alex Tregear, John Cummins, Sam Dale and Liz Sutherland Earth toilet pioneer and former 'anarcho-punk' Muttley is living in an eco-commune in Wales with his teenage daughter, Lineel, when an invitation to the reunion turns up. Lineel is desperate to find out more about her late mother's previous life in Camberley. Muttley reluctantly agrees to accompany her on a pilgrimage back to his home town...on foot. There Lineel learns the unlikely truth about her parents' past, as well as getting an abrupt introduction to life in the 'real world' beyond the confines of the commune. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
8 August 2008 One Chord Wonders: Television's Over[53] Frank Cottrell Boyce Kristopher Milnes, Freddy White, Gerard Horan, Fenella Woolgar, Leanne Rowe, James Daley, Ben Crowe, John Hasler, Amy Enticknap, John Rowe, Dan Starkey, Nyasha Hatendi, Sarah Bedi, Joan Walker and Tim James March, 1977. Punk rock is rumoured to be arriving in suburban Surrey. Is anarchy about to overwhelm civilized society or is this salvation for the bored teenagers of Camberley? BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
1 September 2008 Peter Lorre vs Peter Lorre[54] Michael Butt Stephen Greif, Peter Marinker, Helen Longworth, Kenneth Collard, Nathan Osgood, John Rowe, Kerry Shale and John Chancer Towards the end of his unique career, movie star Peter Lorre found himself at the centre of a strange legal case. Incorporating verbatim extracts from the court transcripts, Michael Butt's play wonders what was going through Lorre's troubled mind as he fought to protect his name. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
2 November 2008 – 9 November 2008 On The Beach[55] Nevil Shute dramatised by Mike Walker Richard Dillane, Claudia Harrison, William Hope, Indira Varma, James Gordon-Mitchell, Jonathan Tafler, Inam Mirza, Stephen Critchlow, Chris Pavlo, Dan Starkey, Jill Cardo, Robert Lonsdale and Gunnar Cauthery In the aftermath of a nuclear war, a deadly radioactive cloud is moving slowly towards Australia, one of few places on Earth where life still exists. BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial
25 November 2008 Flaw in the Motor, Dust in the Blood[56] Trevor Preston Rory Kinnear, Susan Engel, Fenella Woolgar, Janice Acquah, Paul Rider, Jonathan Tafler, Manjeet Mann and Inam Mirza Exploration of life with bipolar disorder.

When Thomas dreams, he's in the world of the crime thriller; his daily life is rather less glamorous.

BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
6 March 2009 Success Story[57] Brett Goldstein Geoffrey Streatfeild, Caroline Catz, Sasha Pick and Laurel Lefkow When Ray's low-budget film is picked up by a major studio his dreams of Hollywood start to become a reality. Then, holed up in a hotel room doing endless publicity interviews, he finds the past coming back to bite him. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
16 March 2009 – 20 March 2009 Trueman and Riley (Series 2)[58] Brian B Thompson Robert Daws and Duncan Preston Drama series about two bickering detectives. The stories are set in Leeds where Trueman and Riley solve a case in each episode. BBC Radio 7
1 June 2009 The Tent[59] Tom Green Siân Reeves, Jeremy Swift, Joanna Scanlan and Janice Acquah Gavin and Fay bravely attempt to plan their long-overdue wedding. It could be in a 19th-century 'medieval' castle or it could be the zoo, but it definitely won't be the church. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
22 June 2009 – 26 June 2009 The Art of Deception[60] Philip Palmer David Schofield, Indira Varma, Matt Addis, Jonathan Keeble, Belinda Lang, John Biggins, Malcolm Tierney, Philip Fox and Benjamin Askew Notorious art forger Daniel Ballantyne, newly released from prison but now dying, agrees to help art critic Jessica Brown to write a book about forgery.

So begins a game of cat-and-mouse that will have deadly consequences.

BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour Drama
29 June 2009 Accomplices[61] Simon Passmore Claudia Harrison, Emily Joyce, Stephen Hogan, Lizzy Watts and Paul Rider What would you be prepared to do to escape the grind of a life going relentlessly downhill? For former City lawyer Alice, the price is getting higher by the minute. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
11 August 2009 The Mouse House[62] Adrian Penketh Adam Kotz, Raquel Cassidy, Nicholas Gleaves, Giles Fagan and Stephen Hogan Wannabe cultural terrorist Mike is determined to make a splash; make a statement; make more of his life. But has he got what it takes to pull it off and light up the skies above London? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
18 September 2009 The Milk Race[63] Mark Tuohy Ivan Kaye, Amarjit Bassan, Kate Binchy, Mairead Conneely, Melissa Advani, Stephen Hogan, David Hargreaves, Kate Layden, Piers Wehner, Rhys Jennings, Tessa Nicholson and Emerald O'Hanrahan Two west London milkmen race each other to Bognor Pier in their milk floats to decide which of them wins exclusive rights to their local round. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
21 October 2009 Those Hard to Reach Places[64] Daniel Thurman Geoffrey Whitehead, Anne Reid, Janet Dibley, Piers Wehner and Emerald O'Hanrahan 'Cleaner...only dirtier' is a slogan unlikely to be used by your average domestic cleaner. But Rita is anything but your average domestic cleaner; as an unfortunate former mayor is about to discover. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
16 November 2009 Forty-Three Fifty-Nine - Wake[65][66] Katie Hims Claire Rushbrook, Rachel Davies, John Lightbody, Emily Beecham, Tom Meredith, Kate Fitzgerald and David Webber The story of Jess' day trip to kiss her dead first love, Danny, goodbye. One lie leads to another and, before they know it, Jess and her mother Avril are in a real pickle. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
18 November 2009 The Loop[67] Nick Perry Ivan Kaye, Edward Hogg, Peter Marinker, Rhys Jennings, Emerald O'Hanrahan and Melissa Advani When a young boy toys with his dad's mobile phone, middle-aged Englishman Nick Perry finds himself speaking to a young stranger called Jim in New York - in 1959. As they talk, they discover that they are both writers: Nick is struggling with his first radio play and Jim's just started on an ambitious new TV show, The Twilight Zone.

Bronze Sony Award – Best Drama Production 2010
BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
6 December 2009 The Hairy Ape[68] Eugene O'Neill Dominic West, Shaun Dingwall, Jim Norton, Sasha Pick, Annabelle Dowler, John Guerrasio, John Kay Steel, Joe Montana, Matt Addis, David Hargreaves, Stephen Hogan, Benjamin Askew and Philip Fox Classic American expressionist drama from 1921. The play tells the tragic tale of Yank, a stoker whose whole world is turned upside down when a young heiress ventures into the engine room of a transatlantic ocean liner. BBC Radio 3 Drama on 3
10 April 2010 The Believers[69] Frank Cottrell Boyce
Original music by Carl Hunter and Mel Bowen
Ray Quinn, Samantha Robinson, Kieran Lynn, John Biggins, Rufus Wright, Gary Bleasdale, Alison Pettitt, Joanna Monro, David Seddon, Laura Molyneux, Jill Cardo and Keely Beresford Liverpool, 1963. The Merseybeat boom is about to take off. And with it, The Believers, a Christian pop band determined to spread the Word. If only they were all singing from the same hymn sheet. BBC Radio 4 Saturday Play
30 April 2010 The Weighing Room[70] Justin Hopper Lloyd Hutchinson, Michael Legge, James Weaver, Paul Rider, David Seddon, Alison Pettitt, Nigel Hastings, Joanna Monro, Bruce Alexander, Michael Shelford and Keely Beresford Noel is a jump jockey anxious to get his career back on track after a spell on the sidelines. Just what does it take to survive in the demanding and dangerous world of National Hunt racing? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
10 July 2010 Going to Ground[71] Simon Passmore Ivan Kaye, Anthony Flanagan, Rupert Evans, Guy Henry, Joshua Jenkin, Alison Pettitt, Christine Kavanagh and Sam Dale 1940, Kent. England is on full alert in anticipation of a German invasion. As church bells sound the alarm, a secret resistance unit springs into action. Whatever happens, none of them expects to see their families again. BBC Radio 4 Saturday Play
22 August 2010 – 29 August 2010 No Highway[72] Nevil Shute dramatised by Mike Walker William Beck, Alison Pettitt, Paul Ritter, Naomi Frederick, Fenella Woolgar, Lauren Mote, Tony Bell, William Hope, Jude Akuwudike, Sean Baker, Sam Dale, Michael Shelford, David Seddon and Christine Kavanagh 1948. The future of Britain's transatlantic aviation industry rests on the success of a new plane - the Rutland Reindeer. One has crashed already and an eccentric government scientist believes more will follow. The race is on to prove his theory before Reindeers start to fell from the sky. BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial
22 September 2010 For Ever England[73] Tom Green Gerard Horan, Claire Harry, Tracie Bennett, Alison Pettitt and Carl Rice Now living abroad, Steve discovers his estranged son Matt has been killed serving in Afghanistan. He returns to England anxious to do the right thing. But how do you begin to grieve for a child you never really knew? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
20 December 2010 – 24 December 2010 The Art of Deception[74] Philip Palmer David Schofield, Hattie Morahan, Matt Addis, Harry Myers, Stephen Greif, Pandora Colin, Jude Akuwudike, Sally Orrock and Iain Batchelor Two years after faking his own death, notorious art forger and conman Daniel Ballantyne re-emerges to resume his cat and mouse game with biographer Jessica Brown. BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour Drama
21 January 2011 The Wild Ass's Skin Reloaded[75] Honoré de Balzac adapted by Adrian Penketh Elliot Cowan, Naomi Frederick, Don Gilet, Chris Porter, Inam Mirza, Lloyd Thomas, Sally Orrock, Jude Akuwudike and Christine Kavanagh Balzac's classic novel is relocated to contemporary London. Rupert, an unemployed investment banker, is distracted from his suicidal despair by a magic skin which can grant his every wish. Inevitably, there is a price to pay. BBC Radio 4 Friday Play
6 February 2011 Massistonia[76] Colin Teevan
Original music by Nikola Kodjabashia
Darren Boyd, Nikola Kodjabashia, Ewan Bailey, Sasha C. Damjanovski, Dolya Gavanski, Ivan Marevich, Iain Batchelor and Leah Brotherhead A tale of Western hubris and Eastern European manipulation of the system, 'Massistonia' follows an English theatre director and his creative team as they try to mount an international touring production of 'Alcmaeon in Corinth'. He embarks on the project with little idea of the forces about to be unleashed against him. BBC Radio 3 Drama on 3
15 March 2011 Small Acts of Kindness[77] Trevor Preston Stephen Greif, Ann Beach, Susan Penhaligon, Joanna Monro, Sean Baker, Gethin Anthony, Sally Orrock and Christine Kavanagh In the late 1950s Charlie was a violent and uncontrollable entrant to art school. His teacher changed the course of his life. In his late sixties his mentor's death shifts everything once more. BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
8 June 2011 The 40 Year Twitch[78][79] Daniel Thurman Paula Wilcox, Philip Jackson, Anne Reid and Brian Bowles When Yvonne loses her job at the age of 64, she starts to fear that husband Neil's devotion to birding - birdwatching to the uninitiated - is actually all about escaping her and their humdrum life together. Thus begins a somewhat overenthusiastic pursuit of the truth as she trains her binoculars firmly on Neil's every move. Can best friend Wendy bring her back to earth? BBC Radio 4 Afternoon Play
27 August 2011 Life After Life[80] Frank Cottrell Boyce Gbemi Ikumelo, Don Gilèt, Damian Lynch, Elaine Claxton, Susie Riddell, Alex Tregear, Carl Prekopp and Gerard McDermott Miranda was undergoing what should have been a routine operation.
Now she finds herself 'on the other side', but whatever notions of what the future might hold beyond her life on Earth Miranda may have had, they were certainly not like this.
It's not even her afterlife, it's Toby's and he's in control.
Inspired by the ways that internet users are increasingly responding to death online, Frank Cottrell Boyce's comic drama follows Miranda as she tries to make sense of the strange cyberworld she has been sucked into.
BBC World Service BBC World Drama[81]
3 September 2011 September in the Rain[82][83][84] John Godber John Godber and Jane Godber Jack and Liz are in Blackpool for one last time. John Godber's classic stage play tells the touching and funny story of a marriage through a lifetime of holidays together. BBC Radio 4 Saturday Play
15 October 2011 The Last Executioner[85] Peter-Jakob Kelting Paul Copley, Ralph Ineson, Bryan Dick, Simon Bubb and Kenneth Collard Switzerland, 1938. Triple murderer Paul Irniger has been sentenced to death. Over 120 men have spontaneously applied to be his executioner. Based on research by a psychiatrist at the time, Peter-Jakob Kelting's play imagines 5 of the applicants competing for the job. BBC Radio 3 The Wire

Notes:

  1. ^ Episodes 1–10 directed by Kate Rowland, 11–20 directed by Toby Swift
  2. ^ Although episode 6 was scheduled for 12 September 2001 its first broadcast may have been pre-empted by news coverage of world events and postponed until 31 July 2002

Sources:

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Prix Italia, Winners 1949 - 2010, RAI Archived 2013-10-22 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play
  3. ^ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama
  4. ^ BBC – Friday Play
  5. ^ BBC – Saturday Play
  6. ^ BBC – Steven Appleby's Normal Life
  7. ^ BBC – Classic Serial
  8. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Doctor Joe Aston Investigates
  9. ^ The King's Coiner – A radio drama by Philip Palmer (script)
  10. ^ Man with Travel Hairdryer – A radio play by Katie Hims (script)
  11. ^ BBC – The Wire
  12. ^ Be afraid. Listen to Radio 3, The Observer, 9 February 2003
  13. ^ BBC – Drama on 3
  14. ^ BBC – Steven Appleby's Normal Life (Series 2)
  15. ^ BBC – The Wire – Creamie
  16. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Making Waves
  17. ^ BBC – Saturday Play – The Ipcress File
  18. ^ Radio review – Drama, Moira Petty, The Stage, 19 January 2004
  19. ^ BBC – Press Office – D-Day radio – The Long Wait
  20. ^ BBC – The Wire – My Arm
  21. ^ BBC – Drama on 3 – How Many Miles to Basra?
  22. ^ How Many Miles to Basra – A radio play by Colin Teevan (script)
  23. ^ Casualties of war, Radio review, Elisabeth Mahoney, The Guardian, 12 July 2004
  24. ^ BBC – Steven Appleby's Normal Christmas
  25. ^ BBC – The Wire – Stone Baby
  26. ^ BBC – Drama on 3 – The Orchid Grower
  27. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Once a Friend
  28. ^ Radio review, Elisabeth Mahoney, The Guardian, 27 March 2006
  29. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – The Conversation
  30. ^ BBC – Friday Play – Walking the Line
  31. ^ BBC – Saturday Play – Cry Hungary
  32. ^ BBC – Drama on 3 – Hooligan Nights
  33. ^ BBC – Radio 7 – Trueman and Riley
  34. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Going for Broke
  35. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Clear Air Turbulence
  36. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – A Man Cut in Slices
  37. ^ BBC – The Wire – Eye Witness
  38. ^ BBC – The Wire – Eye Witness
  39. ^ BBC – Friday Play – Breaking Point
  40. ^ Radio review – Drama, Moira Petty, The Stage, 13 August 2007
  41. ^ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – Nightingale Sang in Fernhurst Road
  42. ^ BBC – The Wire – Gulf
  43. ^ BBC – Drama on 3 – The Devil Was Here Yesterday
  44. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – The City Speaks: Broken Chain
  45. ^ BBC – Arts and Drama – The City Speaks: Broken Chain
  46. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Dropping Bombs
  47. ^ BBC – Drama on 3 – Piper Alpha
  48. ^ BBC – Friday Play – One Chord Wonders: Parallel Lines
  49. ^ BBC – Friday Play – One Chord Wonders: Blitzkrieg Bop
  50. ^ BBC – Friday Play – One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned
  51. ^ One Chord Wonders: Damned, Damned, Damned – A radio play by Frank Cottrell Boyce (script)
  52. ^ BBC – Friday Play – One Chord Wonders: This is the Modern World
  53. ^ BBC – Friday Play – One Chord Wonders: Television's Over
  54. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Peter Lorre vs Peter Lorre
  55. ^ BBC – Classic Serial – On The Beach
  56. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Flaw in the Motor, Dust in the Blood
  57. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Success Story
  58. ^ BBC – Radio 7 – Trueman and Riley (Series 2)
  59. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – The Tent
  60. ^ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – The Art of Deception
  61. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Accomplices
  62. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – The Mouse House
  63. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – The Milk Race
  64. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Those Hard to Reach Places
  65. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Forty-Three Fifty-Nine - Wake
  66. ^ The British Comedy Guide - Radio - Forty Three, Fifty Nine: Wake
  67. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – The Loop
  68. ^ BBC – Drama on 3 – The Hairy Ape
  69. ^ BBC – Saturday Play – The Believers
  70. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – The Weighing Room
  71. ^ BBC – Saturday Play – Going to Ground
  72. ^ BBC – Classic Serial – No Highway
  73. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – For Ever England
  74. ^ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – The Art of Deception
  75. ^ BBC – Friday Play – The Wild Ass's Skin Reloaded
  76. ^ BBC – Drama on 3 – Massistonia
  77. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – Small Acts of Kindness
  78. ^ BBC – Afternoon Play – The 40 Year Twitch
  79. ^ BBC – Radio 4 and 4 Extra Blog: Afternoon Play: The 40 Year Twitch by Daniel Thurman
  80. ^ BBC – BBC World Drama – Life After Life
  81. ^ BBC – BBC World Drama
  82. ^ BBC – Saturday Play – September in the Rain
  83. ^ Godbers to reprise marital drama for Radio 4 debut, Matthew Hemley, The Stage, 28 July 2011
  84. ^ Radio – Drama, Moira Petty, The Stage, 7 September 2011
  85. ^ BBC – The Wire – The Last Executioner