A Touch of the Sun - BBC Saturday Night Theater - N. C. Hunter

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  • čas přidán 31. 08. 2020
  • A Touch of the Sun is a 1958 play by the British writer N.C. Hunter.
    It premiered at the Grand Theatre in Blackpool before moving to the West End, initially at the Saville Theatre before transferring to the Princes Theatre. Its original run lasted for 202 performances between 31 January and 26 July 1958. The cast included Michael Redgrave, Diana Wynyard, Vanessa Redgrave and Ronald Squire. Michael Redgrave won the Best Actor award at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards.
    Norman Charles Hunter was a British playwright whose plays attracted such notable actors to perform them as John Gielgud, Wendy Hiller, Sybil Thorndike, Ralph Richardson, Vanessa Redgrave, Michael Redgrave, and Ingrid Bergman. His play A Picture of Autumn was revived off-Broadway by the Mint Theater Company in 2013. Hunter's play A Day by the Sea was revived off-Broadway by the Mint Theater Company in 2016. It subsequently had its first major UK revival at London's Southwark Playhouse with John Sackville in the title role of Julian Anson.
    Saturday Night Theatre was a long-running radio drama strand on BBC Radio 4. The strand showcased feature-length, middle-brow single plays on Saturday evenings for more than 50 years, having been launched in April 1943. The plays featured in the strand included stage plays, book adaptations and original dramatisations. For most of its history, programmes ran for 90 minutes and were largely entertainment-centred, such as thrillers, comedies and mysteries.
    Saturday Night Theatre was noted as the major drama of the week on BBC Radio 4, until it was scrapped as a programme strand in 1996. Shorter plays continued to be broadcast on Radio 4 on Saturday evenings from 1996 until the relaunch of the channel's schedule in April 1998 by James Boyle, when single dramas were removed from the Saturday evening schedule. Since 1998, the main weekly play on the station has been The Saturday Play, a daytime programme that runs for 60-90 minutes.
    There have since been campaigns to bring back Saturday Night Theatre, but in the context of BBC budget cuts, that have included the 2010 axing of Radio 4's Friday Play (established in 1998, when Saturday Night Theatre was abolished), any return looks unlikely.
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Komentáře • 83

  • @armondlevinia9221
    @armondlevinia9221 Před 5 dny

    Fantastic story line. Wonderful acting. True to life.

  • @susanhrubis1908
    @susanhrubis1908 Před 3 lety +17

    Synopsis. Out of the blue the Lesters are offered the rare treat of a holiday in the South of France and, with it, the unlikely opportunity of escape to happiness. The dour Philip, of course, has no time for such flim-flammery and, with this attitude at the helm, the adventure is destined to end in tears.

  • @davelawday6609
    @davelawday6609 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Lovely drama.. perfect Sunday morning easy listening.. thank you ❤

  • @Tinyflydeposit
    @Tinyflydeposit Před 3 lety +12

    I admired Philip and Mary. And I think, ' there is only one free nation, the nation of the rich' is a marvellous quote. The old fashioned idea that fulfilment can be had not from things but from dedication to principles is a painful loss to an old idealist like me.

    • @Tinyflydeposit
      @Tinyflydeposit Před 2 lety +2

      It's a painful loss to humanity. Thanks for your wise comment

  • @jlb9368
    @jlb9368 Před měsícem +3

    Very well thought out - the conflicts are so real. The inferiority complexes and the rest do not change, they just manifest differently in different generations.

  • @jimmaccormaic6890
    @jimmaccormaic6890 Před 3 lety +10

    Wonderful thought-provoking stuff. Totally absorbing. Many thanks for posting.

  • @SusanMolloy
    @SusanMolloy Před 4 měsíci +2

    Loved it. Thank you!🎉❤😂😢😮😅😊🎉

  • @stevecook3673
    @stevecook3673 Před 3 lety +7

    More pertinent today than ever .

  • @Lyfs-Awsumm
    @Lyfs-Awsumm Před 2 lety +2

    Very,Very NICE!!!! I definitely need to listen to this Again! Well, Done!!!

  • @wondershaw3356
    @wondershaw3356 Před 3 lety +11

    This was absolutely brilliant.Thank you

  • @emilyhuckson2909
    @emilyhuckson2909 Před 2 lety +7

    Enjoyed the premise, the characters and the performance. Cheers from Saigon

  • @yvonnerollinson9779
    @yvonnerollinson9779 Před rokem +2

    Just so enjoyed the quality of acting and story great stuff

  • @sandrapicton8961
    @sandrapicton8961 Před 3 lety +4

    A sad but true story. Thank you.

  • @christrinder1255
    @christrinder1255 Před 3 lety +7

    Excellent play, many thanks for posting and the additional news at the end !👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👍😊

  • @jimrichardson5849
    @jimrichardson5849 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Superb play and acting . ❤

  • @ferberina
    @ferberina Před 3 lety +6

    True and real thank you .

  • @kewalkrishan8523
    @kewalkrishan8523 Před 3 lety +7

    Well done.. Got all ingredients.. Love, comedy. Emotions, thoroughly melodrama.... Had very essance of phenomenal story

  • @Gillby47
    @Gillby47 Před 3 lety +4

    £40 for a holiday to Austria in 1958,we went to Austria for our honeymoon in 1965 at the cost of £14 each.

  • @simonmcgrath4112
    @simonmcgrath4112 Před 3 lety +8

    This was truly brilliant and this is how most of us lived in the 70's (even tho I was only a kiddy)

  • @cousinsister69
    @cousinsister69 Před 3 lety +10

    A great thought provoking play. Certainly leaves much to contemplate. Some wonderful quotes. Excellent acting by some great stars. Hi from Oz 👇💜🙃

  • @ElegantPaws01
    @ElegantPaws01 Před 3 lety +1

    Brilliant

  • @thomaswells8237
    @thomaswells8237 Před 3 lety +7

    Very good entertainment

  • @lindacharles6581
    @lindacharles6581 Před 3 lety +18

    I do love these old plays. Very interesting thank you for sharing.

  • @johnevans6399
    @johnevans6399 Před 3 lety +6

    A quarter of a minute feels like 5 minutes!

    • @Brian.001
      @Brian.001 Před 3 lety +2

      old minutes

    • @mrbazzabee4013
      @mrbazzabee4013 Před 3 lety +2

      I once went out with a woman that had that effect on me.

  • @paulajeffrey6706
    @paulajeffrey6706 Před 6 dny

    I do like a happy ending 😀

  • @mrbazzabee4013
    @mrbazzabee4013 Před 3 lety +6

    A real trustworthy Bread and Butter Radio play with more than a Soupçon of humour .......A real 'Ilfracombe' of a play for sure--Thanx Chessie you old Stonker you.

  • @janethayes5941
    @janethayes5941 Před 3 lety +5

    Boy! I learned a lot of life lessons from this.

  • @dl18336
    @dl18336 Před 2 měsíci

    Good story. Good audio

  • @phonotical
    @phonotical Před 10 měsíci +1

    Broadcast February 1964

  • @johnhannay16
    @johnhannay16 Před 3 lety +2

    Impossible to listen to with an advert every 2 minutes.

    • @celiacoyle7218
      @celiacoyle7218 Před 2 lety +2

      I would agree, but no ads as I listen here in Nov '21.

  • @stevecook3673
    @stevecook3673 Před 3 lety +7

    It is still the case that you enter a profession like teaching or nursing as a vocation and not totally for monetary gain.

    • @magsmaher
      @magsmaher Před 3 lety +3

      Having worked for the NHS most of my life I can guarantee that there is no monetary gain and that it is a vocation.

    • @patricka.crawley6572
      @patricka.crawley6572 Před 2 lety +2

      Knowing many people in the health industry, 'image', self-congratulatory smugness, and 'aren't I wonderful' is the biggest single motivation for recruits.

  • @grimtt
    @grimtt Před 3 lety +7

    Q: is “hackneyed phrase” a hackneyed phrase?

    • @hawthornetree646
      @hawthornetree646 Před 3 lety +3

      No because no one would understand the word hackneyed any other way.

  • @kayrkoet
    @kayrkoet Před 8 měsíci

    Excellent play. Illustrated the conflict that some us feel between money and the lack of it. I think it is possible to be comfortably off and still care about the welfare of those less fortunate. However, the father needed a good dose of reality from Philip and told to behave more considerately or go to an aged care home. Mary puts up with too much and sometimes acts the martyr.

  • @muirhouseterrace
    @muirhouseterrace Před 3 lety +8

    That was very depressing.

  • @mtsenskmtsensk5113
    @mtsenskmtsensk5113 Před 3 lety +5

    A slice of life, with the elderly claiming wisdom from the standpoint of their vanished world.
    it is always difficult to communicate to one's parents and children. They were missing a local pub to find some objective opinions, to cope with their relatives.

  • @SkyeID
    @SkyeID Před 11 měsíci +2

    Funny. That actor isn't American. We wouldn't say "bathe", but we'd say "swim".

    • @stellamariayates3776
      @stellamariayates3776 Před 20 dny

      My mother in law always said bathe and bathing suit. She was of a certain age and class so I think it was the usual term from her earlier days.

  • @jacquiadams863
    @jacquiadams863 Před rokem +5

    Although this is about principles, money v duty etc the absolute boorishness and selfishness of both the teacher and his father caused me to scream at the radio.

  • @roelienpostma2367
    @roelienpostma2367 Před 2 měsíci

    Thought provoking.....

  • @CollegeMan69
    @CollegeMan69 Před 2 lety +1

    We are all prisoners in one way or another………prisoners of life itself perhaps. Some longing to escape - others just content to make do……

  • @guitarboogieboogie
    @guitarboogieboogie Před 3 lety +2

    Posh home life. About poor schoolteacher.

  • @RichardArchibald-jk7ms
    @RichardArchibald-jk7ms Před 29 dny +1

    The bankrupt father going on about drinking and gambling 😂

  • @kikibalden7462
    @kikibalden7462 Před 3 lety +4

    "backward" children...thank goodness we have changed our attitudes...this play made me depressed

    • @mrbazzabee4013
      @mrbazzabee4013 Před 3 lety +1

      I do feel that - that comment is intended to say something about the depravity of the Central character ...that said it !!! But-I could be wrong.

    • @kikibalden7462
      @kikibalden7462 Před 3 lety

      @@mrbazzabee4013 yes I think you are right! But that was the way people spoke about mentally challenged people they were called backwards or retarded sadly

  • @incrediblesimilarity5858
    @incrediblesimilarity5858 Před 3 lety +5

    You fine folks are getting more out of this play than I did. I found it to be terribly tedious. It Was Written in 1958 and apparently very well received at the time, but I don't think it holds up too well today.
    Being as the playwright was British as well all the actors in this play, I have to let you know this is just not my *cup of tea.*

    • @jonathanveale119
      @jonathanveale119 Před 3 lety +1

      So agree. Some of the acting is atrocious.

    • @54onions
      @54onions Před 5 měsíci

      Loved this it gave me something to chew on about being a adult in the 70s now I must listen to 10cc and the like

  • @dougchance8891
    @dougchance8891 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Success with women?
    Flash the cash- she will flash her tash.
    And that is not a growth on the face.
    Below the navel- surrounding the Beef Curtains is more to the point.😅😅😅

  • @pennycartoulis6603
    @pennycartoulis6603 Před 3 lety +4

    Terrible Fake American/Canadian accent🧐

    • @ggray1180
      @ggray1180 Před 3 lety +1

      And pronunciation of Muskoka as "Muskota" interesting. Could never have foreseen the international broadcast of these plays in years to come. No great pressure to get the details correct.

    • @mrbazzabee4013
      @mrbazzabee4013 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes-You yourself would have been far better-I feel sure.

    • @ggray1180
      @ggray1180 Před 3 lety

      @@mrbazzabee4013 Not really; I'm English.

    • @mrbazzabee4013
      @mrbazzabee4013 Před 3 lety

      @@ggray1180 ...actually-my comment was aimed at Penny Cartoulis

    • @ggray1180
      @ggray1180 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mrbazzabee4013 my apologies.

  • @jessarain9917
    @jessarain9917 Před 3 lety +12

    The pervasive sexism of the 1950's showed strongly in the unthinkingly prejudiced script. Poor, martyred mother... giving her all for the benefit of the dominant male. I laughed a great deal at first, then thought soberly of women who were never given any choice but this. Saddest of all is the expectation that Mother must be virtually a saint while being inhumanly self-sacrificing. What a clever trap -- for no woman could live up to this ideal. And if she failed it was a perfect excuse to further excoriate her.

    • @mtsenskmtsensk5113
      @mtsenskmtsensk5113 Před 3 lety +1

      Jessa Rain
      You notice also of the life expectation of the children being mapped out before them. I'm not sure if the school is in fact a borstal ( a Yob being derived from 'backward Boy' i.e. boy spelt backwards)with the talk of an attack with a bicycle chain by one of the pupils. Also in this period women were expected (society not the law) to surrender their job on marriage, to allow a man to bring up a family on that wage and Britain was quite a military society then. Rationing had only finished in 1955, and a school master was notoriously poorly paid, so it is not an average working class family, that is perhaps more literate and able to express themselves. What I'm trying to put into context is that both men and women had a poorer life but it was improving dramatically with the NHS and nearly full employment making the future look promising, and optimistic compared to pre-war.

    • @neilfoddering921
      @neilfoddering921 Před 2 lety +8

      What an ignorant and biased comment, implying that there was some male conspiracy to keep women down. If you’re going to use the word “trap”, then you should also apply it to most men of the time, who were expected to provide for the family, often to the inevitable detriment to their health and risk of injury or death. Who was it working down coal mines and sewers, on building sites, in steel works, in farming, conscripted into the armed forces, and suffering from job-related diseases like asbestosis, miner’s lung and the like? No legal protection against unfair dismissal, discrimination and the like. There certainly was male domination, but most of it was domination of males by other males in positions of power. To suggest that there was some male conspiracy just waiting for another opportunity to “excoriate” women is ludicrous. Social expectations of the time were different from now, and yes there was gender-based prejudice and discrimination then, just as your comments reveal that it still exists now.

    • @dshe8637
      @dshe8637 Před 9 měsíci

      And the daughter not allowed to get a job to let her afford travel, because she was going to be working at home, unpaid.
      And 'timber importing' would have been a dreadful task. Destroying tropical rainforests and abusing locals.
      So much of the wealth of this class came from unethical means

    • @dshe8637
      @dshe8637 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@neilfoddering921 you are regurgitating incel propaganda instead of thinking for yourself.
      Try considering the role of Class in society and wirk

    • @mareeschollum2986
      @mareeschollum2986 Před 3 měsíci

      @@neilfoddering921 don’t judge so harshly, particularly coming from a male perspective. You forget that women too worked in those roles you mentioned and made sacrifices during the war.

  • @brendabarrowable
    @brendabarrowable Před 3 lety +6

    Fairy depressing play with the characters trapped in unpleasant circumstances of their own making. Enjoyed the craftsmanship in the writing but hope no one embraces martyrdom as the mother character did or would be as obnoxious as the father in law knew himself to be.

  • @magsmaher
    @magsmaher Před 3 lety +6

    I found this play thoroughly depressing. The selfishness of the central character (the father) is simply deplorable and the language used to describe mentally challenged children just unacceptable. The way that the mother just gave in to her husband’s selfish demands is very upsetting and the churlish behaviour of the grandfather left me speechless! I do hope that as a society we have moved on.

  • @Lemon_N555
    @Lemon_N555 Před měsícem +1

    Depressing ending (although the writer tried to wrap it up in a pretty bow of naive idealistic words to justify the husband's philosophy of life).
    But you couldn't convince me that this way of life is fulfilling because of the fact the
    Wife is completely subjugated & merely exists to prop up her husband's idea of utopia!
    Her needs & feelings & comfort are secondary to his egocentric life's purpose.
    Who cares as long as HIS " spiritual growth" is nourished?
    What an insufferable husband - prefers his family to scrimp & suffer financial hardship just so he can pompously adhere to his "socialist' principles ?
    Very hypocritical when you live in a country with democratic capitalism.
    What a virtue signalling prig !
    He voluntarily works for a pittance in a career ( being used by the Head Master ) but that's ok because he is in "service" for the greater good of society.
    Meanwhile his wife is mostly stressed & looking older than her years from all the strain.
    Happy marriage indeed!

  • @2msvalkyrie529
    @2msvalkyrie529 Před rokem +1

    If Strindberg had written this there would have been murder
    and a Krakatoa like explosion . Instead it's all terribly well
    mannered and upper lips remain stiff ! Coward would have made it a Comedy . Rattigan a styl!ish tragedy . But Hunter
    was a thoroughly competent playwright in his own style.
    It does rather fizzle out but then....so does Life.?

  • @deegeraghty9426
    @deegeraghty9426 Před 12 dny

    Father, grandfather awful. Complaining, bickering all the time. Gave up after 10 minutes.