Today’s Joanna Page: Billy Liar

In a return to its roots, Today’s Joanna Page eschews the excitement of the review and the intellectual delight of the polemic in favour of pure pictures, since it’s time for the 2004 touring production of Billy Liar, which I obviously didn’t see (even though it began its run at Bromley’s Churchill theatre).

I can’t even comment on the story, since although I’ve seen the movie version, it was so long go, all I can remember are about three images from the whole thing. And I haven’t seen the TV series. Or read the book.

Oh dear.

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The winner of the Sky+ competition isn’t…

Time to announce the winner of the Sky+ competition.

However, we had two contestants this time. Holding remote control one was Lesley Smith who didn’t really plead at all, simply asked to be added to the list, which should technically have disqualified her from winning. However, she’s away on business right now (judging from the out of the office reply message that she’s been sending in response to the daily MINE email digest), so can’t escalate her case easily.

Holding remote control two was a previous competition winner, Ms Rullsenberg, who while making quite a good case for why she needed Sky+, didn’t officially enter herself into the competition. I gave her ’til Sunday to enter, but judging from her latest blog entry, she’s very busy right now.

Tricky, hey?

So, I’m postponing the final decision and opening the floor to you, gentle reader. The competition will remain open another couple of days. If anyone else wants to enter, you still can. But if you think either Lesley or Rullsenberg (or both) are eligible to win the prize based on their current responses, speak up now!

Bear in mind, by the way, that the voucher’s only valid until the 28th of July, so I’m going to need responses quickly!

Sitting Tennant

Today’s Sitting Tennant: Hamlet (from Poly)

David Tennant rehearsing Hamlet

Today’s Sitting Tennant, is reassuringly fresh and up to the minute, since its from rehearsals of Hamlet. I don’t know whether that warrants bonus points. Probably, particularly since it has Patrick Stewart looming in the background.

That puts Rosby in the lead with five entries, Persephone at four. Poly with three and a half, and Scott and Toby with two entries each.

On the witty and amusing captions front, Marie and Toby are now equal top with five captions each, with Persephone on four, Rullsenberg and Electric Dragon on two and Poly on one.

Feel free to suggest one for DT’s skull tossing above.

Got a picture of David Tennant sitting, lying down or in some indeterminate state in between? Then leave a link to it below and if it’s judged suitable, it will appear in the “Sitting Tennant” gallery in due course.

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Lost Gems: The Ice House

The Ice House

Christmas is a time traditionally associated with ghost stories. I don’t know why that is – maybe it’s a pagan hangover, since “let’s celebrate the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ by scaring each other silly” doesn’t strike me as a particularly coherent Christian concept.

Probably the most famous teller of Christmas ghost stories is MR James, the Cambridge don who used to gather friends and students round at Christmas and scare them silly with tales such as Whistle and I’ll Come To You, A Warning to the Curious, The Stalls of Barchester Cathedral and Lost Hearts. These were eventually collected into various omnibuses and back in the 60s and 70s, the BBC started adapting the stories, airing a new tale at Christmas.

Initially, just one-offs, the strand eventually was formalised as A Ghost Story for Christmas, with Rosemary Hill as producer and Lawrence Gordon Clark as director. Sticking with James for the first few years, Hill strayed in 1975, getting Andrew Davies to adapt Charles Dickens’ The Signalman for the strand. She then chose to forego literary sources altogether and began commissioning original stories instead.

The first of these was Clive Exton’s Stigma (which I might deal with at a later time, if you’re lucky), but for reasons known only to the Beeb, the strand concluded with John Bowen’s The Ice House in 1978. Although BBC2 and BBC4 have repeated many of the episodes and the BFI have released some on DVD, The Ice House has never been repeated. It’s a Lost Gem.

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