Wildfire at Midnight - Mary Stewart - BBC Saturday Night Theatre

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  • Опубліковано 16 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 49

  • @TheKathymorrison
    @TheKathymorrison 3 роки тому +20

    Love this one too.. Falling to sleep having someone read to you is so calming.. I have to listen every night now!!!

  • @lyndanorvitch1912
    @lyndanorvitch1912 3 місяці тому +5

    I read all of Mary Stewart's books when I younger.

  • @mckavitt13
    @mckavitt13 3 роки тому +49

    These programmes relax me too, help me to sleep in these anxious times... A thousand thanks!

    • @karengarling8035
      @karengarling8035 3 роки тому +4

      Same here.

    • @daftirishmarej1827
      @daftirishmarej1827 3 роки тому

      I seem to recognise your name from Jamie Mason pre-Covid days! How's life?

    • @doreekaplan2589
      @doreekaplan2589 9 місяців тому +1

      Not thinking 'anxious' thoughts is the answer, turning off the news, not reading about awful daily events, talking about it....all contribute to feeling good, reaching for great, positive, healthful personal times.

  • @aprilskies1051
    @aprilskies1051 3 роки тому +18

    Thank you again for sharing this broadcast. I especially like the Scottish ones but enjoy them all. They remind me of better times

  • @angelamass8405
    @angelamass8405 3 роки тому +16

    Thank goodness something worth listening to .

  • @spanishDoll1
    @spanishDoll1 3 роки тому +15

    Listening to these programs relaxes me

  • @lydiamarks8577
    @lydiamarks8577 3 роки тому +6

    Most enjoyable & right up my street this morning 👍 Thank you for uploading.

  • @petrowiese1387
    @petrowiese1387 3 роки тому +3

    Love these!! Thank you so much. Love from South Africa 🇿🇦

  • @grimtt
    @grimtt 3 роки тому +9

    Yay, a mystery! Many thanks! 👍

  • @spanishDoll1
    @spanishDoll1 3 роки тому +9

    Great listening. Thanks for the upload

  • @emf49
    @emf49 7 місяців тому +2

    That was intriguing and well enjoyable. Thanks!

  • @Bambisgf77
    @Bambisgf77 3 роки тому +11

    I have been reading her novels lately & really enjoy them. Clean mysteries! Thank you for sharing this one.
    ***Edit***
    This is the most violent & graphic Mary Stewart tale I have ever heard 🙁

    • @auntyJanette
      @auntyJanette 3 роки тому

      I wonder if the interpretation and production brings added violence to the story. It is definitely rather brutal.

    • @VLind-uk6mb
      @VLind-uk6mb Рік тому

      @@auntyJanette No, it's there. I have read and re-read every Mary Stewart novel since I was a schoolgirl and pinched my mother's library books. This probably is the most violent.

    • @auntyJanette
      @auntyJanette Рік тому

      @@VLind-uk6mb two years on you are taxing my old memory!! I’ll relisten with a caveat that if it’s too violent I’ll turn it off. 😊

  • @alicejackson771
    @alicejackson771 3 роки тому +20

    Enid Blyton for grown-ups! Lovely!

  • @Wendyj55
    @Wendyj55 2 місяці тому

    @2MsValkyrie529: I LOLLED at this, especially the cardboard 😅.

  • @MrBazzabee
    @MrBazzabee 3 роки тому +3

    Good play Uncle Chesterton.

  • @Tinyflypie
    @Tinyflypie 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you thank you thank you

  • @karensherlock9618
    @karensherlock9618 3 місяці тому

    Just a delight
    Thanks

  • @royweblin9561
    @royweblin9561 Рік тому +4

    Adult entertainment so wonderful 🙏🏻

  • @doreekaplan2589
    @doreekaplan2589 9 місяців тому +1

    Never heard of 'brown coffee'. Americans dont prepare others coffee or tea. We just put milk and sugar on the table.

    • @jordsupp
      @jordsupp 29 днів тому

      Yes, that was interesting. But even in the colonies, we ask, "Black or white?" I'm curious to understand the reference to "brown".

  • @harryturnbull1884
    @harryturnbull1884 Рік тому

    A couple of Mary's stories have been adapted by BBC radio and although very entertaining they were consistently plagued with wild coincidences. Same here. Travelling to a remote Highlands hotel to find you know loads of people also visiting. Piffle.

    • @VLind-uk6mb
      @VLind-uk6mb Рік тому +2

      Nicholas is not a coincidence if you listened to the end. But if it is a fairly well-known small hotel in a place with few others, there's a good chance it will draw people like the actress. And it is a climbing hotel, so it will draw climbers.

  • @tuxedomask7071
    @tuxedomask7071 9 днів тому

    Give the lady an award for that scream. Ouchie 🙈

  • @mariemcdonald-muldowney5679
    @mariemcdonald-muldowney5679 3 роки тому +3

    Love them so much

  • @debrawhited3035
    @debrawhited3035 3 роки тому +4

    I was rather surprised to hear the credits at the end. The voice of Gianetta sounded EXACTLY like Felicity Kendal, so much so, it was hard to believe it wasn't her. I have no idea what year this was recorded (the book was written in the 50s, I think) and may have been too early for it to have been her, anyway. The English men all had that extremely posh accent of an earlier era.

  • @martinlewis807
    @martinlewis807 5 місяців тому +2

    Just like being back in the UK

  • @mortymerjohn8057
    @mortymerjohn8057 Рік тому +1

    the last time I was in Camusunaridh there was just a bothy there

  • @mrbazzabee4013
    @mrbazzabee4013 3 роки тому +10

    Oh No...! There's been another Muh-dah !

  • @anaderol5408
    @anaderol5408 3 роки тому +1

    Good grief - my suspicions were confirmed by Wikipedia - Mary Stewart was married for 56 years until her husband's death - she never experienced divorce. Only exceptional authors should write about personal and deeply emotional topics of which they have no experience. H.G.Wells' "War of the Worlds" was by far a more convincing story than Stewart's "Disneyesque" approach to divorce (especially divorce in the 1950's - it was not a decision taken easily nor was it quick in its execution - by comparison Hillary and Tanzing's conquest of Everest took less time than the average divorce in those days).

    • @claralblume2200
      @claralblume2200 2 роки тому +4

      What twaddle. Authors are authors and use imagination. I can’t possibly think how awful life and art would be if only people wrote what they knew. How stultifying

    • @anaderol5408
      @anaderol5408 2 роки тому

      @@claralblume2200 Disagree - authors do and should use imagination but what they write becomes 'twaddle' when they don't bother to research the topic before committing words to paper unless, of course, it is meant to be a work of fantasy and not depicting everyday life.

  • @2msvalkyrie529
    @2msvalkyrie529 3 роки тому +2

    Apparently Ms Stewart wanted to write a ' classic closed room detective
    story " ? Having listened to this I can safely say Dame Agatha has nothing
    to worry about. No cliche was left unused and massive amounts of cardboard
    employed in constructing the ' characters ' . If she'd come up with a decent
    plot she might have gotten away with it but , alas, that vanished like the Cuillin
    Hills under a thick blanket of Scotch mist.

    • @ayferbektas7034
      @ayferbektas7034 3 роки тому +4

      When a story wasn't specifically written as a radio play, but adapted from a book then the story usually gets shortened. It might be that shortening and adaption have an effect on the original quality of the story.
      I must say, though, I find the quality of the BBC plays excellent.
      Thank you, BBC. And thank you, ChR, for uploading the plays. 🙋‍♀️

    • @MrBazzabee
      @MrBazzabee 3 роки тому +1

      Thanx Uncle 2msvalkyrie ....I'll take dew note.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 3 роки тому +1

      @ MrBazzabee
      Keep it in your sporran ! !

    • @anniebroadbent7961
      @anniebroadbent7961 Рік тому +1

      This is a really poor adaptation of a very good book. Worth reading the book.

    • @VLind-uk6mb
      @VLind-uk6mb Рік тому +2

      @@anniebroadbent7961 I don't think it is too bad -- much better than the adaptation of The Gabriel Hounds -- but the book is definitely richer. I loved re-reading it almost as much for its drawing of the landscape as for the characters, who may have been lightly-drawn but were perfectly understandable.