Radio diary
Early playwright Thomas Heywood, whose work is seldom heard outside universities, was the first to write a truly moving domestic tragedy: “A Woman Killed With Kindness” — The Monday Play on the Concert Programme at 9 this evening. This seventeenth-century drama of sexual guilt, sexual integrity and money, has been adapted for radio and produced for the 8.8. C. by Penny Gold.
Music from the Christchurch Folk and Accoustic Club on Plains FM this evening. If you are into folk music, listen at 8.
relational Radio, at 7.30
tomorrow evening, profiles Oskar Kokoschka, Austrian painter of portraits and landscapes who settled in England just before World War 11. After the break-up of an affair with Mahler’s widow Alma, he became notorious through taking a life-size doll of his lost love to theatres and dinner parties. This 8.8. C. production assesses the man and the myths.
Loneliness links 14-year-old Fleur with her cantankerous neighbour, Mr Hammond, in N. J. Warburton’s “Sunlight on the Garden,” on National Radio 9.05 Wednesday evening. The two yecome
friends when Fleur is working on a school project about World War 11. Patrick Troughton plays Hammond. Produced for the 8.8. C. by Matthew Walters.
Indonesia and the Philippines are examined by statesmen, academics, political scientists and journalists in Isles Apart, on the Concert Programme 9.30 Wednesday evening. They look at how the two countries have been influenced by religion, colonisation, tourism and nationalism. A chance to learn more about our neighbours to the north. James Homes
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Bibliographic details
Press, 27 February 1989, Page 19
Word Count
250Radio diary Press, 27 February 1989, Page 19
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