2,000 episodios

Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music

Front Row BBC Radio 4

    • Sociedad y cultura

Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music

    London Tide with music by PJ Harvey, Salman Rushdie's story of survival: Knife and tenor Ian Bostridge

    London Tide with music by PJ Harvey, Salman Rushdie's story of survival: Knife and tenor Ian Bostridge

    Knife is Salman Rushdie’s memoir about surviving a near-fatal knife attack in August 2022 and the long, painful period of recovery that followed.
    Ben Power’s adaption of the Dickens novel Our Mutual Friend – London Tide – which features songs that he co-wrote with PJ Harvey, has just opened at the National Theatre in London.
    Baby Reindeer is a new Netflix drama written by and starring Richard Gadd who drew directly on his own shocking experience of being stalked.
    All three are reviewed by Tahmima Anam and John Mullan.
    We also hear from tenor Ian Bostridge on mobile phone use in concert halls and why he stopped a performance of Britten's Les Illuminations with the CBSO last night.
    Presenter: Tom Sutcliffe
    Producer: Corinna Jones

    • 42 min
    Lionel Shriver's new book Mania, Tyrell Williams on Red Pitch

    Lionel Shriver's new book Mania, Tyrell Williams on Red Pitch

    Lionel Shriver on her latest novel Mania, in which she creates an alternative USA where the Mental Parity Movement insists that everyone is equally clever. Can a friendship between two women survive when they hold polarised views on this particular “culture war”?
    Why are universities all over the country closing arts courses and cutting jobs? Front Row investigates and considers the consequences.
    Playwright Tyrell Williams talks about his acclaimed play Red Pitch, about three young lads dreaming of football stardom. But what happens when their local football pitch is under threat, as a result of gentrification?
    Presenter: Samira Ahmed
    Producer: Julian May

    • 42 min
    Sir John Akomfrah, bicentenary of Byron's death and sped-up music

    Sir John Akomfrah, bicentenary of Byron's death and sped-up music

    Lord Byron died 200 years ago on Friday. Lady Caroline Lamb described him as 'mad, bad and dangerous to know'. Fiona Stafford has edited Byron's Travels, a new selection of his poems, letters and journals. He was only 36 when he died, but had written seven volumes of verse, thirteen volumes of journal and thousands of letters. The poet A. E. Stallings, who lives in Greece, where Byron died while supporting the Greek struggle for independence - and Fiona Stafford, join Tom Sutcliffe to celebrate this great, scandalous and very funny Romantic poet.
    We talk about the sped-up music phenomenon, and what it tells us about the constantly evolving relationship between the music industry and music fans. Music business writer Eamonn Forde and singer-songwriter Fiona Bevan are in the Front Row studio.
    And artist Sir John Akomfrah joins us from the British Pavilion at the 60th Venice Biennale where he is representing the UK, with his exhibition, Listening All Night To The Rain.
    Presenter: Tom Sutcliffe
    Producer: Paul Waters

    • 41 min
    The Book of Clarence, Liberation Squares, Northern Ireland's filming boom

    The Book of Clarence, Liberation Squares, Northern Ireland's filming boom

    British director Jeymes Samuel discusses his new film The Book of Clarence, a Biblical comedy about a down-on-his-luck young man who tries to escape from a debt by pretending to be a messiah like Christ.
    Sonali Bhattacharyya on her new play Liberation Square, which just opened at the Nottingham Playhouse and explores the lives of three young Muslim women who find themselves caught up in the state surveillance ‘Prevent’ programme.
    With the hit Belfast-set drama Blue Lights returning to BBC One for its second season tonight, Kathy Clugston reports on Northern Ireland booming film industry.
    Presenter: Nick Ahad
    Producer: Paula McGrath

    • 42 min
    Amy Winehouse biopic Back to Black and Percival Everett's James reviewed

    Amy Winehouse biopic Back to Black and Percival Everett's James reviewed

    Back to Black is the Amy Winehouse biopic out this week and directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson.
    James is Percival Everett’s retelling of Mark Twain’s 1884 novel Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, narrated by the enslaved Jim.
    The Wallace collection spotlights Ranjit Singh, the Maharaja of the Sikh Empire and the treasure trove of weapons that kept him in power.
    Writer Dreda Say Mitchell and journalist and broadcaster Bidisha join Tom Sutcliffe to review.
    We also look at the BAFTA games awards with scummy mummy and gamer Ellie Gibson.
    Presenter: Tom Sutcliffe
    Producer: Corinna Jones

    • 42 min
    Folk musician Martin Simpson, movie icon Anna May Wong, and classical music leaders criticise Arts Council England

    Folk musician Martin Simpson, movie icon Anna May Wong, and classical music leaders criticise Arts Council England

    Anna May Wong was an international star who appeared in some of Hollywood’s biggest movies in a career that spanned from the silent films of the 1920s, through the advent of talkies in the 30s, to television in the 1950s, despite all the obstacles in her path. A new biography, Not Your China Doll, examines how against all the odds Anna May Wong found international fame and became a trailblazer for Asian American actors.
    The English folk singer and guitar virtuoso Martin Simpson performs material from his new album - his 24th - Skydancers. The title track, commissioned by naturalist Chris Packham, highlights the plight of the Hen harrier. Simpson talks about his love of birds, of traditional song, of writing his own, the influence on him of American music, and a lifetime playing the guitar and banjo.
    Some leaders of classical music organisations say that the attitude to funding by the Arts Councils in England and Wales is undermining excellence, and putting inclusion before professionalism. We hear from a range of voices, including Sir Antonio Pappano, Chief Conductor at the London Symphony Orchestra and music director of the Royal Opera House; John Gilhooly, director of the Wigmore Hall and chair of the Royal Philharmonic Society; Kathryn McDowell, Managing Director of the London Symphony Orchestra and a former music director at Arts Council England; and Michael Eakin, Chief Executive of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra and former Executive Director of the Arts Council Northwest.
    Presenter: Samira Ahmed
    Producer: Julian May

    • 42 min

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