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cover2cover
Dan Cotterall
a podcast about books, literature and film
E037. Katherine Mansfield "Miss Brill"
It’s Sunday afternoon! Miss Brill extracts her fur from its box and heads gaily to the park where the people from this southern French town like to stroll, chat, observe each other and listen to the band as it strikes up a tune in the green rotunda. Miss Brill's particular pleasure is to sit on her favourite park bench and listen in on the conversations of others. She feels that she is one of the actors in these eagerly anticipated Sunday performances! This story by Katherine Mansfield is a finely chiselled everyday tragedy. 
Sep 18, 2022
17 min
E035. Measure for Measure: Duke Vincentio & King James 1
Measure for Measure was Shakespeare’s first Jacobean play. After acceding to the English throne in 1603, King James became the sponsor of Shakespeare’s theatrical troupe… and Shakespeare thumbed through the new monarch’s publications to see who he was dealing with. The Duke Vincentio of the play resembles King James 1. And yet Shakespeare succeeds in making this fantasticall Duke of dark corners both a problem solver and an eerily disturbing character.
Jul 30, 2022
23 min
E036. Measure for Measure: 2 outstanding productions
The Cheek by Jowl production of Measure for Measure from 2016 - in Russian - dispenses with some of the comic characters to intensify its focus on the Duke. The setting for the Royal Shakespeare Company production of the play, from 2019, is 19th-century Vienna - lush and oppressive. It is fascinating to see how two top directing and design teams shake, shape and stir this great play – in which Isabella pronounces one of Shakespeare’s greatest speeches. 
Jul 30, 2022
27 min
E034. Chekhov Trilogy: Comments
In this episode, we reflect on how these three stories - The Man in a Case, Gooseberries and About Love - intermesh. Chekhov draws his characters with gentle, clear-eyed irony. Like the curious figure of Mavra, these men fear to take decisive action, they clothe their deepest aspirations in silence and shy away from risk. There are brief moments of radiance but the rain that falls during these stories leaves hopes and dreams damp and defeated. 
May 18, 2022
30 min
E031. Chekhov: "The Man in a Case"
“The Man in a Case” is the first of three stories that Chekhov wrote around the year 1898 about the lives and characters of the schoolmaster Burkin, the veterinarian Ivan Ivanovitch and the landowner Alehin. This first story introduces the ludicrously cautious character Byelikov, a professor of Greek who is afraid of anything that involves risk and novelty. Burkin describes how, despite this temperament, Byelikov comes very near getting married… 
May 11, 2022
39 min
E032. Chekhov: "Gooseberries"
Ivan Ivanovitch tells the second story – “Gooseberries” – about his brother Nikolai’s 25-year attempt to establish himself on a farm in the countryside where he can drink tea, watch his ducks swim and grow gooseberries. Dismissive of his brother’s rural ambition, Ivan Ivanovitch becomes passionate – in the warmth of the drawing room – about the importance of not allowing oneself to be lulled to sleep.
May 11, 2022
34 min
E033. Chekhov: "About Love"
The final story in the trilogy – “About Love” – belongs to the landowner Alehin. Appointed a justice of the peace, Alehin has the opportunity to go regularly to town to attend the circuit court. There he meets the lovely Anna Alexyevna, a married woman to whom he is drawn and who is drawn to him. They go to the theatre together, sitting side by side, their shoulders touching. What will Alehin do? When should he speak? 
May 11, 2022
28 min
E030. Ted Hughes: "The Rabbit Catcher"
The 6-year marriage between Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes broke down in May 1962 when Hughes began an affair with another woman. That month, the furious Plath and the uneasy Hughes went on an excursion to the Devon coast. On a windswept cliff-top, they came across some rabbit traps hidden in the grass.  Both poets wrote a poem about this. This episode concentrates on Hughes’ poem, written several years later. 
Apr 28, 2022
20 min
E029. Sylvia Plath: "The Rabbit Catcher"
The 6-year marriage between Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes broke down in May 1962 when Hughes began an affair with another woman. That month, the furious Plath and the uneasy Hughes went on an excursion to the Devon coast. On a cliff-top, in a roaring wind, they came across some rabbit traps hidden in the grass. Both poets wrote a poem about this. This episode concentrates on Plath’s poem, written in that same month of May 1962. 
Apr 28, 2022
23 min
E028. Tara Westover: "Educated"
Tara Westover's Educated is the autobiographical story of a girl born into a fundamentalist family in the USA. The family lives in rural Idaho, largely cut off from other people, as Tara's father prepares feverishly for the end of the world. Tara eventually manages to go to university. It's a story about being indoctrinated and controlled, about fanaticism, about courage, about learning to own one's own narrative, about realising that the people you love do not necessarily belong in your life, and about what it means to be educated.
Feb 17, 2022
27 min
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