Samuel Pepys – After the Fire: BBC Radio 4 full-cast dramatisation
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Description
Kris Marshall (My Family) stars in this BBC Radio 4 dramatisation of the famous diarist’s account of the aftermath of the Great Fire of London. Following on from the acclaimed radio dramatisation of Pepys’ complete diaries, this further instalment of his chronicles focuses on events following the cataclysmic inferno that destroyed much of the capital four hundred years ago. When the Great Fire of 1666 was finally extinguished, little remained of London but smouldering rubble. Samuel Pepys witnessed firsthand the impact it had on the city and its people, and would be haunted by what he had seen for the rest of his life. Thousands of homes and many key buildings had been destroyed or damaged, including St Paul’s Cathedral. Now aged 70, in poor health, and living with his servant Will in Clapham, Pepys remembers the devastation. He recalls burying his prize Parmesan to keep it safe, standing in Moorfield among the homeless as London burned, going out in his carriage to look at the ruins, and viewing the plans for the new city that would rise from the ashes – its centrepiece a magnificent cathedral that would be hailed as a masterpiece. Starring Kris Marshall as Samuel Pepys, this entertaining and enlightening adaptation by Hattie Naylor vividly conjures up the sights and sounds of Pepys’ world. Duration: 1 hour 15 mins approx.
Additional information
Weight | 0.1 kg |
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Dimensions | 1.02 × 14.48 × 12.45 cm |
PubliCanadanadation City/Country | United Kingdom |
by | |
Format | CD-Audio |
Language | |
Publisher | |
Year Published | 2017-2-28 |
Imprint | |
ISBN 10 | 178529329X |
About The Author | Samuel Pepys was born on 23 February 1633, the son of a London tailor. He graduated from Cambridge in 1654, and in 1655 he married Elizabeth St Michel. He started work for Sir Edward Montague, a relation who later became the 1st Earl of Sandwich, and through him first went to sea. Pepys later found work with the Navy Office, eventually rising to become Secretary of the Admiralty. He also became a JP, an MP and a Fellow of the Royal Society. In later life he was accused of being part of the anti-monarchist ‘Popish Plot’, and was twice imprisoned for it. Upon his second release he retired to Clapham, then considered to be ‘in the country’. Samuel Pepys died on 26 May 1703. His diaries, which had been written in code, were bequeathed to Magdalen College, Cambridge, where they can still be viewed. |
"…balancing domesticity, business and history so vividly and unexpectedly it sounds as if 1660 were the day before yesterday."—Gillian Reynolds, Daily Telegraph (review of the first series) |
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