BBC Radio 4 Drama – Edward, Edward


You have five days to listen to ‘Edward, Edward’ by Abigail Docherty. It was first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on Monday 20 May.

From BBC Radio 4:

‘A two-hander about Edward VI and Lady Jane Grey starring brilliant young actors Oscar Kennedy and Izzy Meikel Small, first seen together in the BBC’s recent Great Expectations.

Aged just nine years old, Edward VI becomes King upon the death of his father, Henry the VIII. Together with his cousin Jane, Edward tries to negotiate the vagaries of life at court and to find a freedom when every move he makes is watched over by the tenacious Privy Council.’

Listen at:

BBC Radio 4 – Edward, Edward

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Two new free displays at the National Portrait Gallery


Queens and Consorts: Likeness in Life and Death


This free display opens at the National Portrait Gallery in room 3 on 12th June. Running until 28th February 2014, the display looks at the comparison between portraits and copies of tomb effigies.

‘Sculptural tomb effigies offer a fascinating comparative to painted portraits. This display focuses on a small selection of portraits of sixteenth-century queens and consorts, pairing copies of the sculpted effigies from the royal tombs in Westminster Abbey with painted portraits, in order to explore the process of exchange that occurred between the images that represent the sitters in life and those that memorialise them in death.
This comparison can be explored in the Gallery through the display of electrotype copies of the effigies. These were made by the Birmingham firm of Elkington & Co. in the late nineteenth century, and were based on plaster cast moulds taken by Domenico Brucciani. For example, the electrotype copy of Maximilian Colte’s effigy of Elizabeth I can be compared both with a portrait of her as a young queen, and with the magnificent image presented in the ‘Ditchley’ portrait by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, which is on display in Room 2.’ (NPG)

(from http://www.npg.org.uk/whatson/display/2013/queens-and-consorts-likeness-in-life-and-death.php)


Treasons, Plots and Murder


This free display opens at the National Portrait Gallery on 26th May in room 16. Running until 16th February 2014, the display looks at seventeenth century plots and how these events were portrayed in print.

‘The seventeenth century was witness to frequent and often gruesome plots, scandals and murders. From the Gunpowder Plot in 1605 to the Rye House Plot of 1683 the motivation was often religious; although religion and political power were inextricably linked during the Stuart period. Not all seventeenth-century ‘plots’ were plots at all; the Popish Plot of 1678 was fabricated by Titus Oates with a consequence that dozens of innocent people were brutally executed. Sexual politics could be equally controversial and were central to the case of the Thomas Overbury murder in 1613. This display explores these unwholesome episodes through contemporary prints and raises questions about the role that print culture could play in promoting a highly biased version of events.’ (NPG)

(from: http://www.npg.org.uk/whatson/display/2013/treason-plots-and-murder.php)

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Interview with Elizabeth Fremantle (author of Queen’s Gambit)


Read my interview with Elizabeth Fremantle about her new novel ‘Queen’s Gambit.’


(c) Paola Pieroni

(c) Paola Pieroni

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Leanda de Lisle – what to expect in her forthcoming book about The Tudors…

As most of you are aware the historian Leanda de Lisle now has a website, Leanda de Lisle, a Blog and is on Facebook and Twitter.

Her previous work, ‘The Sisters Who Would Be Queen: The Tragedy of Katherine, Mary and Lady Jane Grey’, revealed that the only contemporary description of Lady Jane is a fake, discovered the funeral details of Mary Grey and exposed some of the myths about their mother, Frances, Duchess of Suffolk.


(c) Chatto & Windus

(c) Chatto & Windus


Leanda’s new book, ‘Tudor: The Family Story’ will be published by Chatto & Windus on 29th August.

So what revelations can we expect about the Tudors? Leanda’s website gives a sneak peak….

I am particularly excited about the following:

‘New revelations on Mary Tudor and Lady Jane Grey.

• Flodden seen from the perspective of two Queens, Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scots & Katherine of Aragon.

• Uncovered manuscripts re-construct the life of Henry VIII’ niece Margaret Douglas. A player in key events over four Tudor reigns who plots – ultimately successfully – for her heirs to inherit Elizabeth’s throne.’

(from: http://www.leandadelisle.com/books/tudor-family-story/)

You can read about further revelations at:

Leanda de Lisle – Tudor: The Family Story


Follow Leanda at:

Leanda de Lisle

Blog

Facebook

Twitter

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Books 2013 – New publication dates…

Late June 2013 – The Tudor Rose: Princess Mary Rose, Henry VIII’s Sister by Jennifer Kewley Draskau

‘The beautiful sister of Henry VIII, the spoiled darling of the court, Princess Mary Rose Tudor was married off to the ailing King of France against her will, and, after his death, had to fight for the right to marry Henry’s favourite companion, Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk. After bearing him four children, Mary Rose died in the full flower of her beauty. Her adored husband, too busy to attend her funeral, soon married the 14-year-old fiancee of their only surviving son, who shortly thereafter died of TB. Her older daughter, Frances, was the mother of the ill-fated Jane Grey, the ‘Nine Days Queen.’ Her second daughter, Eleanor, was the grandmother of Fernando, 5th Earl of Derby, intended by Henry VIII to inherit the throne after Elizabeth. The Tudor Rose is the previously untold story of Mary Tudor and the role she and her descendants played in Tudor England.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details

The History Press


28th July 2013 – Royal Exiles: from Richard the Lionheart to Charles II [Paperback] by Iain Soden

‘’I know there are but few steps between the prisons and graves of princes’ Charles I The experience of exile and captivity, usually in war, was not uncommon for medieval kings and princes. Many knew the joy of survival followed by the frustration of being caged; some tried to govern from exile; others adapted and took advantage of a temporary release from duty; most canvassed allies and very few gave up hope. This book chronicles the experiences of capture, flight, captivity or exile as they languished far from home and the highs and lows of their attempts to regain a life to which they could relate. From Richard the Lionheart in 1192 to Charles II in 1651, a succession of England’s kings and princes were forced to flee into exile or endure captivity at home or abroad, as were foreign royalty in English hands. Even kings can be pawns in the great game of international diplomacy. Royal lineage brought privilege but also great danger. Those who suffered in this way lived periods of great frustration and of edge-of-the-seat uncertainty, surrounded by spies and guards, governing or simply relating to the outside world in secret or by smuggled letter. Negotiations for their release, when possible, were often half-hearted and subject to conflicting agendas. Returns could be torrid affairs and often involved force of arms. Some were broken by their experiences. Others came back with tales of adventure and derring-do. Most were forgotten or wrapped in layers of propaganda, put in the shade by their subsequent successful reigns or their ignominious end. It is a story of privileged lives rendered helpless, and of keeping a flame of hope alive.’

From – Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Amazon.co.uk

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