moon_custafer: sign: DANGER DUE TO OMEN (Omen)
moon_custafer ([personal profile] moon_custafer) wrote2024-08-07 10:03 am
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A Break from Other Topics

Came across these reaction videos for the Classic Doctor Who story “The Visitation,” which has one of the best one-off historical-era companions, 17th-century ham-actor-turned-ham-highwayman Richard Mace (Michael Robbins).

This led me to look into the production of the episode, and it turns out screenwriter Eric Saward refitted the character from one he’d invented in the mid-1970s for a series of radio plays, which are listenable on Youtube. 

So far I’ve only listened to the first show, "The Assassin," and the mystery-plot isn’t the most intricate, but the atmosphere’s good fun. The radio version of Richard Mace is voiced by Geoffrey Matthews, and he’s a Victorian actor leading a double life as East End beggar and information-broker, while also consuming alarming amounts of brandy. Anyway this leads to him, and his long-suffering dresser, Roundtree (Leonard Fenton), occasionally helping Scotland Yard solve bizarre mysteries. The recording was clearly audio-taped by someone off a radio broadcast – they also seem to have taped over a production of The Mikado, so you get a little unrelated bit of Gilbert-and-Sullivan dialogue after the credits.
sovay: (Claude Rains)

[personal profile] sovay 2024-08-07 02:06 pm (UTC)(link)
The radio version of Richard Mace is voiced by Geoffrey Matthews, and he’s a Victorian actor leading a double life as East End beggar and information-broker, while also consuming alarming amounts of brandy. Anyway this leads to him, and his long-suffering dresser, Roundtree (Leonard Fenton), occasionally helping Scotland Yard solve bizarre mysteries.

That sounds delightful.
thisbluespirit: (dw - five)

[personal profile] thisbluespirit 2024-08-07 05:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Eric Saward refitted the character from one he’d invented in the mid-1970s for a series of radio plays,

I've known that pretty much forever (blame a misspent youth reading Doctor Who magazine!) but even with my recent bout of radio listening, it had never occurred to me to go looking for the radio series in question. Although, tbf, I do have very mixed reactions to some of Saward's DW work. I'm glad to hear they're good!
thisbluespirit: (dw - five)

[personal profile] thisbluespirit 2024-08-13 07:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Aw, my pleasure! I'm glad you're enjoying her reactions, too.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2024-08-07 08:06 pm (UTC)(link)
The recording was clearly audio-taped by someone off a radio broadcast – they also seem to have taped over a production of The Mikado, so you get a little unrelated bit of Gilbert-and-Sullivan dialogue after the credits.

I really miss those little bits of analog life.