Do3 - The Light of Darkness [R]

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    Do3 - The Light of Darkness [R]

    Drama on 3 returns on Sunday 4 September, 8.45pm with a repeat of Louis Nowra's The Light of Darkness.

    "When Leslie Davis suddenly takes up a diplomatic posting in Harput, a remote province of Turkey, he is determined to find commercial opportunities for America. Instead, soon after his arrival, Turkey enters World War One on Germany's side. Davis finds himself playing poker to save the lives of his young secretary, his interpreter and many other Armenians. Later he wrote up the account of his Harput experience in a book called Slaughterhouse Province.

    "Louis Nowra is a playwright who has researched Davis's life and work and the history of Harput. He is based in Australia and was drawn to this story by way of his admiration for the music of the Armenian composer Komitas, which features in the play."

    (Last broadcast Sun 1 Aug 2010)
    It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

    #2
    I didn't hear this when it was broadcast last year, so decided to catch up with it this time. For me, it was one of those historical dramas where the main interest is in the history and not the drama - despite, or perhaps because of, the weightiness of the subject matter it did not really take off or have much dramatic tension. It was based on the real life experiences and observations of an American consul in a Turkish province just before and during the Armenian genocide in 1915-17. The primary source for the play can be found here if anyone wants to look through it. There were some decent performances, especially from Jack Klaff as the sinister provincial governor, Sabit Bey, but all too often the dialogue did not match up to the horrific nature of the actual events, and the listener's expectations were never seriously challenged as to what was to come next (and often, what was to be said next).

    It's very hard, perhaps impossible, at the distance of nearly a century for a dramatist to convey anything of the terror and brutality of that history. If the play had one merit, it was to awaken interest in a subject which has been wrongly consigned to almost a footnote to the history of the first world war. Shamefully, the fact of the genocide has never been officially recognised by the UK government, though a number of countries including prominent European ones have recognised it. It's to be hoped that, in the three and a half years leading up to the centenary of the start of the genocide, pressure will be put on this UK government to correct that situation.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by aeolium View Post
      If the play had one merit, it was to awaken interest in a subject which has been wrongly consigned to almost a footnote to the history of the first world war. Shamefully, the fact of the genocide has never been officially recognised by the UK government, though a number of countries including prominent European ones have recognised it.
      And, of course, as we have said not infrequently, a feature programme could have done that equally well - if not better (better, in the sense that that would be what the feature was intended to do, whereas a play does arouse expectations of good dramatic writing and is at least a partial failure if the drama doesn't satisfy).
      It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by french frank View Post
        And, of course, as we have said not infrequently, a feature programme could have done that equally well - if not better (better, in the sense that that would be what the feature was intended to do, whereas a play does arouse expectations of good dramatic writing and is at least a partial failure if the drama doesn't satisfy).
        Perhaps a double-pronged approach would be best of all. There are doubtless many who would tune-out to a documentary presentation about the genocide. Nor do I fear there is great support at the BBC for presenting the truth on the matter - Auntie cheerled for the "coalition" quite unequivocally in Iraq, when Turkey's support greatly suited Britain. The BBC closed its eyes when Turkey launched cross-border strikes at Iraqi Kurds (the very people whom the Coalition claimed to be defending, ehem). The USA has been shouting for a long time about the EU granting expedited membership to Turkey... and the Beeb is always keen to underscore The Truth From The Oval Office. Armenia, by contrast, has no powerful allies to fight its corner, while Turkey mobilises a thunderous PR machine to sweep its persecution of Armenians and Kurds under the carpet.

        Comment


          #5
          There are doubtless many who would tune-out to a documentary presentation about the genocide. Nor do I fear there is great support at the BBC for presenting the truth on the matter
          I don't buy the idea of the BBC suppressing items on the Armenian genocide - if that were the case they could easily have shelved this play, which did not hold back on placing the responsibility for the slaughter firmly on the Turkish authorities. I suspect they feel it is a somewhat obscure subject for a documentary feature (which would normally be on R4) whereas that is not a problem for historical dramas on Do3. I agree with ff that a documentary would have covered the material better, and I would be surprised if there were not one in the centenary year 2015. As for many 'tuning out' to a documentary on the genocide, how many do you think tuned in to this play about it?

          PS Have just noticed that there was a BBC TV documentary on the genocide in 2003, entitled 'The Betrayed' and presented by Fergal Keane.
          Last edited by aeolium; 09-09-11, 15:19. Reason: Added PS

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by aeolium View Post
            I don't buy the idea of the BBC suppressing items on the Armenian genocide - if that were the case they could easily have shelved this play, which did not hold back on placing the responsibility for the slaughter firmly on the Turkish authorities.
            Originally posted by aeolium View Post
            As for many 'tuning out' to a documentary on the genocide, how many do you think tuned in to this play about it?
            You seem to have answered your own question there I doubt that this play registered even a blip in Ankara. Whereas a documentary (inevitably on another network, such R4 with a broader listener base) would have been harder to hide away in the scheds.

            Originally posted by aeolium View Post
            PS Have just noticed that there was a BBC TV documentary on the genocide in 2003, entitled 'The Betrayed' and presented by Fergal Keane.
            The Iraq War only began in 2003. Probably the documentary was made the previous year (due to weather conditions in winter) and had already been scheduled for screening - no-one had really realised then how much Downing Street would pander to Turkish interests to obtain supply-lines, airfields, military and hospital backup etc.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Al R Gando View Post
              The Iraq War only began in 2003. Probably the documentary was made the previous year (due to weather conditions in winter) and had already been scheduled for screening - no-one had really realised then how much Downing Street would pander to Turkish interests to obtain supply-lines, airfields, military and hospital backup etc.
              On the other hand, they can't keep on producing documentaries about the genocide. There are other things going on in the world!
              It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by french frank View Post
                On the other hand, they can't keep on producing documentaries about the genocide. There are other things going on in the world!
                Fair enough, although one report since Feargal Keene's 2003 program wouldn't really be "keeping on producing documentaries"... in my book, anyhow

                Comment


                  #9
                  I doubt that this play registered even a blip in Ankara. Whereas a documentary (inevitably on another network, such R4 with a broader listener base) would have been harder to hide away in the scheds.
                  I don't think a play on R3, or indeed a documentary on R4, will register much in Ankara and that is not a primary concern of the BBC when scheduling its radio transmissions. The fact is that the BBC did produce a TV documentary on the genocide and I don't believe a conspiracy theory that the BBC have got cold feet simply because of the Iraq war, as if they are merely a propaganda tool of the government. For one thing, Turkey was a strategic ally well before the 2nd Iraq war and any concerns about possible offence to the Turkish government would equally have applied in early 2003.

                  Anyway, for me, the test will be in 2015. If your view of the BBC is right, then there will be no significant feature on the genocide in that year. As ff says, in the interim there will be plenty of other stuff going on.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by aeolium View Post
                    If your view of the BBC is right, then there will be no significant feature on the genocide in that year. As ff says, in the interim there will be plenty of other stuff going on.
                    The BBC is no longer an unbiased player in the New Great Game - it sets the agenda in Information Wars, rather than reporting it. By 2015 I expect the BBC will have partnered with NATO in an official sense, and will be working in tandem as a War Partner. By then we'll be deeply enmeshed in the Iran War, of course.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Al R Gando View Post
                      The BBC is no longer an unbiased player in the New Great Game - it sets the agenda in Information Wars, rather than reporting it. By 2015 I expect the BBC will have partnered with NATO in an official sense, and will be working in tandem as a War Partner. By then we'll be deeply enmeshed in the Iran War, of course.
                      Then you and I have utterly different views about the nature of the BBC.

                      Did anyone else listen to this play and have any views about it?

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by Al R Gando View Post
                        The BBC is no longer an unbiased player in the New Great Game - it sets the agenda in Information Wars, rather than reporting it. By 2015 I expect the BBC will have partnered with NATO in an official sense, and will be working in tandem as a War Partner. By then we'll be deeply enmeshed in the Iran War, of course.
                        Codswallop - am I allowed to say that?

                        This is the Arts and Ideas board, and a thread on drama: can we not turn it into another wrangle about the warmongering West, please? I'm sure there are other forums where like-minded people meet to say how terrible Britain and the USA are.
                        It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by french frank View Post
                          Codswallop - am I allowed to say that?
                          You are indeed allowed! As long as I am allowed to disagree!

                          Over the past decade since the "sexed-up WMD" nonsense the reinvented BBC has moved from moral conscience to complicit apologist. And it's made lots of dosh doing so. Today's BBC is NATO's mouthpiece.

                          You really cannot expect to discuss a play about atrocities committed by one nation upon another, without a discussion of those issues and how they are presented in the media. Nor do I think the playwright would want those issues to go undiscussed.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            You really cannot expect to discuss a play about atrocities committed by one nation upon another, without a discussion of those issues and how they are presented in the media. Nor do I think the playwright would want those issues to go undiscussed.
                            Did you listen to the play? You don't seem to be commenting on it at all, only about how the BBC is NATO's mouthpiece and similar nonsense. If you think that, why are you even posting on a forum devoted to the discussion of one part of the BBC's output?

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by aeolium View Post
                              Did you listen to the play?
                              Ever been to Armenia?

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