John Betjeman - Time with Betjeman - BBC Series 1983

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  • KLawrence
    • Jun 2024

    John Betjeman - Time with Betjeman - BBC Series 1983

    All seven programmes in the 'Time with Betjeman' series, first broadcast on BBC2 in
    1983. Programme 1 does have some edits due to copyright issues.

    Decent 480p quality - to my knowledge this series has never had a commercial release.

    Time With Betjeman Episode 1 (1983)Series of programmes celebrating the work and ways of the Poet Laureate.

    Time With Betjeman Episode 2 (1983)Series of programmes celebrating the work and ways of the Poet Laureate.

    Time with Betjeman episode 3Series of programmes celebrating the work and ways of the Poet Laureate.

    A series of programmes celebrating the work and ways of the Poet Laureate.

    Time with Betjeman Episode 5 (1983)Series of programmes celebrating the work and ways of the Poet Laureate.

    Time with Betjeman Episode 6 (1983)Series of programmes celebrating the work and ways of the Poet Laureate.

    Time with Betjeman Episode 7 (1983)The final episode in a series of programmes celebrating the work and ways of the Poet Laureate.
  • Serial_Apologist
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 36754

    #2
    Many thanks, KLawrence!

    Comment

    • LMcD
      Full Member
      • Sep 2017
      • 7586

      #3
      Tonight's episode of 'Words and Music' was called 'Betjeman's World' - churches, trains, architecture, concern for the environment, death, bells - readings by Tamsin Grieg and archive recordings of JB himself. There was a particularly felicitous segue from the Somerset & Dorset Joint Railway - which I think some folk called the 'Slow and Dirty' - to a Somerset Rhapsody by Gustav Holst, and the programme ended with Flanders and Swann's almost unbearably poignant 'Slow Train'.

      Comment

      • Serial_Apologist
        Full Member
        • Dec 2010
        • 36754

        #4
        Just too long a programme for a Sunday in my case - I'll be trying to fit this in tomorrow.

        Bells, blossoms and railway branch lines in a John Betjeman-inspired playlist.


        Comment

        • smittims
          Full Member
          • Aug 2022
          • 3251

          #5
          Yes, I think it's best to record and watch them one by one. I especially enjoyed the short black-and-white films restored some years sgo under the title 'The Lost Betjemans' and 'Betjeman Revisited'.

          Comment

          • hmvman
            Full Member
            • Mar 2007
            • 1031

            #6
            I shall look forward to catching up with this series and it'll be good to see the films again. There was an absolutely wonderful film made in 1977 as part of the Queen's jubilee celebrations called 'The Queen's Realm' which was aerial footage of Britain overlaid with Betjeman's poetry and British classical music. I'd love to see that broadcast again.

            Comment

            • LMcD
              Full Member
              • Sep 2017
              • 7586

              #7
              Originally posted by hmvman View Post
              I shall look forward to catching up with this series and it'll be good to see the films again. There was an absolutely wonderful film made in 1977 as part of the Queen's jubilee celebrations called 'The Queen's Realm' which was aerial footage of Britain overlaid with Betjeman's poetry and British classical music. I'd love to see that broadcast again.
              It's on BBC4 at 7.00 p.m. on Sunday, followed by lots more Betjeman! (He died on the 19th of May 1984).

              Comment

              • hmvman
                Full Member
                • Mar 2007
                • 1031

                #8
                Originally posted by LMcD View Post

                It's on BBC4 at 7.00 p.m. on Sunday, followed by lots more Betjeman! (He died on the 19th of May 1984).
                Ah, thank you, I shall make sure to watch.

                Comment

                • gradus
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 5484

                  #9
                  I watched it last night and it was every bit as good as I expected, a moving combination of poetry beautifully spoken and images put together by someone who loves our country.

                  Comment

                  • oddoneout
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2015
                    • 8569

                    #10
                    Originally posted by gradus View Post
                    I watched it last night and it was every bit as good as I expected, a moving combination of poetry beautifully spoken and images put together by someone who loves our country.
                    I've seen it before*, but it was just as good this time round - a programme to get lost in.
                    The accompanying music did make me wonder why we don't hear more of it, and I can't find a music list to explore further. Playing "guess the tune" is all very well but without the answers it has limited appeal. The same applies to the poetry used.
                    Something I did notice was how much better aerial photography is now that drones are used - no wobble, no ground level gales or mass stampeded animals - and fewer issues with how close to cliffs and buildings is safe enough.


                    * broadcast April 2023 I've just noticed.

                    Comment

                    • Serial_Apologist
                      Full Member
                      • Dec 2010
                      • 36754

                      #11
                      Yes I'd also seen it before - or at any rate the middle of the 3 programmes, which I taped back at the time of its first broadcast in 2001. I hadn't seen the Monitor, a fascinating insight into his and his fellow poet's feelings about life and death which revealed Betjamen as something of a sceptic, notwithstanding his outward empathies with C of E Protestantism. He was a funny old so-and-so,Betjamen, wasn't, he: on the one hand railing against modern day de-personalisation and its manfestations, particularly as expressed in landscape and architecture, on the other holding to his illusory dreams of a bygone England vested in Crown, Aristocracy and the common peasant! I would still love to write poetry of any kind, let alone as subtle and multilevelled in meanings as he did!

                      Comment

                      • smittims
                        Full Member
                        • Aug 2022
                        • 3251

                        #12
                        Yes, Betjeman had his contradictions , but I think that's part of his fascination, and why he's so interesting to listen to. . He was from an age when original-thinking people weren't produced by a mass-production education system. We're back to Harry Lime and the cuckoo clock.

                        It was of course a horribly unfair age riddled with inequalities and prejudice, but it did produce such intersting minds. Ralph Vaughan Williams and Thomas Hardy were agnostics with a deep love of the church and the Bible: it's a complex paradox they couldn't explain.

                        Comment

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