Synopsis
The Oldie magazines podcast featuring discussion and debate around the lead features in the latest magazine, plus live recordings from our famous Literary Lunches. Presented by Harry Mount and Annabel Sampson.
Episodes
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Andrew Roberts on Churchill: Walking with Destiny at the Oldie Literary Lunch
02/11/2018 Duration: 11minAndrew Roberts on Churchill: Walking with Destiny
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December Issue: Blue guides and the Greek islands
31/10/2018 Duration: 16minLucy Lethbridge talks to our editor Harry Mount about the world famous Blue Guides and the perceived difference between tourists and 'real' travellers.
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6: December Issue: Life was my Uni
31/10/2018 Duration: 19minOur editor, Harry Mount, interviews Nicky Haslam about the joy of having not been to university.
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5: Miranda Seymour on In Bryon's Wake at the Oldie Literary Lunch
25/10/2018 Duration: 09minMiranda Seymour on In Bryon's Wake
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4: Giles Wood and Mary Killen on The Diary of Two Nobodies at the Oldie Literary Lunch
25/10/2018 Duration: 12minGiles Wood and Mary Killen on The Diary of Two Nobodies
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4: Dan Cruikshank on Skyscrapers at the Oldie Literary Lunch
25/10/2018 Duration: 15minDan Cruikshank on Skyscrapers
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3: Tony Adams on Sober: Football. My Story. My Life. at the Oldie Literary Lunch
25/10/2018 Duration: 11minTony Adams on Sober: Football. My Story. My Life.
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1: November Issue: Let's Get Real About Food
02/10/2018 Duration: 24minLucy Deedes, the daughter of WF Deedes, Private Eye’s Dear Bill, remembers a childhood spent eating roadkill and deer butchered in the garden – before we all got so fussy about food.
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1: November Issue: I Once Kissed Roger Moore
02/10/2018 Duration: 27minFormer Bond Girl Madeline Smith talks to Annabel Sampson about Roger Moore undressing her with a magnetic watch in 'Live and Let Die'. Madeline also talks about Bond Girls in the #MeToo climate, and why Peter Cook was the 'one that got away'.
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2: Filming if...
20/09/2018 Duration: 28minTo celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of if… The Oldie screened Lindsay Anderson’s anti-establishment satire set in an English public school at the Soho's Curzon. David Wood – who played Johnny in the film – spoke to Valerie Grove, the Oldie's radio columnist, afterwards. Here is part of that conversation, followed by a few questions from the audience.
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October Issue: Kenneth Cranham on Harold Pinter
03/09/2018 Duration: 33minTen years after Harold Pinter's death – and on the eve of a new season of his plays – actor Kenneth Cranham remembers his friend's advice on how to understand and act in his works
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October Issue: Sara Wheeler on Anton Chekov's Gardens
28/08/2018 Duration: 17minOur Digital Editor, Annabel Sampson, talks to Sara Wheeler about Anton Chekhov’s Russian garden, that has been copied in Devon after a blooming debut at this year’s Hampton Court Palace Flower Show. Chekhov’s work as a doctor was invigorated by a deep sympathy with the natural world. Listen here.
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1: September Issue: Ask Virginia
08/08/2018 Duration: 27minThe Oldie’s Agony Aunt, the stand-up, novelist and columnist Virginia Ironside, opens up about solving reader conundrums, something she has done now for nearly 40 years. She airs her mixed feelings about celebrity agony aunts and the unreadable prose of some of her contemporaries. Our Digital Editor goes to her house in West London, to see Virginia and meet her cat.
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1: Dame Jenni Murray on A History of Britain in 21 Women at the Oldie Literary Lunch
07/08/2018 Duration: 13minThey were famous queens, unrecognised visionaries, great artists and trailblazing politicians. They all pushed back boundaries and revolutionised our world. Jenni Murray presents the history of Britain as you've never seen it before, through the lives of twenty-one women who refused to succumb to the established laws of society, whose lives embodied hope and change, and who still have the power to inspire us today. This talk was recorded at an Oldie Literary Lunch at Simpson's-in-the-Strand on July 17th 2018.
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1: Ferdinand Mount on Prime Movers at the Oldie Literary Lunch
07/08/2018 Duration: 19minThe former head of Margaret Thatcher’s policy unit and former editor of the TLS will talk about his latest book, Prime Movers. It examines the political ideas of twelve great thinkers across the centuries, including Pericles, Jesus Christ and Edmund Burke. This talk was recorded at an Oldie Literary Lunch at Simpson's-in-the-Strand on July 17th 2018.
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1: Andrew Gimson on Gimson's Prime Ministers at the Oldie Literary Lunch
07/08/2018 Duration: 12minWho is your favourite prime minister? Gimson has written a vivid account of the lives of PMs from Walpole to May. The former parliamentary sketchwriter for the Telegraph and biographer of Boris Johnson, Gimson is the dream guide to our First Lords of the Treasury. This talk was recorded at an Oldie Literary Lunch at Simpson's-in-the-Strand on July 17th 2018.
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1: September Issue: Soho's Golden Age
07/08/2018 Duration: 21minChristopher Howse recalls the heyday of London’s boozy artistic bohemia – from the Forties to the Eighties. In conversation with Harry Mount.
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1: Miles Goslett on An Inconvenient Death: How the Establishment Covered up the David Kelly Affair at the Oldie Literary Lunch
07/08/2018 Duration: 14minFrom the man who exposed the Jimmy Savile scandal – in The Oldie – comes a book on the mysterious death of Dr David Kelly in 2003\. It remains one of the most shadowy episodes in recent British political history. This talk was recorded at an Oldie Literary Lunch as part of Buxton International Festival on July 7th 2018.
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1: Leanda de Lisle on The White King: The Untold Story of Charles I at the Oldie Literary Lunch
07/08/2018 Duration: 13minDrawing on lost royal letters from a closed archive, The White King introduces us to Charles I as the monarch at the heart of an epic tale: of populist politicians, the fall of the mighty, religious hatreds, civil war, the power of a new media, and a maligned queen. This talk was recorded at an Oldie Literary Lunch as part of Buxton International Festival on July 7th 2018.
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1: D. J. Taylor on Rock and Roll is Life: A Novel at the Oldie Literary Lunch
07/08/2018 Duration: 10min'Rock and Roll is Life' is a vastly entertaining, picaresque and touching novel inspired by the excess and trajectories of the great '60s and '70s supergroups, and of the tales brought back from the front line by a very special breed of Englishmen who made it big in the States as the alchemists and enablers, as well as the old making way for the new in the era of the baby boomers. At its heart is one man's adventure, and the poignancy of the special relationships that dominate his life. This talk was recorded at an Oldie Literary Lunch as part of Buxton International Festival on July 7th 2018.