The Oldie Podcast

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 132:45:55
  • More information

Informações:

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

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Bel Mooney on Life Lines

    22/03/2016 Duration: 08min

    The Daily Mail's Bel Mooney talks at the renowned Oldie Literary Lunch about her agony column and latest book Life Lines - Words To See You Through. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Andrew Lownie on Guy Burgess

    22/03/2016 Duration: 08min

    Andrew Lownie talks at the renowned Oldie Literary Lunch about his book: Stalin's Englishman: The Lives of Guy Burgess. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie of the Year: Gyles Brandreth, Olivia De Havilland, Jeremy Hutchison, Germaine Greer, Timothy West, Prunella Scales and more

    10/02/2016 Duration: 57min

    Join Gyles Brandeth introducing THE OLDIE OF THE YEAR at SImpson's on the Strand. Gyles presents prizes to Olivia De Havilland, Jeremy Hutchinson, Aung San Suu Kyi, Molly Meacher, Timothy West & Prunella Scales, Robert Hardy, Germaine Greer, Don McCullin, Lady Colin Campbell and Leon & June. Sponsored by Baillie Gifford, long term investment partners.

  • Oldie of the Year Awards: Olivia de Havilland’s acceptance speech

    03/02/2016 Duration: 02min

    At 99 and a half years old. Olivia de Havilland the Hollywood star graciously accepts her Oldie of The Year Award 2016.

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Adam Sisman on John Le Carré

    01/02/2016 Duration: 12min

    Adam Sisman talks at the renowned Oldie Literary Lunch about his biography about John Le Carre. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Humphrey Barton on Menuhin

    01/02/2016 Duration: 12min

    Humprey Burton talks about Menuhin: A Life at the renowned literary lunch. In 2000, the presenter of the BBC's "Young Musician' series wrote the life the world's most famous Yehudi Menuhin, who has been close colleague. To mark Menuhin's centenary this biography has been republished with a new introduction. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Jonathan Dimbleby on The Battle of the Atlantic

    01/02/2016 Duration: 15min

    Jonathan Dimbleby talks at the renowned Oldie Magazine literary lunch. The presenter of ANY QUESTIONS? Talks about the battle that secured the Allied Victory and which ran through the whole course of the war. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Paul Willetts on Renezvous at the Russian Tea Rooms

    14/01/2016 Duration: 12min

    The Oldie Recordings presents Paul Willetts, chronicler of Soho and Fitzrovia, has dug up a spy story whose protagonists include a white Russian Nazi and a US Embassy double agent. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Jonathan Fenby on Modern France

    14/01/2016 Duration: 09min

    Jonathan Fenby talks at The Oldie Literary Lunch about his latest book which explores the tempestuous history of modern France. For more than a decade Jonathan was head of Reuters in Paris. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Gyles Brandreth on Wordplay

    14/01/2016 Duration: 15min

    Gyles Brandeth the star performer talks at The Oldie Literary Lunch. He is someone who would entertain even if he simply read from the Yellow Pages. Gyles reveals why he is such a scream on BBC Radio 4's Just A Minute: prepare yourself for a linguistic frenzy of palindromes, mnemonics and acronyms. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Sir Ian Kershaw on To Hell & Back

    16/12/2015 Duration: 09min

    Ian Kershaw talks at the enowned Oldie Literary Lunch at Simpsons on the Stand, London W1. Kershaw is the leading expert on Hitler and Nazi Germany. His latest work focuses on the consequences for Europe of being plunged into two World Wars. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Barry Cryer and his Parrot Jokes

    16/12/2015 Duration: 06min

    Barry Cryer, comedian and writer makes up for Jonathan Miller not turning up to the renowned Oldie Literary Lunch at Simpsons on the Stand, by telling some of his eponymous parrot jokes. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Tom Holland on the House of Caesar

    16/12/2015 Duration: 11min

    Classicist and historian Tom Holland talks at the renowned Oldie Literary Lunch at Simpsons on the Stand, London W1. Dynasty - The Rise & Fall of the House of Caesar is a prequel to Persian Fire and Rubicon. The book provides an exuberant portrait of Rome's first imperial Dynasty. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Flora Fraser, The Washingtons

    01/12/2015 Duration: 11min

    The renowned Oldie Literary lunch held in Brighton welcomes Flora Fraser, granddaughter of Elizabeth Longford and daughter of Antonia Fraser. Flora describes the marriage of The Washingtons, George and Martha, and the struggle for independence in the US. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Alison Weir on The Lost Tudor

    01/12/2015 Duration: 11min

    The biggest selling Historian in the UK Alison Weir talks about The Lost Tudor Princess: A Life of Margaret Douglas, Countess of Lennox at a renowned Oldie Literary lunch. Her latest book looks at the life of scandal, imprisonment, drama and tragedy of this relatively unknown royal Tudor. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Piers Paul Read, Scarpia

    01/12/2015 Duration: 11min

    The Oldie Lunch Recordings presents Piers Paul Read's latest novel reimagines the life of Vitellio Scarpia, the villain of Puccini's Tosca. With a backdrop of 18th Century Rome, we follow him from disgrace and penury to his fatal clinch with Tosca who he ruined. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Charles Moore on Margaret Thatcher

    25/11/2015 Duration: 15min

    Charles Moore on Margaret Thatcher: Everything She Wants Volume Two: talks at the renowned Oldie Literary Lunch at Simpsons on the Stand, London W1. Moore returns to Simpson's to talk about his much awaited Volume Two of his highly praised biography. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Patrick Bishop on The Cooler King

    25/11/2015 Duration: 14min

    Patrick Bishop Author of The Cooler Kings talks at the renowned Oldie Literary Lunch at Simpsons on the Stand, London W1. Bishop has spent 26 years covering conflicts around the world and has reported from the front line of almost every major war of our era. Author of The Fighter Boys, his new work tells us the story of Canadian Spitfire pilot William Ash who defied the Nazis by trying to escape from a succession of PoW camps. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Stephen Clarke, How the French Won Waterloo

    25/11/2015 Duration: 18min

    Stephen Clarke Author of How The French Won Waterloo or think they did talks at the renowned Oldie Literary Lunch at Simpsons on the Stand, London W1. Clarke paints the French version of Wellington and Blucher's victory in 1815. Sponsored by Doro, number one in the senior mobile market

  • Oldie Literary Lunch: Loyd Grossman Benjamin West on the Struggle to be Modern

    18/11/2015 Duration: 09min

    Benjamin West and the Struggle to be Modern At the time of his death in 1820, Benjamin West was the most famous artist in the English-speaking world, and much admired throughout Europe. From humble beginnings in Pennsylvania, he had become the first American artist to study in Italy, and within a few short years of his arrival in London, was instrumental in the foundation of the Royal Academy of Arts (he succeeded Sir Joshua Reynolds to become its second President) and became history painter to King George III. Grossman explains why Wolfe was such an instant success and why this thrilling work of art continues to exercise such a strong grip on our imaginations nearly 250 years after it was first shown to the public. He situates West in the midst of Enlightenment thinking about history and modernity, and seeks to demolish some of the prejudices about the talent and intentions of the young man from the Pennsylvania frontier who attained such eminence at the British court." Sponsored by Doro, number one in the

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