All Posts by

Steven Thomson

Showing 33 Result(s)

Waves Breaking On A Shore

by Neil Brand and Michael Eaton in two parts for BBC Radio 4.
The new world of silent movies captures the imagination of two young men, one Irish the other Jewish, at the turn of the 20th century starring Andrew Scott, Hayley Atwell and Jim Norton.

John Major & Albert Reynolds

The Conflict Is Over

by Michael Eaton for BBC Radio 4.
The story of the secret discussions that led up to the signing of the Downing Street Declaration in December, 1993.

A Life of Chekhov

by Irene Nemirovsky adapted by Michael Hastings for BBC Radio 4.
Episodes from the childhood and later life of Anton Chekhov, starring Andrew Scott and Romola Garai.

The Leopard

by Giuseppe di Lampedusa adapted by Michael Hastings for BBC Radio 3.
A masterpiece of 20th century Italian and European literature starring Stanley Townsend, Hayley Atwell and Tom Hiddleston. Directed by Lucy Bailey.

Felix Holt, The Radical

by George Eliot adapted by Michael Eaton for BBC Radio 4.
George Eliot’s political novel set during the time of the Great Reform Act of 1932 with Hayley Atwell as Esther Lyons, directed by Lucy Bailey.

Afternoon Romancers

by Nick McCarty for BBC Radio 4 starring Sally Hawkins.
A man and a younger woman embark on an affair with a difference.

The Pickwick Papers

by Charles Dickens adapted by Michael Eaton in four parts for BBC Radio 4.
Samuel Pickwick’s hilarious topsy turvey adventures are celebrated in Dickens’ picaresque novel as he travels on his journey through life, starring Timothy Spall and Toby Jones.

A Brief Interruption

by Ben Steiner an original play for BBC Radio 4.
Tom Courtenay stars as a neglected, weary and careworn God who bemoans some of the day-to-day frustrations of being The Supreme Being.

The Bride’s Chamber

by Charles Dickens adapted by Michael Eaton for BBC Radio 4.
A ghost story from the master of the genre.

Tender Is The Night

by F Scott Fitzgerald adapted by Michael Hastings for BBC Radio 4.
Set on the French Riviera in the 1920s, Fitzgerald’s celebrated novel reveals the tragic romance of the young actress Rosemary Hoyt, played by Rebecca Hall, and the stylish American couple Dick and Nicole Diver.