Filtrar por género

Soho Bites Podcast

Soho Bites Podcast

Dominic Delargy

A surpisingly large number of films have been set in Soho - that one square mile which has, for decades, been the beating heart of bohemian, cosmopolitan London. In each episode of Soho Bites, we talk to a special guest about a different Soho film and accompany it with a shorter, thematically linked item which may or may not be film related. Written, produced & presented by Dominic Delargy Based on an original idea by Dr Jingan Young https://twitter.com/BitesSoho https://sohobitespodcast.com/donate https://sohobitespodcast.com/review

69 - Soho Bites 47: Monsieur Ripois (1954)
0:00 / 0:00
1x
  • 69 - Soho Bites 47: Monsieur Ripois (1954)

    Bienvenue dans le premier épisode de 2024.

    Monsieur Ripois (1954) was directed byRené Clément and stars the French heart throb, Gérard Philipe along with the English beauties, Joan Greenwood,Natasha Parry& Valerie Hobson. It was based on the 1912 novel, Monsieur Ripois et la Némésisby Louis Hémon.

    The film was released under several other titles including “Lovers, Happy Lovers” & “Knave of Hearts” and was made in both English and French with the two versions being shot concurrently.

    We talk about Monsieur Ripois to the actor and director Jason Morell, whose mother was Joan Greenwood, one of the stars of the film. Listen out for some seventy year old hot gossip!

    Also on the French theme, we revisit an episode of Mural Morsels to hear about the notorious bohemian French poet, Paul Verlaine. This was an interview I did with another poet, Niall McDevitt, back in 2020 who has since sadly passed away. We’re using this interview with the blessing of his partner, Julie Goldsmith.

    Read this article by Jason Morell about dear old mum.

    Follow Jason on the Twitters.

    Here’s a little extract from the film.

    Of course our friends at Reelstreets have watched M. Ripois and you can look at some of the locations from the film HERE.

    Julie Goldsmith, the partner of the late Niall McDevitt, is a sculptor. You can see some of her work on Instagramand on her website.

    Niall’s obituary in The Irish Times.

    Buy tickets for the event at the South Bank - A Niall McDevitt Celebration.

    The 1995 Paul Verlaine biopic, Total Eclipse is worth watching if you can find it - although it’s quite difficult to track down. Here are a few options.

    Thank you for listening.

    Follow us on Twitter (or X - whatever)

    If Musk starts charging, find us either on our new Threads feed or on Blue Sky.

    Email us at sohobitespodcast@gmail.com

    We'd love it if you left us a lovely REVIEW.

    And if you'd like to help support the show we'd be very grateful.

    Check out our spin-off series Mural Morsels

    Thu, 01 Feb 2024 - 1h 01min
  • 68 - Soho Bites 46: Don't Open 'til Christmas (1984)

    Ching ching etc - it's the Soho Bites Christmas special.

    Having just left behind the wholesome world of Jessie Matthews and 1930s musicals, it feels right to descend into the grubby underbelly of Soho with the festive fiasco, Don't Open 'til Christmas.

    The "plot" such as it is, is a basic one. A crazed serial killer is roaming the west end murdering men dressed as Santa Claus. If there's a worse Christmas film (not including anything by Hallmark) we'd be very interested to hear about them.

    Written, produced & directed by a rotating motley crew of exploitation regulars, the film apparently took two years to make which is possibly the most shocking thing about it.

    Our guest for this episode is the magnificent David McGillivray who has not only written about this film in the past but also knew many of the people involved.

    David's Twitter and his IMDB listing.

    Buy David's books, Doing Rude Things and Little Did You Know.

    Thanks to Danny Cox for the countdown of festive Santa murders.

    If you really want to see Don't Open 'til Christmas, you can find it on YouTube.

    Thank you for listening.

    Follow us on Twitter (or X - whatever)

    If Musk starts charging, find us either on our new Threads feed or on Blue Sky.

    Email us at sohobitespodcast@gmail.com

    We'd love it if you left us a lovely REVIEW.

    And if you'd like to help support the show we'd be very grateful.

    Check out our spin-off series Mural Morsels

    Thu, 21 Dec 2023 - 54min
  • 67 - Soho Bites 45: Friday the Thirteenth (1933)

    Jessie part three.

    For this, the third and final instalment of our mini-series about the 1930s' biggest UK film star, Jessie Matthews, we met up with Dr Jennifer Voss of De Montford University to talk about Friday the Thirteenth (1933).

    NB: this is the Friday the Thirteenth from 1933, directed by Victor Saville with a large ensemble cast including Jessie as well as her husband, Sonnie Hale, Emlyn Williams (who also wrote the script), Gordon Harker, Edmund Gwenn, Eliot Makeham, Frank Lawton and the lovely Ursula Jeans plus many more. It is notthe silly 1980s slasher film of the same name.

    Friday the Thirteenth consists of seven separate stories which all come together at the end when our many protagonists find themselves aboard a bus which is involved in a fatal accident.

    To talk about Jessie, her life & career we're joined again by Rob BakerJade Evans and Dr Lawrence Napper.

    For this episode we also meet David Drummond who knew Jessie for the last thirty years of her life and dated her daughter! For many years, David ran a shop in the West End selling theatre and film related memorabilia & ephemera. Sadly the shop is no longer there but you can still visit the Pleasures of Past Times website.

    Our thanks to Professor Sean Street who provided some of the archive audio in the programme.

    Watch this 1981 BBC documentary about Jessie Matthews.

    Jessie appeared on This is Your Life in 1961.

    Jessie's biographer, Michael Thornton wrote this appalling, salacious, muckraking and probably untrue article for the appalling, salacious, muckraking Daily Mail which I have pasted it into this Google Doc to deprive the Mail of your clicks.

    Rob Baker is on Twitter too and you can buy his books HERE.

    Article about Jessie by Rob on his Flashback website.

    Follow Jade on Twitter and/or Instagram to learn about her research in fact you can find all her links HERE.

    Buy Jessie's autobiography or read it for free online.

    Of course, Lawrence is on Twitter too and here's his At the Pictures blog.

    The passages from Jessie's autobiography were read by Jane Slavin whose official title is, apparently, "Queen of Loveliness".

    During the pandemic, we made an episode of Mural Morsels about Jessie Matthews.

    Thank you for listening.

    Follow us on Twitter (or X - whatever)

    If Musk starts charging, find us either on our new Threads feed or on Blue Sky.

    Email us at sohobitespodcast@gmail.com

    We'd love it if you left us a lovely REVIEW.

    And if you'd like to help support the show we'd be very grateful.

    Check out our spin-off series Mural Morsels

    Thu, 21 Dec 2023 - 1h 09min
  • 66 - Soho Bites 44: Evergreen (1934)

    Jessie part two.

    This is the second instalment of a three part mini-series about the 1930s' biggest UK film star, Jessie Matthews.

    Evergreen (1934) was based on Ever Green, CB Cochran's 1930 musical spectacular at the Adelphi Theatre. Jessie starred as Harriet Green in both the stage show and the film.

    We're joined by Dr Melanie Williams of The University of East Anglia to talk about the film and  Rob BakerJade Evans and Dr Lawrence Napper return to the show to talk about Jessie's life.

    Evergreen is the story of two Harriet Greens, in which one Harriet finds fame and fortune by impersonating the other.

    Evergreen was third of five Jessie Matthews films directed by Victor Saville and co-starred MrJessie Matthews, Sonnie Hale. Barry Mackay plays the love interest, Tommy Thompson and Betty Balfour plays Maudie, continuing her successful transition from silent films to talkies.

    Watch this 1981 BBC documentary about Jessie Matthews.

    Jessie appeared on This is Your Life in 1961.

    Jessie's biographer, Michael Thornton wrote this appalling, salacious, muckraking and probably untrue article for the appalling, salacious, muckraking Daily Mail which I have pasted it into this Google Doc to deprive the Mail of your clicks.

    Melanie has a ton of film & TV writing out there including books on David Lean and A Taste of Honey. Follow her on the site formally known as Twitter.

    Rob Baker is on Twitter too and you can buy his books HERE.

    Article about Jessie by Rob on his Flashback website.

    Follow Jade on Twitter and/or Instagram to learn about her research in fact you can find all her links HERE.

    Buy Jessie's autobiography or read it for free online.

    Of course, Lawrence is on Twitter too and here's his At the Pictures blog.

    The passages from Jessie's autobiography were read by Jane Slavin whose official title is, apparently, "Queen of Loveliness".

    During the pandemic, we made an episode of Mural Morsels about Jessie Matthews.

    Thank you for listening.

    Follow us on Twitter (or X - whatever)

    If Musk starts charging, find us either on our new Threads feed or on Blue Sky.

    Email us at sohobitespodcast@gmail.com

    We'd love it if you left us a lovely REVIEW.

    And if you'd like to help support the show we'd be very grateful.

    Check out our spin-off series Mural Morsels

    Tue, 24 Oct 2023 - 1h 01min
  • 65 - Soho Bites 43: The Good Companions (1933)

    The Big Jessie series.

    This is the first of a three part mini-series focusing on the 1930s' biggest UK film star, Jessie Matthews.

    None of Jessie's films were set in Soho, but the fact that she was born on Berwick Street where her dad was a market trader, that she lived in William & Mary Yard on Brewer Street and that she learned to dance in an upstairs room at The Blue Posts means that, as far as we're concerned, any film starring Jessie Matthews is a Soho film.

    Across the next three episodes we will talk about three different Jessie films and learn about her life through talking to several special guests. In this first episode, we talk to Rob Baker, Jade Evans and Dr Lawrence Napper about Jessie's early life and her rise to stardom and Lawrence hangs around to talk about Jessie's 1933 breakthrough film, The Good Companions.

    Also starring a very young John Gielgud, Edmund Gwenn and Mary Glynne, The Good Companions was directed by Victor Saville, produced by Michael Balcon and was based on a best selling 1929 novel of the same name by JB Priestley.

    Watch this 1981 BBC documentary about Jessie Matthews.

    Jessie appeared on This is Your Life in 1961.

    Jessie's biographer, Michael Thornton wrote this appalling, salacious, muckraking and probably untrue article for the appalling, salacious, muckraking Daily Mail which I have pasted it into this Google Doc to deprive the Mail of your clicks.

    Rob Baker is on Twitter and you can buy his books HERE.

    Article about Jessie by Rob on his Flashback website.

    Follow Jade on Twitter and/or Instagram to learn about her research in fact you can find all her links HERE.

    Buy Jessie's autobiography or read it for free online.

    Of course, Lawrence is on Twitter too and here's his At the Pictures blog.

    In this episode, the passage from Jessie's autobiography was read by Jane Slavin whose official title is, apparently, "Queen of Loveliness".

    During the pandemic, we made an episode of Mural Morselsabout Jessie Matthews.

    Thank you for listening.

    Follow us on Twitter (or X - whatever)

    If Musk starts charging, find us either on our new Threads feed or on Blue Sky.

    Email us at sohobitespodcast@gmail.com

    We'd love it if you left us a lovely REVIEW.

    And if you'd like to help support the show we'd be very grateful.

    Check out our spin-off series Mural Morsels

    Wed, 20 Sep 2023 - 1h 03min
Mostrar más episodios