Dear Mr Spectator, Joseph Addison
Dear Mr Spectator, Joseph Addison
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Dear Mr Spectator
A BBC Radio full-cast drama inspired by the anonymous writings of the famous social commentator

Author: Joseph Addison, Richard Steele

Narrator: Benjamin Whitrow, Richard Lumsden, Sam Troughton, Bryan Dick, David Schofield, Jemma Redgrave, Claire Rushbrook, Full Cast

Unabridged: 2 hr 17 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/06/2023


Synopsis

The complete Series 1 and 2 of the drama based on the publications of the real-life Lady Whistledown - the anonymous 18th Century columnist, 'Mr Spectator'

'Wonderfully droll' The Spectator

London, 1710. Enigmatic man of letters Mr Spectator moves like a shadow through the city's streets and coffee-houses, observing the manners, morals and misdemeanours of his fellow men. He has his finger on the pulse of all the latest news and fashions, and shares his wit and wisdom in his daily news-sheet - which is avidly perused by readers from all stations of society, from the humble to the highest in the land. In these two radio series, we meet his greatest fans, who look to him to solve their problems and determine their futures...

Series 1 centres around Gilbert Mowbray, a clockmaker who is fast approaching his 40th birthday - and is not handling it well. Neglecting his workshop and his customers, he spends his time glued to Mr Spectator's musings - much to his wife Kitty's exasperation. As his midlife crisis deepens, can the nation's favourite agony uncle help Gilbert reassess his life?

In Series 2, Britain is nine million pounds in debt - but Chancellor of the Exchequer Robert Harley has a plan to generate the necessary income: a little idea called the South Sea Company. However, to get his Bill through Parliament, he needs someone the public trusts to speak out in favour of the scheme. Enlisting the aid of Palace paper-boy Ned Dempsey, Harley determines to track down Mr Spectator - but can Ned unmask the elusive scribbler before time, and Harley's patience, run out?

Adapted by Elizabeth Kuti from Joseph Addison and Richard Steele's Spectator essays, this wry, whimsical drama stars Benjamin Whitrow (Pride and Prejudice) as Mr Spectator, the anonymous oracle who, like his fictional counterpart Lady Whistledown, hid behind a nom de plume to stoke controversy. Among the supporting cast are Richard Lumsden, Sam Troughton, Bryan Dick, David Schofield, Jemma Redgrave and Claire Rushbrook.

Production credits
Inspired by and dramatised from Joseph Addison and Richard Steele's 18th-century Spectator essays by Elizabeth Kuti
Produced and directed by Heather Larmour
Violin played by Paddy O'Flaherty

Cast
Mr Spectator - Benjamin Whitrow
Gilbert - Richard Lumsden
Kitty - Amy Marston
Jonathan - Sam Troughton
Coffee-boy - Samuel Barnett
Lady - Fo Cullen
Gentlemen- Miche Doherty/Richard Dormer/Chris McHallem/Mark Lambert
Stockjobbers - Miche Doherty/Mark Lambert
Disgruntled man/Freddie/Lion - Richard Dormer
Wife/Leticia - Sarah Kants
Spectacle inventor/Gravedigger - Chris McHallem
Signor Niccolini - Miche Docherty
Isabel - Emma Bolger
Jacob - Daniel Walsh
Aggie - Laura Conway
Ned Dempsey - Bryan Dick
Harley - David Schofield
Abigail - Christina Cole
Queen Anne - Jemma Redgrave
Anne Baldwin - Claire Rushbrook
Defoe - Sam Dale
Aunt Maude - Stella McCusker
Opera Singer - David Revels
With Seainin Brennan, Niall Cusack, Paul Kennedy, Marty Maguire and Charlie Niblock-Hamill

First broadcast on BBC Radio 4, 12-16 January 2009 (Series 1), 16-20 August 2010 (Series 2)

© 2023 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd. (P) 2023 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd

Reviews

Goodreads review by JoAnn on April 19, 2022

I gave it four stars because the style was hard for me and I need to grow as a reader before I can really appreciate it. That isn’t it’s fault though. It is a charming, funny book. I pre read it for Ambleside Online Year 9.......more

Goodreads review by Graychin on September 30, 2013

Sir Roger de Coverly is a Tory of the old, old school. A country gentleman, seeming wise and seeming fool, he steps out of the text of The Spectator as one of Addison and Steele’s most memorable recurring characters. The early 18th-century prose here is wonderful, of course. The tale of Sir Roger’s......more

Goodreads review by Jess on January 20, 2013

I highly recommend this work as it is not only highly entertaining but the style in which it is written is very fine. It is a pleasure to read and I could suggest no finer example of English for the writer and speaker to emulate.......more

Goodreads review by Marley on May 24, 2012

I've wanted to read the Roger de Coverley papers since I was in high school and finally did. I have my grandmother's copy printed in 1904 and edited by Mary E. Litchfield. I have been unable to discover who Litchfield was, but her intro and notes are superb, covering history literature, theatre, rel......more

Goodreads review by Sajia on March 11, 2016

It's really a good witty work of the author . He explores , flowered an flourished of his time through the character Sir Roger... it's really an enjoyably book to know that time's political and social situation..........more