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Roald is in Tanganyika working for Shell when war breaks out. He joins the RAF, but a terrible accident leaves him eventually unfit for active duty.

A new biography by Matthew Dennison of the creator of many much-loved literary characters.

The familiar image of Roald Dahl is that of an old man, a tall, stooping figure usually dressed in a long cardigan, a rug over his knees in his writing hut. But one of our greatest storytellers was, as a young man, a dashing, very tall, handsome chap who women were very much drawn to.

He was brought up by his feisty Norwegian mother, and her love of the country myths and folk tales of the North influenced his writing. A flying accident which nearly killed him ended his war career, which was followed by time in Washington, where he began his writing career with short stories. There he met the beautiful actress Patricia Neale and began a family. Tragedy struck when his elder daughter died from measles, his baby son was nearly killed in a road accident in New York, and his wife suffered a near fatal stroke from which he almost single-handedly forced her back into good health. For all his life he remained unafraid to court controversy, or to make his views known forcefully.

The reader is Owen Teale, an award-winning stage actor who has appeared in plays such as Under Milk Wood, Macbeth and A Doll’s House for which he received a Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play. He is also well known as a screen actor including, on television, roles in Line of Duty, A Discovery of Witches, Spooks, Doctor Who and Game of Thrones. On the big screen, his appearances include Save The Cinema, Dreamhorse, Tolkien and The Last Legion.

Abridged by Libby Spurrier
Directed by Celia de Wolff
Sound Design by Lucinda Mason Brown

A Pier production for Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4

14 minutes

Last on

Wed 10 Aug 2022 00:30

Broadcasts

  • Tue 9 Aug 2022 09:45
  • Wed 10 Aug 2022 00:30