Our Mutual Friend - Episode 1
The first of two episodes in which John Yorke considers Charles Dickens’s last completed novel, Our Mutual Friend.
Our Mutual Friend was the last novel that Charles Dickens completed, and was written at a point of significant turmoil in the author’s personal life. It's a hugely ambitious and sophisticated novel, drawing the wild complexities of 1860s London life into its purview and marrying realism with mythic symbolism to great effect. Identities shift, deception battles unceasingly with the truth, while the great River Thames continues to flow.
John Yorke attempts to bring shape and light to this disparate, dark and enormously powerful piece of work, with the help of Dickens’ own great-great-great grand-daughter Lucinda Hawksley, novelist and critic Philip Hensher and Professor Phil Davis from the University of Liverpool.
John has worked in television and radio for 30 years and shares his experience with Radio 4 listeners as he unpacks the themes and impact of the books, plays and stories that are being dramatised in Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4’s Sunday Drama series. As former Head of Channel Four Drama and Controller of Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Drama Production he has worked on some of the most popular shows in Britain - from EastEnders to The Archers, Life on Mars to Shameless. As creator of the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Writers Academy, he's trained a generation of screenwriters - now with over 70 green lights and thousands of hours of television to their names. He is the author of Into the Woods, the bestselling book on narrative, and he writes, teaches and consults on all forms of narrative - including many podcasts for R4.
Contributors:
Philip Hensher, novelist and critic
Professor Phil Davis, from the University of Liverpool
Lucinda Hawksley, author
Reader: Paul Dodgson
Researcher/Broadcast Assistant: Nina Semple
Sound: Sean Kerwin

Producer: Geoff Bird

Executive Producer: Sara Davies
A Pier production for Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
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Opening Lines
John Yorke unpacks the themes behind the stories in Radio 4's weekend afternoon dramas.