Radio Heaney
As broadcaster, contributor and interviewee, Seamus Heaney was a lyrical, engaging voice on radio. John Toal presents a compilation of highlights.
In his acceptance speech as newly anointed Nobel Laureate, Seamus Heaney recalled how vital a role the wireless had played in his early life growing up on a farm in Mossbawn Co. Derry. On the radio, he heard dispatches from the front line during the Second World War, was gripped by Dick Barton Special Agent and revelled in the musicality of the Shipping Forecast. As an up and coming published poet, Heaney wrote and presented many programmes for schools in Northern Ireland, exploring and celebrating fellow writers and the local landscape. He also made for a compelling contributor and interviewee to any discussion on the purpose of poetry and was ultimately crowned with the medium's greatest accolade, an invitation to Radio 4's Desert Island. This programme compiles many of Heaney's greatest radio moments.
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Clip
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Seamus Heaney's memories of being 'timid and scared'
Duration: 01:51
Broadcasts
- Sun 12 Jan 2014 16:30大象传媒 Radio 4
- Sat 18 Jan 2014 23:30大象传媒 Radio 4
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Seamus Heaney
Seamus Heaney, acclaimed by many as the best Irish poet since Yeats, has died aged 74.