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Footloose

Poetry, prose and music on the subject of feet, with readers Hermione Norris and Robert Bathurst, stars of the TV drama series Cold Feet.

From bare feet to dancing feet and booted feet, with everything in between, the programme features poetry and prose by writers including Cecil Day Lewis, DH Lawrence, Hans Christian Andersen, Pauline Prior-Pitt and Jung Chang, and music by Prokofiev, Victoria, Fats Waller and Kirsty MacColl. The readers are Hermione Norris and Robert Bathurst, stars of the TV drama series "Cold Feet".

The notion of a programme about feet might at first seem comical, but once you begin to look at how the image of the foot is used in literature, a wide range of symbolism reveals itself. Phrases such as "best foot forward", "the world at your feet", "falling at your feet" all evoke power and achievement. "Treading on eggshells", "a foot in the door", "pussy-footing around", "getting cold feet", all point towards hesitation and a lack of confidence. The symbolism of Jesus Christ washing his disciples' feet, re-enacted every Maundy Thursday, is one of the most powerful symbolic acts in the Christian liturgical calendar. Just as powerful is the image of an army marching to war. Children's literature and fairy tales are peppered with footprints, from Cinderella trying on the glass slipper to The Little Mermaid, who has to endure the sensation of dancing on sharp knives in order to become human.

Producer Helen Garrison.

1 hour, 15 minutes

Last on

Thu 3 Jan 2019 16:30

Music Played

Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes

  • 00:00

    Paul Whiteman

    Happy Feet

    Performer: Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra.
  • Edgar Albert Guest

    The Baby's Feet read by Hermione Norris

  • 00:00

    Claude Debussy

    Suite bergamasque for piano, Passepied

    Performer: Jean-Efflam Bavouzet (piano).
    • Chandos CHAN10467.
  • DH Lawrence

    Baby Running Barefoot read by Robert Bathurst

  • Tennessee Williams

    Heavenly Grass read by Hermione Norris

  • Joseph C Lincoln

    Little Bare Feet read by Robert Bathurst

  • 00:00

    Henry Mancini

    Baby Elephant Walk

    Performer: Richard Armstrong Orchestra, Richard Hayman.
    • Naxos 8.557825.
  • Laurence Binyon

    The Little Dancers read by Hermione Norris

  • 00:00

    Peter Warlock

    Capriol suite for strings or full orchestra; Pieds en l'air

    Performer: Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Clio Gould.
    • Apex 2564621142.
  • The Gospel according to Mark

    Chapter 9: v45 read by Hermione Norris

  • Hans Christian Andersen

    The Red Shoes (extract) by Robert Bathurst

  • 00:00

    Brian Easdale

    The Red shoes - ballet suite (extract)

    Performer: 大象传媒 National Orchestra of Wales, Rumon Gamba (conductor).
    • Chandos CHAN10636.
  • 00:00

    Traditional Mexican

    Tarantella

    Performer: Aquarelle Guitar Quartet.
    • Chandos CHAN10609.
  • 00:00

    Dmitry Shostakovich

    Football, from Russian river - suite (from the incidental music) Op.66

    Performer: Rustem Hayroudinoff (piano).
    • Chandos CHAN 9907.
  • Cecil Day-Lewis

    Walking Away read by Hermione Norris

  • 00:00

    Richard Strauss

    Lieder, Op. 48, TrV 202; Ich Schwebe

    Performer: Camilla Tilling (soprano), Paul Rivinius (piano).
    • BIS BISSACD1709.
  • John Mole

    The Shoes read by Hermione Norris

  • 00:00

    Sergey Prokofiev

    Cinderella [Zolushka] - suite no. 1 Op.107: Cinderella's waltz; Midnight

    Performer: St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Temirkanov.
    • Signum SIGCD214.
  • Dorothy Aldis

    Feet read by Hermione Norris

  • Billy Collins

    Walking Across the Atlantic by Robert Bathurst

  • 00:00

    Frank Bridge

    The Sea - suite for orchestra (H.100), no.3; Moonlight (Adagio ma non troppo)

    Performer: 大象传媒 National Orchestra of Wales, Hickox.
    • Chandos CHAN10729.
  • Hans Christian Andersen

    The Little mermaid (extract) read by Hermione Norris

  • 00:00

    Tom谩s Luis de Victoria

    Quam pulchri sunt gressus tui

    Performer: The Sixteen, Harry Christophers.
    • Coro CORSACD16033.
  • William Shakespeare

    Romeo and Juliet (extract) read by Robert Bathurst

  • 00:00

    Sergey Prokofiev

    Romeo and Juliet - Dance of the knights

    Performer: London Symphony Orchestra, Gergiev.
    • LSO Live LSO0682.
  • 00:00

    Kirsty MacColl

    In These Shoes

  • 00:00

    Zhao Jiping

    Raise the Red Lantern (music from the film sound track)

    • Milan 73138 35670-2.
  • Jung Chang

    Wild Swans (extract) read by Hermione Norris

  • Rudyard Kipling

    Infantry Columns read by Robert Bathurst

  • 00:00

    Eric Coates

    The Eighth Army March

    Performer: Royal Artillery Band, Major Geoffrey Kingston.
    • Naxos 8.554488.
  • 00:00

    Hugo Wolf

    M枚rike-Lieder: Fu脽reise

    Performer: Werner G眉ra (tenor), Jan Schultsz (piano).
    • Harmonia Mundi HMC901882.
  • Robert Frost

    The Road Not Taken read by Hermione Norris

  • 00:00

    Charles Villiers Stanford

    O for a closer walk with God

    Performer: Choir of Trinity College - Cambridge, Stephen Layton, Alexander Hamilton (organ).
    • Hyperion CDA68174.
  • Gospel according to John

    Chapter 13: vv5-14 read by Robert Bathurst

  • Anonymous

    Footprints in the Sand read by Hermione Norris

  • 00:01

    Johann Sebastian Bach

    Johannespassion (BWV.245), Part 1; Ich folge dir gleichfalls (Aria)

    Performer: Dunedin Consort, John Butt, Joanne Lunn (soprano).
    • Linn CKD419.
  • 00:01

    Bob Chilcott

    The Runner (from The Modern Man I Sing)

    Performer: Tenebrae, Nigel Short.
    • Signum SIGCD904.
  • Pauline Prior-Pitt

    Odd Socks read by Hermione Norris

  • 00:01

    Leroy Anderson

    March of the Two Left Feet

    Performer: 大象传媒 Concert Orchestra, Slatkin.
    • Naxos 8.559356.
  • 00:01

    Fats Waller

    Your Feet聮s Too Big

    Performer: Fats Waller and his Rhythm Band.

Producer Note

There is something rather comical about feet, and certainly when asked what my subject was for this edition of Words and Music, my reply 鈥 鈥淚鈥檓 doing a programme about feet鈥 鈥 has invariably resulted in laughter.聽 But think about it.聽 Yes there is definitely a comedy aspect, (and I have not shied away from that in the programme), but feet, like other parts of the body such as the heart and the head, have provided a potent metaphor for every conceivable human emotion over many centuries of literature.聽 Once you begin to think about popular vernacular sayings involving feet, footsteps, toes, running and walking,聽 it becomes obvious just how wide a subject this is.聽

So, putting my best foot forward, I decided that 鈥淐old Feet鈥 stars Hermione Norris and Robert Bathurst were obvious choices for the readings, which broadly follow the human life span, beginning with baby steps鈥.literally.

Edgar Albert Guest jumps straight in and expresses what most people feel when confronted with the delights of a baby鈥檚 feet, whilst DH Lawrence captures the essence of how a small child鈥檚 feet interact with nature.聽 Both poems make one want to reach out and touch, and maybe kiss those little pink toes.

There are hundreds, maybe thousands, of pieces of music which relate to steps and the varied movements of feet.聽 So much music is written for dancing and equally as many non-classical songs have been written about feet, dancing, walking or running away, various sports activities, and it has been difficult to choose.聽 However, for the most part, I have opted to pick out the pieces which capture the mood of the poems as well as the broader subject material, or which move on the narrative thread of a person owning those feet as they get older.

Debussy鈥檚 鈥淧asspied鈥 sounded, to me, exactly like a little child running about, and Henry Mancini鈥檚 iconic 鈥淏aby elephant walk鈥, provides a more comic portrayal.

We move through childhood, where Lawrence Binyon鈥檚 evocative picture of two youngsters dancing in a shaft of light particularly struck me, and Warlock鈥檚 鈥淧ieds en l鈥檃ir鈥澛 captures that feeling perfectly.

Fairy tales, ostensibly, for children, but often rather gruesome, seem to provide many foot related stories.聽 Hans Christian Andersen鈥檚 鈥淭he Red Shoes鈥 explores religious obligation and the perceived evils of vanity.聽 Young Karen willingly allows her bewitched dancing feet to be cut off, rather than continue to endure the torture of dancing without ceasing.聽 Brian Easdale鈥檚 music here is from the 1948 film 鈥淭he Red Shoes鈥, which is not, in fact, related to the fairy tale, but which is a story revolving around a ballerina torn between love and her dedication to dance.聽 However the extract I鈥檝e chosen illustrates the fairy tale rather well and I particularly like the eerie magical effect of the ondes martinot.

Shostakovich鈥檚 vigourous piano depiction of 鈥淔ootball鈥 introduces a heart-breaking poem by Cecil Day Lewis about the growing independence of a young boy playing his first match.

With maturity comes love and rejection, and a sequence of poems, prose and music explores different aspects of this, ranging from the ecstatic 鈥淚ch Scwebe鈥 by Richard Strauss setting the words of Karl Friedrich Henckell 鈥淚 float as on angel wings and my foot hardly touches the ground鈥, to John Mole鈥檚 searing poem 鈥淭he Shoes鈥, where a child is left holding the empty shoes of his father who has walked away and left the family home.

The enchanted Cinderella dances wildly into the night and midnight disaster, to the music of Prokofiev, whilst 鈥淭he Little Mermaid鈥 (another Hans Christian Andersen heroine),聽 pays the price of a spell which enables her to walk on land make her feel as if she is treading on sharp knives.

Capulet ponders on which of the dancing women suffer from corns in a wearily sexist monologue from Shakespeare鈥檚 鈥淩omeo and Juliet鈥, but then the wonderful, much missed singer song writer Kirsty MacColl gets her own back in a fabulously cynical and funny song 鈥淚n these shoes鈥.聽 To a backdrop of infectious, driving Latin rhythms, she depicts various scenarios where men tempt her on journeys promising passion, which she turns down due to her viciously inappropriate footwear.

The appalling practice of binding feet in 19th Century China is vividly described by Jung Chang in her seminal work 鈥淲ild Swans鈥, and Rudyard Kipling manages to capture the monotonous, trance like rhythm of an army marching in boots in his poem 鈥淚nfantry Columns鈥.

As life progresses, a philosophical note of regret begins to creep in with Robert Frost鈥檚 famous 鈥淭he Road not taken鈥 and with further thoughts from the Bible and from the music of Bach and Stanford.

For the last section of the programme the mood is lightened by Pauline Prior-Pitt鈥檚 lament on lost socks, and Fats Waller鈥檚 hilariously insulting tribute to his friend鈥檚 enormous pedal extremities.

I hope you enjoy the programme, whether plunging in feet first or merely dipping a toe.

Producer Helen Garrison

Broadcasts

  • Sun 29 Oct 2017 17:30
  • Thu 3 Jan 2019 16:30

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