Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

30/03/1968

Edition of the magazine arts series. Interviewees include sculptor Barbara Hepworth, and John Izzard meets with author JRR Tolkien at his home in Oxford. (1968)

Edition of the magazine arts series. Includes an interview with sculptor Barbara Hepworth, who discusses her influences and style.And John Izzard meets with author JRR Tolkien at his home, walking with him through the Oxford locations that he loves while hearing the author's own views about his wildly successful high-fantasy novels. Tolkien shares his love of nature and beer and his admiration for 'trenchermen' in this genial and affectionate programme. The brief interviews with Oxford students that are dotted throughout reveal the full range of opinions elicited by The Lord of the Rings, from wild enthusiasm to mild contempt. (1968)

40 minutes

Last on

Sat 30 Mar 1968 10:00

Did You Know?

Tolkien fell in love with Edith Bratt when he was 16. They were then separated for five years because his guardian refused to allow him to contact Edith until he was 21. They married on 22 March 1916, just before Tolkien departed to serve in France during World War I, and remained a close and devoted couple until Edith's death in 1971. Tolkien had the name 'Luthien' engraved on her headstone and then, when he died in 1973, was buried in the same grave and had the name 'Beren' added to the memorial. Tolkien described the epic love story of the Elvish princess Luthien and the mortal Beren in The Silmarillion. In the universe of The Lord of the Rings, it is considered to be the greatest romance of the Elder Days.

Archive

Archive programmes available on iPlayer reflect the broadcast standards and attitudes of their time, which may not accord to some current 大象传媒 editorial guidelines. We aim to select programmes which can be shown in their entirety but in some cases edits are required. In these cases, edits are kept to a minimum and are made only for technical reasons.

Broadcast

Featured in...

Modern Writers Collection

This programme is available online as part of the Modern Writers Collection