A Wᴀʀᴅᴇɴ ғᴏʀ Aʟʟ Sᴀɪɴᴛs (Iɴsᴘɪʀᴇᴅ ʙʏ M.R. Jᴀᴍᴇs) (Rᴀᴅɪᴏ Dʀᴀᴍᴀ)
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ต.ค. 2024
- One of four stories from the Saturday Night Theatre: Ghosts from the Past. The undead are unleashed in this tale of revenge stalking the corridors of Oxbridge in Gerry Jones 's dramatisation of HS Bhabra's story.
Contributors:
Unknown: Gerry Jones
Unknown: Brett Usher.
Unknown: John Webb
Director: Martin Jenkins
James Montague: Benjamin Whitrow
Simon Evans: John Rowe
Reporter: David Learner
Waiter/Ainsley: Eric Allan
Ben Whitrow played Mr Bennett in the famous TV 'Pride and Prejudice' and is excellent at studious, quiet men who simply want to be left alone.
Very enjoyable and solidly presented.
really good story thanks I enjoyed it
Thanks! Very creepy!
Yes, I love all these plays too & want to thank you for sharing.
Well acted , very enjoyable. Thanks.😁
Pinky,just pinky!
Great radio drama...thank you!
It’s quite psychologically scary with a great cast
Fine actors in a very fine play!
Thanks for making my evening so much more enjoyable!❗
Thumbs up!
WALLS MELTING SOUNDS LIKE AN ACID TRIP
That’s what I thought 💭 was he spiked in that bottle of red wine i
Unusually slow to start. Hang in there.
Top notch... from the Story to the Production to the Actors... you name it! This has it all! Thank you!
Well done
Love these radio plays. Close your eyes and you are in another time, another place. Thank you.
april fools
It’s incredible, very scary psychologically theological thriller
Good.
Just shared it on Twitter
💗💜💗!!!
I hate the 437 telephone calls that had to blast at 3x the volume of any other sound in this. WHY? Decent story, but the blasted telephones were murdering small children in 3rd world countries 9000 miles away.
James Montague, this is what he calls himself on the telephone?and then at 12;42 he calls himself Montague first.
Many men of that era referred to themselves and other men by their last name. It wasn't like today when everyone called each other by first names.
Didn't enjoy it, I'm afraid. Opening was a bore. Lost interest really quickly.
The casual reference to paedophilia was a bit shocking. 1970s?