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WOSAS : F1065 WOSAS/CD348/track2
R1128.wav


Sound recording, story; a ghost story and legend from Bungay, Suffolk, England told by Hugh Lupton, at The Crick Crack Club at The White Lion Pub, Llantwit Major, South Glamorgan, Wales, 1st November 1991.

Music played, and story told by Hugh Lupton. A story of forbidden love between a young lady from a wealthy family and a young man who is a farm hand. On declaring their intention to marry, the young lady is sent away by her father. The young man becomes ill, dies, and is buried, but his ghost travels to collect his fiance and bring her back to her father's house. On that journey the women wraps a scalf around her lover's neck to warm him as they ride. The next day the women hears that her lover is in fact dead and buried, and demands to see his body. When they body is exhumed, they find that the women's scalf is wrapped around the neck of the dead man in his coffin.

audience:- adult
    recording quality
condition:- good
completeness:- complete
duration:- 0 hours, 16 minutes, 6 seconds

This is one of a series of recordings made by Marc Jobst to create a pilot of a series of radio programmes entitled Cracking Tales for broadcast on BBC Radio 4. Pilots were made, but the programme was never broadcast.

This event was the first of a series of storytelling events promoted by The Crick Crack Club in collaboration with St Donats Arts Centre.

The Crick Crack Club was founded by Ben Haggarty in 1987 and was the first regular performance storytelling club to be established in the UK. From the outset, the club operated with a programme of storytellers put in place by an artistic director, Ben Haggarty. It had no 'floor spots' whereby anyone had the opportunity to tell stories. The club was created in response to a recognised need for there to be sufficient UK storytellers to perform competent, formal evening shows for adult audiences in the proposed 1989, 15 day long, Third International Storytelling Festival at London's South Bank Centre. In the autumn of 1987 the first season of 26 weekly Crick Crack Club events was launched in a pub theatre (The Chair) in Ladbrook Grove, with the expressed aim of trying out new artists and providing an opportunity for established artists to develop their skills and repertoire for adults. Jenny Pearson of the Kew Storytellers helped Ben Haggarty with the organisation of this first season.The Crick Crack Club promoted weekly events in various venues in London between 1987 and 1995, and then monthly events at the Spitz from 1995 to 2001. During this time it also organised numerous monthly events and mini-festivals in regional arts venues throughout England. In 1991/92 wth £10,000 from the Arts Council Literature department it tried to establish a touring circuit promoting 120 events in a year. Daniel Morden gave invaluable administrative support during this period. In 1993, in partnership with David Ambrose of St. Donats Arts Centre in Wales, the Crick Crack Club Club created the Beyond the Border International Festival of Storytelling and Epic Singing. Ben Haggarty co-directed Beyond the Border from 1993 to 2005. Since 2001 the Crick Crack Club has worked on a peripatetic basis, programming in various venues and in partnership with various organisations, and in 2003 began a long-term partnership with Barbican Education in London, to promote 9 events a year in the Barbican Pit Theatre

storytelling:- storyteller; musician: Hugh Lupton
male / British / English / Welsh

origin:- Bungay, Suffolk, England


use:- BBC Radio 4
Marc Jobst

radio broadcast pilot


administration & programming:- administrator: St Donats Arts Centre
administrator: David Ambrose
administrator; programmer: The Crick Crack Club
administrator; programmer; Artistic Director: Ben Haggarty


storytelling:- Llantwit Major, South Glamorgan, Wales: The White Lion Pub
01 Nov 1991
storytelling club: The Crick Crack Club
public performance
radio production


gift from:- Marc Jobst


©  The London Centre for International Storytelling: 2007
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