WOSAS : F1147
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WOSAS/CD276/track4
R976.wav
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Peasant's Clever Daughter,
The
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Sound recording, story and song; The Peasant's
Clever Daughter, a European riddling tale and folk tale, told by
Sally Pomme Clayton, with song sung by Helen Chadwick and Inanna
as part of the programme The Seeds of Love, at The Crick Crack
Club at The Old Farm House Pub, Kentish Town, London 14th
February 1991
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Song followed by story told by Sally Pomme
Clayton. A peasant girl and her father live together. The girl's
father finds a beautiful saucer and ignoring his daughter's
warnings, he takes it to the King, who promptly demands that he
bring him the matching cup. When he cannot produce the cup, the
King accuses the man of being a thief and sends him to prison.
The man tells the King of his daughter's advice and the King
becomes curious. The King sets the girl a number of challenges
and riddles to solve. The girl solves the riddles, marries the
King and becomes Queen, but she agrees that her husband's word
will be law. As Queen she cannot resist correcting her husband's
decisions. The King threatens to banish her back to her peasant
home, but tells her she may take with her the thing which she
holds dearest. The Queen gives her husband a sleeping draught and
kidnaps him, and when he awakes in her peasant home, he realises
that he is the thing which she holds dearest.
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Programme note reads - The Seeds of Love - an
evening devised by storyteller Pomme Clayton and singer Helen
Chadwick, to celebrate the feast of St Valentine.
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recording quality
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condition:-
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good
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completeness:-
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complete
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duration:-
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0 hours, 12 minutes, 11 seconds
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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.
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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
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storytelling; singing:-
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storyteller: Sally Pomme Clayton
female / British
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storytelling; singing:-
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singing group: Inanna
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storytelling; singing:-
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singer: Helen Chadwick
female / British
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storytelling; singing:-
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singer: Joanna Foster
female
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storytelling; singing:-
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singer: Venice Manley
female
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origin:-
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folklorist: The Brothers Grimm
folklorist: Jakob Grimm
folklorist: Wilhelm Grimm
folklorist: Peter Christen Asbjornsen
folklorist: Jorgen Moe
Germany, Europe
Norway, Scandinavia
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Crick Crack Club season flyer
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Click to enlarge images
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use:-
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BBC Radio 4
Marc Jobst
radio broadcast pilot |
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administration & programming:-
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adult
administrator; programmer: The Crick Crack Club
administrator; programmer; Artistic Director: Ben Haggarty
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storytelling; singing:-
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Kentish Town, London, England: The Old Farm House Pub
14 Feb 1991
storytelling club: The Crick Crack Club
public performance: The Seeds of Love
radio production
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gift from:-
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Marc Jobst
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© The London Centre for International Storytelling:
2007