Round Britain Quiz

Remember the difference between standard American and English cryptic crosswords? For the answer “dumb,” an American crossword might provide the clue, “Unable to speak,” whereas an English one would say, “Unspeakably stupid.” If you like your crossword clues a little crooked like that, you’ll like Round Britain Quiz.

The BBC describes Round Britain Quiz, which has been broadcast on BBC Radio since 1947, as “[r]adio’s most fiendish quiz, with cryptic questions drawing on unpredictable fields of knowledge.” The latest episode (Sept. 30th) features a question involving Evelyn Waugh.

That’s a pretty weak hook upon which to hang an EW News posting, but if you aren’t familiar with the program do please give it a try. It presents intellectually demanding questions in a cryptic and entertaining way that Americans in particular will find unusual.

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Reminder: Episode 1/7 of BBC Radio 4’s Men at Arms was broadcast today

You have seven days left to listen to the episode at http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qfz6.

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Cecil Beaton 1955 “Entrée interdite” Evelyn Waugh portrait for sale

BEETLES+HUXLEY (who seemingly favor all-caps for everything) has for sale a print of Cecil Beaton’s celebrated 1955 photographic portrait of Evelyn Waugh standing behind a gate to which is affixed a sign that states, “ENTREE INTERDITE AUX PROMENEURS.”

B+H describe the photograph as follows:

EVELYN WAUGH, CHATEAU ST FIRMIN, CHANTILLY, APRIL 1955
BEATON, SIR CECIL, CBE (1904-1980)

MODERN SILVER GELATIN PRINT STAMPED WITH SOTHEBY’S EDITION STAMP, INSCRIBED WITH TITLE AND NUMBERED ON REVERSE
18 X 18 INCHES
FROM AN EDITION OF FIFTY

The price is £1,400, or approximately $2,254 at today’s GBP/USD exchange rate.

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Evelyn Waugh’s 1960 Face to Face interview with John Freeman

In June 1960 Evelyn Waugh was interviewed by John Freeman for the BBC television program Face to Face.

Although during the interview Waugh isn’t exactly bursting with bonhomie and appears more than a little ill at ease (it was apparently his television debut), the mood is generally reflective and good-tempered, which — as several YouTube commenters point out — makes a nonsense of Joan Bakewell’s prefatory remarks that Waugh is “obstructive, irritable, and curt.” Well, perhaps curt isn’t far off, but obstructive and irritable? You decide.

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Broadcast of BBC Radio 4’s new Sword of Honour adaptation begins on Sept. 29th

The first episode of the new BBC Radio 4 seven-part adaptation of Evelyn Waugh’s Sword of Honour trilogy will be broadcast on Sept. 29th at 3:00 p.m. UK time. Archived episodes should be available for up to seven days after broadcast for listening on demand.

Unlike BBC television programs, which are only accessible to those with a UK-based IP address, BBC radio programs are generally available to web listeners anywhere in the world. A large number of both free and paid applications exist that permit Windows, Mac, and Linux users to record streaming audio from the web.

Update (Sept. 20): Link to the program’s home page fixed.

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2013 Evelyn Waugh Undergraduate Essay Contest

Essays by undergraduates on any aspect of the life and work of Evelyn Waugh are solicited for the Ninth Annual Evelyn Waugh Undergraduate Essay Contest. The contest is sponsored by Evelyn Waugh Studies, whose editorial board will judge the submissions.

Subject: Any aspect of the life or work of Evelyn Waugh

Prize: $500

Limit: 5,000 words

Deadline: 31 December, 2013

Undergraduates in any part of the world are eligible to enter.

Entries (electronic submissions preferred) should be directed to Dr. John H. Wilson at (click to email), or by post to Dr. Wilson at:

Department of English
Lock Haven University
Lock Haven, PA 17745
USA

Academics are encouraged to print the contest flyer and post it in their departments.

Those not in academia are requested to pass the flyer on to persons eligible to enter the contest.

Please note that through the generosity of an anonymous donor, we have been able to increase the prize to $500 this year.

“There will be a prize of half a crown for the longest essay, irrespective of any possible merit.”  –Decline and Fall (1928)

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Shoreham WordFest Evelyn Waugh evening at Lancing College, Sept. 27th

The Shoreham WordFest literary festival, “[a] celebration of the spoken and written word, with readings and discussion, poetry, song, books, plays and other writings,” will begin its 2013 program of activities with an evening devoted to the life and works of Evelyn Waugh held at Lancing College, which Waugh attended from 1917 to 1921:

Members of the English Department and pupils of Lancing will recall Evelyn Waugh’s time as a pupil at the College and its influence on his writing, illustrated by readings from his novels including Decline and Fall, A Handful of Dust and, of course, Brideshead Revisited.

Refreshments will be available along with a display of archive material about Lancing in Waugh’s time. A unique opportunity to hear about one of our most celebrated authors in a wonderful setting which he knew well.

Tickets £5, available from www.ticketsource.co.uk/shorehamwordfest or by telephone to WordFest: 07522 957691.

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Evelyn Waugh manuscripts at the British Library

A short article at the British Library’s English and Drama blog on its Evelyn Waugh collection:

The British Library holds an extensive Waugh collection, at the heart of which is Waugh’s incoming correspondence. These letters, dating from 1921 to 1966, the year of his death, were acquired from the Waugh family in 1990 and were selected by Waugh himself (showing him taking some steps towards what we might term ‘self-archiving’ and shaping posterity’s view of him). Waugh’s correspondents range from family members to society friends, from friends and acquaintances from the literary and arts worlds and the Roman Catholic Church, to occasional communications, many of which relate to publishing and the business side of writing. The letters vary from extended series over several decades – the most substantial being from Nancy Mitford – to single communications, often congratulating him on his most recent publication.

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Jonathan Coe: What’s so funny about comic novels?

Evelyn Waugh barely gets a mention, but Jonathan Coe’s reflections in the Guardian on the comic novel are worth sharing:

All of this leads us inevitably to PG Wodehouse, the elephant in my comic room, about whom I’ve been silent for too long. We must admit that there is not a grain of satire or moral seriousness in his novels and of course he proved himself, during the war, to be possessed of an incredible political naivety. But while it should have been obvious to me that these very qualities are the key to his greatness, for a long time they made me feel stupidly snobbish about Wodehouse and reluctant even to read him. Some years ago I was lucky enough to be awarded a prize in his name, and with it came a complete set of the Everyman edition of his works. It was only then that I realised the pure, unpolluted humour of which he was possessed was the greatest possible gift he could have offered to the world: the same thing, I suppose, that Italo Calvino had in mind when he extolled the virtues of “thoughtful lightness”, or “comedy that has lost its bodily weight”. More and more I feel that, just as all art aspires to the condition of music, all humour should really aspire to the condition of Wodehouse.

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Autumn 2013 issue of Evelyn Waugh Studies published

The Autumn 2013 issue of Evelyn Waugh Studies has been published and is available in PDF format here.

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