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Special to the Bates Archive
London,
27 February. Alan Bates delighted
a full house in the Purcell Room this evening with a handful
of poems by Thomas Hardy, and excerpts from four novels: "Far
from the Madding Crowd," "Tess of the d'Urbervilles,"
"Mayor of Casterbridge," and "The Trumpet Major."
From the programme: "This reading
from Thomas Hardy's prose fiction and his poetry celebrates a
writer whose books have remained steadily in demand. In the novels
and tales he made the region he called Wessex his own. His knowledge
of Dorset and the neighbouring counties was profound. The world
of his forefathers was evoked by him with such vividness that
it has survived to become part of our heritage. Increasingly
he has been recognised as a major poet with an extraordinary
range of skills, and a mastery that he retained into old age."
To the music of "Rejoice Ye Tenants
of the Earth," wearing a double-breasted black suit, Bates
entered the stage, set with period furniture: a Victorian chair
upholstered in vivid yellow, and a small table containing a globe
lamp and a carafe of water. Mostly standing but occasionally
using the chair, he read from a bright red folder, specs perched
on his nose, free hand waving to punctuate his words.
The audience listened closely, in complete
silence broken only by gusts of laughter, bursts of applause,
and the occasional sigh, as at the end of "Absent-Mindedness
in a Parish Choir," in which a hapless band of players is
banished from church by the Squire, "a wickedish man,"
who is affronted by an ill-timed error on the part of the musicians'
leader. It's a delightful theatre-piece, and Bates reads it in
dialect (as written), with immaculate timing. (You can hear it
for yourself on his Thomas Hardy CD.)
After the one-hour reading, Bates greeted
and signed copies of his CD for a long queue of visitors. (Many
thanks to Carol Robinson for the photo above; the woman sitting
with Alan at the table is the National Trust representative.)
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