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From: wbutcher <wbutcher~at~netvigator.com>
Date: Mon, 5 Sep 2011 10:20:30 +0800
To: "'Jules Verne Forum'" <jvf~at~gilead.org.il>


Bonjour Stefan,

 

An informative site! Could I just add that the Garard Green and Daniel Philpott readings of Journey to the Centre of the Earth both use my copyrighted translation (Oxford UP, 1992, with an introduction, notes and other material; various editions since; full text available on http://www.ibiblio.org/julesverne/books/jce.htm). Neither was authorised, and neither acknowledged the use, although the Philpott Naxos one had the same cover painting as my 1st edition.

 

Naxos later admitted the error, paid compensation and undertook to withdraw the recording from sale.

 

Best regards,

 

William Butcher

 

From: owner-jvf~at~Gilead.org.il [mailto:owner-jvf~at~Gilead.org.il] On Behalf Of Stefan Marniok
Sent: 04 September 2011 22:08
To: 'Jules Verne Forum'
Subject: Re: Jules Verne Radio Shows

 

Hello Drake and others,

 

this is an interesting discussion. I specialized in radio plays and audio books from Jules Verne. I made a short list of 22 different radio plays / audio books from JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH (spoken language: English) that I know, they are from my own collection.

You can check them here: http://www.jules-verne-comics.de/hsp/audio/vc_audio_english.htm Of course there are more different versions in other languages like German, French etc., too.

I mentioned if the Professor is named Lidenbrock or Hardwigg. I hope the list will help you!

Please also check my homepage with many radio plays and audio books from Jules Verne: www.jules-verne-hoerspiele.de

 

Best

Stefan Marniok

 

 

Von: owner-jvf~at~Gilead.org.il [mailto:owner-jvf~at~Gilead.org.il] Im Auftrag von Drake Lolley
Gesendet: Montag, 29. August 2011 22:58
An: Jules Verne Forum
Betreff: Re: Jules Verne Radio Shows

 

Alex,

 

Thanks for the correction! I should have looked closer at the dates... I have already listed to the 1938 recording, and I enjoyed the parts that they lift in, and lamented the parts that they left out. Obviously, it was impossible to fit the entire book into one radio program, and so many portions were very briefly summarized "journal entry" style. It sounds like the 1946 recording might be more interesting from a comedic point of view; I'm glad that I listened to the earlier version!

By the way, I have found a radio adaption of "The Mysterious Island", which is my favorite Jules Verne book. I have just started listening to it, so let's hope that the plot is not badly mangled. Unfortunately, I have had some very bad experiences with Mysterious Island adaptions in the past, particularly in movies. Thanks again!

 

Drake

 

 

 

On Mon, 29 Aug 2011 13:17:47 -0700 (PDT), Alex Kirstukas wrote:

Hi Drake,

 

Just a quick note -- Welles's 1938 recording isn't the same as his 1946 one. The former is a straightforward adaptation of 80D (the Stephen W. White translation); the latter is a condensed version of, and long commercial for, Welles's Broadway musical Around the World (songs by Cole Porter, adaptation again from the White translation). Both are interesting, but rather strange; the 1938 Aouda sounds like Natasha Fatale from The Rocky & Bullwinkle Show, and the 1946 Cole Porter songs are extremely silly. ("Phileas" is made to rhyme with "Piccadilly-ous," and the big romantic number is built around the line "Should I tell you that I love you, or wait till you tell me?"!)

 

Alex

 

 

 


  _____


From: Drake Lolley
To: Jules Verne Forum
Sent: Monday, August 29, 2011 2:19 PM
Subject: Re: Jules Verne Radio Shows

Mr. Keeline,

 

Thank you for your reply! The only "vintage" recording of a Jules Verne radio drama that I could find on Archive.org was here:

http://www.archive.org/details/1946MercurySummerTheatre

 

 

This was, of course, the same recording that was kindly brought to light earlier by Mr. Kytasaari.

I have done some more research into the matter since my last post, and I have unearthed a few more available vintage recordings. I don't know if this is a topic that interests anyone else here on the forum, but I will try to post my findings. It would be great to see all of these recordings in one place! This may be one of my future projects.

I have looked into librivox and other similar services in the past, but unfortunately I have not had much luck with them. Being a speed reader, I found that the slow reading pace of many of the recordings was very trying to the nerves! This, of course, was my fault and not theirs, and I greatly admire the spirit of these projects... I have just found that reading the actual book is easier for me. I greatly appreciate that you took the time to look up these sources, though. Thank you!

 

Drake

 

 

On Sat, 27 Aug 2011 19:26:39 -0700 (PDT), James Keeline wrote:

Not quite in the classic radio drama class but more like "books on tape" are the readings offered free on http://www.LibriVox.org which are performed by amateurs. Some are better than others, of course. The Verne titles may be found on this search:

 

https://catalog.librivox.org/search.php?author=Jules+Verne

 

Archive.org has many radio dramas but I don't notice any of the vintage ones on this Jules Verne search. There may be other items of interest though:

 

http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=%22Jules%20Verne%22%20AND%20mediatype%3Aaudio

 

At the very least you could fill up your iPod or other MP3 player with these readings available in several languages.

 

James D. Keeline
_____

http://www.Keeline.com
http://Stratemeyer.org


  _____


From: Brian Taves
To: Jules Verne Forum
Sent: Saturday, August 27, 2011 8:58 AM
Subject: Re: Jules Verne Radio Shows


Years ago I traced the English-language radio-audio adaptations of JV. My definition included from an dramatized version, to a condensation read by a single reader, but excluded straightforward readings of by a single individual of an entire novel, ie book-on-tape or audio book.

 

The total was around fifty, from the early days of radio in the 1930s, thru the present. I know that there are at least that many and more broadcast in such countries as France, Germany, and the former Czechoslovakia.

Brian

 

 

 
Received on Mon 05 Sep 2011 - 05:21:47 IDT

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