Neil Gaiman: Oscar Wilde and giving the audience what they want

2024 ж. 11 Сәу.
4 573 Рет қаралды

Step into the unsettling world of Oscar Wilde's Salomé as Lucy Eaton sits down with acclaimed author and visionary storyteller, Neil Gaiman (write of The Sandman, Good Omens and Coraline). Gaiman shares his insights and reflections on this iconic piece of literature, as he dissects the influence of Wilde's lesser known work. He offers a unique perspective on the enduring significance of this raw and impactful piece by delving into the play’s history and his own personal relationship with it, reading it for the first time age 13. As well as discussing the play, Neil breaks down the joys of seeing his own stories adapted into stage and screen and why theatre has a special place in his heart.
Hear Me Out is hosted by Lucy Eaton, a theatre producer and West End / screen actress best known for her role as Lucy in hit BBC comedy ‘Staged’. Other episodes of Hear Me Out include Adrian Lester, Mark Gatiss, Patsy Ferran and Toby Stephens.
Follow us on TikTok, Instagram and X at @PodHearMeOut.
** Join the family by subscribing on iTunes or becoming a Hear Me Out Patreon! www.patreon.com/podhearmeout **
Podcast of the Week - Guardian
Top 10 theatre podcasts - Feedspot
"An ode to the brilliance of language peppered with personal anecdotes" - Vanity Fair
A Lucy Eaton Productions podcast.

Пікірлер
  • Love Neil Gaiman. He's the kind of artist I would love to be

    @alfomar@alfomarАй бұрын
    • Amen to that!

      @podhearmeout@podhearmeout17 күн бұрын
  • Neil is so delightful … what a creative mind … it takes a spark to make a fire, in Neil these sparks make a bon fire 🔥.

    @jeanninecalder3652@jeanninecalder365210 күн бұрын
  • "when your heart is too full" ❤ What a perfect way to describe it!

    @helenl3193@helenl319316 күн бұрын
  • So glad I was able to find the video version of this!! Just listened to it on Apple Podcasts, but It is so lovely that I wanted to actually watch this one. What a kind, fascinating and intelligent human Neil Gaiman is.

    @chaosGooseDE@chaosGooseDEАй бұрын
    • Always lovely to see it as well as hear it! Thanks for double-enjoying.

      @podhearmeout@podhearmeout17 күн бұрын
  • Mr Gaiman: 👏👏🤙❤!

    @morgana7116@morgana711618 күн бұрын
  • My name is Salome. I used to hate it as a kid 😅 as a grown woman I apriciate the notion my mother must have had.

    @More13Feen@More13Feen14 күн бұрын
    • My name is Salome, too! Always happy to find another one 😊

      @salomel.9308@salomel.93086 күн бұрын
  • Hey, hey. Greeting from the South the Brazil. Two days ago, I have finished the first season of "Stage" and, now, I'm seen this beauty of interview. It's so delightful. Congratulations and keep on this incredibly show.

    @joao6396@joao6396Ай бұрын
    • Thank you so much for your kind comments - we hope you enjoy other episodes of the show too (and other seasons of Staged!)

      @podhearmeout@podhearmeout17 күн бұрын
  • I love Neil Gaiman and I love Lucy Eaton so very much! And this episode of the podcast is just golden! Thank you! 💙

    @AgnesPerditaX@AgnesPerditaXАй бұрын
    • Well we love you very much too!

      @podhearmeout@podhearmeout17 күн бұрын
  • So happy to see and listen the two of you!

    @SritaBlack@SritaBlackАй бұрын
    • We are so happy to have you watch and listen!

      @podhearmeout@podhearmeout17 күн бұрын
  • Sarah Bernhardt still had her legs them , if she was 47. It was amputated when she was 70, 1915, because her knee had caused unrelenting pain for several years . She continued in theatre until she died at 78🎉❣️🎭

    @cathygould@cathygould15 күн бұрын
  • 💚💚💚

    @bruh-xx6kr@bruh-xx6krАй бұрын
  • The death of John the Baptist is not a little-known Biblical episode. This Herod is also not the baby-killing Herod the Great. Herod Antipas, same family, is the successor of Herod the Great.

    @pendorran@pendorran18 күн бұрын
    • Yes indeed re: not being baby-killing Herod! We have since learnt this. Thanks for the correction!

      @podhearmeout@podhearmeout17 күн бұрын
  • I always felt that Salome was missunderstood and used by Herod to get rid of John the Baptist, but of cours its framed as the "evil and vain seductress destroying a good man". Symbolicly I kind of look at the beheading as a geting rid of ego and letting the wild force of life winn over restriction and dogmas. Even if it means the eventual death of the beautyfull wild dancer.

    @More13Feen@More13Feen14 күн бұрын
  • No it’s not baby-killing-Herod! Baby-killing-Herod was Herod the Great. Salomé dances for his son Herod Antipas! Johanan preaches *against* the marriage of Herod Antipas to Herodias because she was his late brother’s wife and the marriage is “incestuous” (by the cultural standards of the time and place). That’s why he is in prison.

    @deforeestwright2469@deforeestwright246916 күн бұрын
    • Thanks for clarifying that! It's been decades since I studied the biblical story, fewer decades since I read Salome (in English)may first I thought "but Neil wouldn't make that mistake" anthem I realized it's Wilde's story.

      @cathygould@cathygould15 күн бұрын
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