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NEW BBC Radio 4 programme about the series (and the music in particular)


"Robinson Crusoe: Rescued Again"
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00xhz8j

Broadcast 11:30am 20th January 2011 on BBC Radio 4
Listen for SEVEN DAYS from the above date (UK ONLY)
via link on the above page or direct from here:-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/console/b00xhz8j

Glenn Mitchell examines the impact of the French television series The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe along with its extremely popular and iconic music score.

Anyone who was a child in Britain between 1965 and 1981 will remember BBC1's The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, based on Daniel Defoe's novel - or, at least, they will remember the music. The theme tune, with its rumbling introductory notes suggesting the rolling waves of the on-screen title sequence, remains distinctive, as does the full incidental score, comprising numerous cues that in each case represent some part of Crusoe's existence.

It was filmed in the Canary Islands as a group of mini-series based on classic novels. Unlike most adaptations of the novel, this production concentrated not merely on events on the island, but incorporated Crusoe's other adventures, told in flashback.

In 1964 the series was shown both in Europe and, in an English-dubbed edition, on American TV. By the time this version was screened on BBC1 in October 1965, it had been divided into thirteen 25-minute episodes. The series immediately captured the imagination of schoolboys everywhere - among them the writer and presenter of this programme, Glenn Mitchell.

The programme sets out to track down Crusoe actor Robert Hoffman, whose subsequent international career has included numerous features and the TV series Dallas. Now in his seventies, he still lives in his native Salzburg.

Initial tea-time screenings made way for early-morning repeats in every school holiday until 1981. Crusoe had become almost a cliché, and few noticed its departure from the schedules when black-and-white shows such as these were being consigned to skips.

Some claim the BBC prints were simply dumped, and others maintain that they were returned to a vault in France in 1982. When, after almost two decades, interest was expressed in a video release, the only surviving copies proved to be this 13-part English edition, in material requiring extensive restoration. Crusoe was rescued only from this single, fragile source and subsequently released on VHS and, more recently, DVD. Of the original French version, nothing remained but the first episode, rendered useless by Portuguese subtitles. It did, however, reveal that the French original had a different, and inferior, music score, fortunately replaced by the music of Robert Mellin - formerly a hit songwriter in Britain - and Gian-Piero Reverberi.

Before the series itself was recovered, the original music recordings had been rescued by Mark Ayres, a composer who has worked on incidental scores for Dr Who, has remastered audio tracks for the commercial release of vintage Who episodes, and was involved in the latter days of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. Ayres' work on the few remaining tapes produced a CD of the score in 1990, followed by an expanded edition in 1997 after composer Mellin had supplied some second-generation tapes of the edited cues.

The programme features contributions from fans Lawrence Marcus and David West, along with composer's Mark Ayres and Gian-Piero Reverberi.

With readings by Barnaby Gordon the programme is produced by Stephen Garner.


"Oh look - a lovely spider! And it's eating a butterfly!"
'' ,,

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[deleted]

Well, aren't you the lucky one? David West, who was interviewed for the show, and who runs the original "Adventures of Robinson Crusoe" fansite, has posted the whole shebang therein (did he get prior permission from the Beeb? How long will it stay???). Good quality sound if a bit hissy. I think he must have recorded it from a portable FM radio (detuned/poor signal strength). But it's there alright!

http://www.davidsemporium.co.uk/crusoe9A.html

http://davidsemporium.co.uk/crusoerescued.mov

"Oh look - a lovely spider! And it's eating a butterfly!"
'' ,,

reply

[deleted]

I grew up watching this incredibly beautiful and well made series in the 1960's....it made quite an impression on me and instilled values still within me. Its wonderful photography and meaningful dialogue imparted many of life's truths to me and many other youngsters who watched it....it could do likewise for today's lost children if repeated on tv.....so glad I have the complete series on DVD now....

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