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the letter
and the interview
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Wonderful reading and equally interesting interview with Ben et al.
Thanks for posting the two videos Lola Red.
I love writing letters. And receiving them.
One of my most favourite memories is of the letters my husband got when he was researching his first book. Part of the research involved corresponding with a few (a very select few) WWI pilots (this occurred on or about 1984-5) who had known (and flown) with Canadian WWI hero Billy Bishop (who was the subject of Dan's book).
One, whose name was Roger Neville, was the pilot to Bishop when he was a young observer in a two seater in the Royal Flying Corp. Roger wrote Dan several times and it was totally exciting getting his letters.
I was a bit better at reading his handwriting than Dan so I helped "translate" them for him. Roger was an ace pilot himself (and was awarded Military Cross) and a complete gentleman in his letters to Dan - friendly, conversational, funny and completely open to all questions that Dan had. We still have those delicate onion-skin pages sent "air-mail" by him, stored lovingly away in Dan's treasures. Neville passed away in 1986 but was still taking his "holiday on the continent" when he corresponded with Dan - full of life even at his advanced years. It was a complete pleasure to have been what it seemed like, personally aquainted with him, through his letters to us.
Like it was discussed in the interview portion of these videos - letters offer us a more intimate glimpse into someone's personality because you can hold in your hands on to the moments that they dedicated solely to you when they sat down to correspond with you. It is the time consumed and the effort they made to (as Ben said) go from mind to hand to paper. A very special way of communicating for sure.
-Val
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Thank you very much for posting, Lola. I think it is a wonderful and fascinating project and I am very glad that he is so strongly committed to this (up to his own production company getting involved).
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Thanks for the links Lola. I played the first video for my husband with just the sound (didn't let him see the picture) and asked him whose voice he thought it was. He's very good at picking actors by their voice, but I thought this would catch him out. It didn't take him long though, about a minute into it he said "Benedict". The he teased me mercilessly for thinking I could trick him when he knows who I am obsessed with
Last edited by ukaunz (March 29, 2015 1:31 am)
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That was a very interesting view! Both the letter itself and the discussion after!
I really think Ben is great at reading these letters, he seems to really try to do them justice.
Handwriting is a dying artform isn't it? I was on the train yesterday and jotted down some poetry by hand and realized I had an audience
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Benedict can literally read anything.
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