Podcast appearances and mentions of lynne reid banks

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Best podcasts about lynne reid banks

Latest podcast episodes about lynne reid banks

Review It Yourself
The Indian in the Cupboard (1995) with Savon

Review It Yourself

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 62:07


Savon, formerly of Coffee and Comments podcast, returns to review a classic film, The Indian in the Cupboard (1995). Based on the 1980 book by Lynne Reid Banks, the story sees Omri, a young kid who lives in New York City, discover his cupboard brings his toy American Indian to life.Discussion Points:-How the book became a staple of British Primary Schools.-The DVD read-through returns.-Sean is confused by American foods.-Savon and Sean discuss the differences between the book and the film adaptation.-Savon describes how 90's the film feels and was surprised to see an Abacus. -The differences between the book and the film adaptation.-The tumultuous story of the American West.-Savon and Sean discuss the unexpected emotional depth in the film.Raised Questions:-Who chooses the books you read at Primary (Elementary) school?-Why do we read so many American based stories in Britain?-Do Americans get fed up with films based in New York?-Is this film more 'Field of Dreams' (1989) than 'Toy Story' (1995)?-What happened to skating in films?Corrections:-*Frank OZ played Yoda in the Star Wars films, not C3PO.-*Alan Abernathy was the character in Small Soldiers, not Lewis.Thanks for Listening!Find us here: X: @YourselfReviewInstagram: reviewityourselfpodcast2021YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@ReviewItYourself⁠ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Last Word
Sir Paul Fox, Lynne Reid Banks, Joan Hills, Amnon Weinstein

Last Word

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2024 27:49


Matthew Bannister on:Sir Paul Fox, the respected TV executive who commissioned some of the best loved programmes of the 1960s and 70s. We have a tribute from his former colleague Sir David Attenborough. Lynne Reid Banks, the author best known for her novel “The L Shaped Room.”Joan Hills, the artist who played a key role in the art world of the 1960s and, with her husband and two children, was part of the Boyle Family quartet.Amnon Weinstein, the luthier who collected and restored violins which had been played in concentration camps during the Second World War.Interviewee: Sir David Attenborough Interviewee: Gillon Stephenson Interviewee: Georgia Boyle Interviewee: Avshalom Weinstein Interviewee: Jaap HamburgerProducer: Gareth Nelson-DaviesArchive Used: Sportsview, BBC Television, 27/01/1955; Roger Bannister 4 minute mile news report, BBC Archive Newsreel, 07/05/1954; Interview with Paul Fox, The Oral History of the BBC, connectedhistoriesofthebbc.org, 30/11/1984; Lynne Reid Banks interview with Rita Hayworth1956, On This Day, ITN Archive Facebook channel, uploaded 13/07/2022; L-Shaped Room, Official Trailer, 20th Century Fox, 1962, Dir: Bryan Forbes; Lynne Reid Banks interview, With Great Pleasure, BBC Radio 4, 24/09/1999; Reading extract, The Indian in the Cupboard, Episode 1, BBC Radio 4, 02/10/1986; Official Film Promo, Paramount Pictures, Dir: Frank Oz, 1995; Lynne Reid Banks talks about how her life would be different if she couldn't write, gconversations YouTube Channel, uploaded 25/10/2012; Joan Hills interview, The Boyle Family, BBC Four, 27/08/2003; Amnon Weinstein 2018, Alabama Holocaust Education Center, YouTube uploaded 02/06/2022; Violins of Hope, CBS Sunday Morning, YouTube uploaded 22/03/2024;

Monocle 24: Monocle on Saturday
Wirecard scandal and the history of the honeytrap

Monocle 24: Monocle on Saturday

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2024 31:05


Terry Stiastny updates Georgina Godwin on the Wirecard fugitive case and discusses the honeytrap scandal that has rattled Westminster this week. We examine the history of honeytrap scandals and look back at the lives of two extraordinary people: journalist Hella Pick and author Lynne Reid Banks. Plus: twins Dina and Rosabella Gregory take us through their new opera, ‘The Haberdasher Prince', and Louise Doughty joins to talk about her guest edition of Writers Mosaic, ‘Blood and belonging: Traveller Writers'.

Read Me a Story, Ink
"The Hare and the Orphan" by Lynne Reid Banks

Read Me a Story, Ink

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2024 6:09


A story from Ms Banks' delightful anthology “The Magic Hare” in which the magic hare is snared by an orphan for dinner. The hare continues to suggest ingredients that would make him taste better but the final one is through the dark forest where the orphan has never gone. The hare leads the way, the orphan overcomes her fear and both live happily, but separately, ever after.

Read Me a Story, Ink
"The Hare and the Flower" by Lynne Reid Banks

Read Me a Story, Ink

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2024 9:17


A story from Ms Banks delightful anthology “The Magic Hare” in which the magic hare hears tiny bells after every good deed and discovers they are applause from a sad, unnamed flower. In gratitude, the magic hare gives the flower a name, ‘harebell,' or ‘Campanula rotundifolia.'

banks flower hare campanula lynne reid banks
Still Scared: Talking Children's Horror

In this episode Ren Wednesday and Adam Whybray go back to Ren's childhood to talk about a dark comedy: Angela and Diabola by Lynne Reid Banks. A different twist on the Omen trope, this book gives the evil child a twin of corresponding pure goodness, and a couple of long-suffering parents who do their best for their increasingly supernatural offspring. Indulge in the allure of evil with us, spooky kids, but please don't lock any small children in cages. A transcript of this episode is available at: https://stillscared.podigee.io/57-angelaanddiabola

omen indulge lynne reid banks
Pages n' Pages
Chapter 14: Was It a Fever Dream or Did We Really Read It?

Pages n' Pages

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2021 80:50


Do you ever have those random memories of a book you read and you're not sure if you actually ever read it? We sure have! Sometime it feels like the books we read as children were just weird memories we just made up. In this week's episode we talk about the books we read as children that feel like a fever dream. Stick around until the end to hear stories from Morgan's childhood that make you wonder how she actually survived her teenage years. Books we mention: Games We Play by Dana Isaly, The Guncle by Steven Rowley, Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir, We Are All the Same in the Dark by Julia Heaberlin, Jay's Gay Agenda (Jay's Gay Agenda, #1) by Jason June, The Love Hypothesis by Ali Hazelwood, Dorothy Must Die (Dorothy Must Die, #1) by Danielle Paige, She Who Became the Sun (The Radiant Emperor, #1) by Shelley Parker-Chan, Under the Whispering Door by TJ Klune, The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune, The Spanish Love Deception by Elena Armas, Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar, The Fairy Rebel by Lynne Reid Banks, Animorphs Series by K.A. Applegate, Bunnicula series by Deborah and James Howe, Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark Series by Alvin Schwartz. Check out Pages n' Pages on Instagram. These opinions of the books are entirely our own. Image by Kapona via Vector Stock.

NewzKidz - global news and current affairs reported by kids, for kids
NewzKidz S2 E28: Coronavirus and climate change, Ocean Microplastics, May Day, Book Review: The Indian in the Cupboard

NewzKidz - global news and current affairs reported by kids, for kids

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2020 12:12


This week Rose and Zara update you on the latest news on the pandemic, and talk about Greta Thunberg and Unicef’s campaign to help fight coronavirus. They discuss how governments have been discussing how climate change has to be tackled once this pandemic is over, and review how scientists have found the highest levels of microplastics ever recorded on the seafloor. They also explore the history and background to May Day. Finally, Zara reviews the book “The Indian in the Cupboard” by Lynne Reid Banks.

Large Marge Sent Us
202. The Indian in The Cupboard

Large Marge Sent Us

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2020 75:27


1995's The Indian in the Cupboard is an adorable film! Based on the 1980 children's classic by Lynne Reid Banks, the story follows Omri, a little boy living in Brooklyn who receives a cupboard for his birthday and an Indian figurine from his friend Patrick.  His mom gives him a key from her key collection (who knew that was a thing!) and what do you know ... when he locks the Indian in the Cupboard he comes to life! Directed by Frank Oz, this movie has a lot of good life lessons including but not limited to, the lack of education and ignorance white people have or are taught about Native Americanas, having respect for other cultures, learning that people are not toys (even if they were toys at one point), and don't befriend a kid with a bowl cut named Patrick! We laughed, we cried, we jumped out of our seats (literally).  

Theresa June Maps
Ch 1 - The Indian in the Cupboard by Lynne Reid Banks

Theresa June Maps

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2019 2:06


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indian cupboard lynne reid banks
Calibre Interviews
Lynne Reid Banks Interview

Calibre Interviews

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2019 19:22


Lynne Reid Banks is a prolific author of both children and adult novels, having written some forty-five books to date. From The L-Shaped Room (which was later turned into a movie) to Harry the Poisonous Centipede, Banks has turned her hand to a diverse range of subjects. In this interview, Emma talks to Lynne about acting, living on a kibbutz, losing the ability to read, and being the first female reporter on British TV!

banks british tv lynne reid banks
Time Spent Poorly All Pod Feed
Ep – 06 – Indian In The Cupboard Report

Time Spent Poorly All Pod Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2019 43:18


Cameron and his dad meet where Cameron gives a very detailed report of his reading of the children's novel "The Indian in the Cupboard" by Lynne Reid Banks.

games indian cupboard book reports lynne reid banks being a kid
Hangin' 10 With Cam
Ep – 06 – Indian In The Cupboard Report

Hangin' 10 With Cam

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2019 43:18


Cameron and his dad meet where Cameron gives a very detailed report of his reading of the children's novel "The Indian in the Cupboard" by Lynne Reid Banks.

games indian cupboard book reports lynne reid banks being a kid
Overdue
Ep 328 - The Indian In The Cupboard, by Lynne Reid Banks

Overdue

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2018 62:46


When we talk about judging books by the standards of their time, we’re usually dealing with books that have been written many many decades ago, but Lynne Reid Banks’ The Indian In The Cupboard isn’t far removed from our own childhoods. It’s easy to see why the book resonates with kids, but it’s also frustrating to see Banks acknowledging the gap between pop culture depictions and reality even as she feeds into so many stereotypes.

Overdue
Ep 328 - The Indian In The Cupboard, by Lynne Reid Banks

Overdue

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2018 62:46


When we talk about judging books by the standards of their time, we’re usually dealing with books that have been written many many decades ago, but Lynne Reid Banks’ The Indian In The Cupboard isn’t far removed from our own childhoods. It’s easy to see why the book resonates with kids, but it’s also frustrating to see Banks acknowledging the gap between pop culture depictions and reality even as she feeds into so many stereotypes.

Sunday
Bishop Row, International Women's Day, Lynne Reid Banks

Sunday

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2017 43:53


"Between Myth and Reality" the sculptures of Chaim Stephenson, is at the Crypt of St Martin-in-the-Fields, Trafalgar Square till the 10th May 2017. Chaim passed away last year aged 89, Edward met with his wife Lynne Reid Banks at the exhibition she told him about his work and their life together. The worst excesses of the Indian wedding industry may soon be curbed if a new bill is approved. The proposed bill will not only limit the number of guests and dishes served to avoid waste, but also put a "tax" on the most extravagant newlyweds. Rahul Tandon reports from India. Ahead of International Women's Day we talk to 'our woman in Rome' Sally Axworthy, UK ambassador to the Vatican, about her first 6 months in a very unique and male dominated diplomatic role. And we speak to two women who embody the theme for this year's International Women's Day - Be Bold for Change - Julie Siddiqi and Laura Marks - organisers of Britain's first ever Jewish/Muslim Women's Conference which aims to challenge the narrative around the role of women in religion. The announcement that Philip North has been named as the next Bishop of Sheffield has been criticised by many women in the diocese as he has said that he does not support and will not participate in the ordination of women as priests and bishops. Kevin Bocquet reports from Sheffield. Followed by an interview with the Bishop of Repton, the Rt Revd Jan McFarlane. The 30th anniversary of the sinking of the Herald of Free Enterprise ferry will be marked on Monday. 193 people lost their lives. Sailors' Society Chaplain Bill McCrae and Kim Spooner who lost her aunt and uncle recall the events of the 6th March Producers Carmel Lonergan Peter Everett Editor Amanda Hancox.

RNIB Talking Books - Read On
4: Non Fiction with Mark Miodownik, Lynne Reid Banks, Stephen Grosz and John Aitchison

RNIB Talking Books - Read On

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2017 57:43


This week we take a look at non-fiction books in the RNIB Talking Books library including Stuff Matters: Exploring the Marvelous Materials That Shape Our Man-Made World by Mark Miodownik and The Shark and the Albatross by John Aitchison. #RNIBConnect #ReadOnAir

sharks nonfiction albatross aitchison mark miodownik lynne reid banks stephen grosz rnib talking books stuff matters exploring
Seeking Tumnus
The Indian in the Cupboard - Lynne Reid Banks

Seeking Tumnus

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2016 60:00


In which we discuss Lynne Reid Banks' classic best selling book The Indian in the Cupboard. A fun game quickly turns a little sour, as we bring the fantasy to life in more ways than one. We also hear some questions from Bri, and take a quick look at the movie of the same name. What toy would you bring to life if you had a magic cupboard?

Arts & Ideas
Night Waves - Shlomo Sand

Arts & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2013 44:46


Adam Mars-Jones reviews the first West End revival of the nine Tony award winning; A Chorus Line. What is old age, and when we get there, how do we face the end? Philip Dodd discusses with the best-selling novelist Lynne Reid Banks, historian Pat Thane and Professor of English Literature at Oxford, Helen Small. Plus an interview with the controversial Israeli historian Shlomo Sand.

professor oxford israelis west end english literature chorus line helen small shlomo sand lynne reid banks night waves adam mars jones philip dodd
YA Rewind
YA REWIND: The Mystery of the Cupboard by Lynne Reid Banks

YA Rewind

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2013 14:05


Today on YA Rewind, I’m discussing the fourth book from the Indian in the Cupboard series about a cupboard and magic key that bring plastic figures to life, its unsettling implications, and why writing time travel is always a bitch. Plus, the Great Harry Potter Re-Read Adventure and a visit to the Elephant House – the birthplace of the Boy Who Lived. The post YA REWIND: The Mystery of the Cupboard by Lynne Reid Banks appeared first on MeganChristopher[dot]net.

Bookclub
Lynne Reid Banks

Bookclub

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2010 27:38


James Naughtie and readers talk to the celebrated author Lynne Reid Banks about her first novel, The L-Shaped Room. It was an instant success and has been in print ever since it was published exactly fifty years ago. It's the story of Jane, a single young woman who falls pregnant. Reading The L-Shaped Room again in 2010, it's easy to forget what a taboo it was to be pregnant and unmarried in the early 1960s. Jane is a brave character who decides to bring up the baby by herself, after her father throws her out. But her feelings are mixed, and as almost a punishment to herself she rents a grubby L-shaped room at the top of a run- down boarding house in Fulham. Gradually as she settles in and does up the room, she makes friends, and in tandem with the improvements to her surroundings, her life gets better. This is a novel that has inspired young women to independence, whatever their situations. Readers in the audience describe what this book means to them - from a woman whose own mother brought her up single-handedly to another who says that the line about Jane having to wear a wedding ring 'brought it all back.' Lynne Reid Banks was one of the first female news-reporters at ITN. Although she complained she was always given 'soft stories' she did not consider herself a feminist at the time, which is ironic, as the L-Shaped Room is considered as a feminist novel. Recorded with a group of twenty-five readers in the studio, Bookclub with Lynne Reid Banks is a lively discussion with a writer looking back at the book that changed her life as well as many readers' lives. James Naughtie chairs the programme. July's Bookclub choice : Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel. Producer : Dymphna Flynn.