Craig Warner - Radio

Radio

  • 2013: Tosca's Kiss, BBC Radio 3 - with Stephen Dillane, Kate Fleetwood
  • 1997: Agonies Awakening (book, music and lyrics), BBC Radio 3 - with Anton Lesser, Miles Anderson, Clare Holman, Hugh Quarshie, Josette Simon
  • 1996: Beaumarchais, six-part serial, BBC Radio 4 - with Henry Goodman, Ronald Pickup, Bill Nighy, David Calder, Ron Cook
  • 1996: Strangers on a Train, BBC Radio 4 - with Saskia Reeves, Michael Sheen, Anton Lesser, Bill Nighy
  • 1995: The Mind-Body Problem, BBC Radio 4 - with Bill Nighy, Michael Maloney, Geraldine James
  • 1993: A Romance, BBC Radio 4 - with Michael Maloney, Kristin Milward
  • 1992: High Flyer, BBC Radio 4 - with Mick Ford
  • 1992: A Sense of Things Moving Forward, BBC Radio 4/World Service - with Ben Kingsley, Frances Barber, Simon Russell Beale, Patrick Malahide
  • 1991: Figure with Meat, BBC Radio 3 - with Clive Merrison, Judy Parfitt, Lynsey Baxter
  • 1991: Piece, after Iain Banks, BBC Radio 5 - with Bill Paterson
  • 1990: Love to Madeleine, BBC Radio 4 - with Richard E. Grant, Miranda Richardson, Phil Davis
  • 1989: By Where the Old Shed Used to Be, BBC Radio 3 - with Miranda Richardson, Anton Lesser, Judy Parfitt
  • 1988: Great Men of Music, BBC Radio 4 - with Phil Davis

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Famous quotes containing the word radio:

    ... the ... radio station played a Chopin polonaise. On all the following days news bulletins were prefaced by Chopin—preludes, etudes, waltzes, mazurkas. The war became for me a victory, known in advance, Chopin over Hitler.
    Margaret Anderson (1886–1973)

    England has the most sordid literary scene I’ve ever seen. They all meet in the same pub. This guy’s writing a foreword for this person. They all have to give radio programs, they have to do all this just in order to scrape by. They’re all scratching each other’s backs.
    William Burroughs (b. 1914)

    There was a girl who was running the traffic desk, and there was a woman who was on the overnight for radio as a producer, and my desk assistant was a woman. So when the world came to an end, we took over.
    Marya McLaughlin, U.S. television newswoman. As quoted in Women in Television News, ch. 3, by Judith S. Gelfman (1976)