Hallowed Histories

Richard Sheppard

A regular podcast covering different aspects of English folklore, starting in East Anglia. Broadcast from the media suite at UEA, we include monthly podcasts covering a different myths, interspersed with interviews, specials and readings from local authors.

  1. 12/29/2024

    DBL645 (mono) by Shane Brown - Hallowed Histories Presents The Winter Tales 2024

    Hello and welcome back to another in the Hallowed Histories strand of Winter Tales, and we hope you all had a very pleasant Christmas.  Christmas is an odd time, as i am sure you realized. What strikes us as being so odd is the way in which it collapses the old into the new. Christmas traditions that have been with us since the Victorian era, and sometimes even further back, are not settled in with presents of cutting-edge technology, video calls to distant relatives, ecards and the AI algorithm tempting you with targeted Boxing Day sales. This weird mix of the future and the past can lead to a very tense present.  Shane Brown’s story tonight, DBL645 (mono) touches on this. We are big fans of Shane Brown’s work over here at Hallowed Histories. His novel, Welcome to Marlington, was one of my favorite books of the past few years, and his annual tradition of releasing a new ghost story every Christmas has become a very welcome custom. You can find these stories on amazon, and they are all well worth checking out. Tonight’s story combines a lot of Shane’s recurring themes – music, the esoteric world of collecting, ghost stories and East Anglia.  DBL645 (mono) is read by David McCabe, who was so magnificent in our Sherlock Holmes reading last year. David is an actor, script editor and voice artist, who has had a full year playing Phileas Fogg in the Maddermarket’s revival of Around the World in 80 Days. David has that too-rare gift for a voice actor of being able to breathe life into every individual character, and he uses that to excellent effect in this reading.

    51 min
  2. 12/15/2024

    Ten Knocks by Helena K Bacon - Hallowed Histories Presents The Winter Tales 2024

    Hello and welcome back to the Hallowed Histories strand of Winter’s Tales, stories to amuse, to chill and to wrap presents by. One of the joys of Christmas is meeting with friends, and i am happy to announce that this story combines two old friends of the show, a writer and an actor who are much welcome visitors back to this podcast.   Helena Bacon is an academic, a writer and an educator with interests in the gothic, folk horror, mythology and the landscape of Norfolk. In other words, all the right things. Her story tonight, Ten Knocks, combines a lot of those interests and yet remains wholly original. It’s power of mounting dread will stay with you long past the end of this episode, but hopefully won’t come creeping around your door. The story itself is performed by John Davis, who was kind enough to work with us last year on one of the Slow Burn anthology tales. John is an actor and voice artist, who was recently seen in a revival of The Philidelphia Story and can be seen soon in The Clearing at the Sewell Barn Theatre in Norwich. If Helena’s story puts you on the edge of your seat, it’s John’s voice which will tip you over. Thanks to both of them, and to you for sticking with us for the Winter Tales. See you again next week.   Tickets are still avaible for our next live event, historian Neil Storey talking about the dark side of East Anglia in the beautiful Stranger's Hall: - Hallowed Histories present Neil Storey at Strangers' Hall - Norfolk Museums Service

    19 min
  3. 11/10/2024

    Episode Forty-Seven: Norwich is the Old Hollywood - How a Local Boy Revived Dracula and Frankenstein for the Ages (w. Dr. Mark Fryers)

    During the Halloween season, we had the pleasure of merging our passion for horror and East Anglian tales. This opportunity arose when Dr. Mark Fryers, a film history expert and a friend of our podcast, reached out to us. He shared his ongoing research involving Norwich, Count Dracula, and Universal Studios, which immediately piqued our interest for a podcast feature. In the upcoming interview, Mark will shed light on Charles D. Hall, a Norwich native born in 1888, coinciding with the year of Jack the Ripper. Hall honed his architectural skills in Norwich, which later propelled him to Hollywood fame after a period working with Fred Karno's music hall company. There, he encountered icons like Charlie Chaplin and Laurel and Hardy. Transitioning from designing sets for Karno, Hall eventually collaborated with Hollywood horror legends such as Tod Browning and James Whale. His artistic vision crafted the ambiance of legendary locales like Castle Frankenstein and Castle Dracula, and films like The Invisible Man and The Black Cat, featuring Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi. Dr. Mark Fryers, who now lectures at the Open University, is an extensively published scholar with a focus on maritime and gothic horror representations. His book, "Celluloid Tales: Norfolk Film History," is currently available and comes highly recommended, and can be found ⁠here⁠

    30 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

A regular podcast covering different aspects of English folklore, starting in East Anglia. Broadcast from the media suite at UEA, we include monthly podcasts covering a different myths, interspersed with interviews, specials and readings from local authors.