Franz Kafka The TrialTopics Franz Kafka, The Trial, Radio Drama
the trailDramatised for Radio by Hanif Kureishi
Joseph K. is an unexceptional man. He lives a quiet life and works in a bank. But one ordinary morning he is woken by two men. and finds himself under arrest. What is his crime? From that moment on, Joseph K. enters a strange, bewildering world of nightmare.
Joseph K:……Mike Gwilym
Willem:…….David Peart
Franz:……..Stuart Organ
Frau Grubach:……..Madi Hedd
Inspector:…….Simon Hewitt
Nelghbour:………Eva Stuart
Block:……..Michael Bilton
Woman in courtroom:………Rosalind Adams
The Advocate:……..Nigel Graham
Examining magistrate:……..Edward Cast
Secretary:…….Jean Trend
Girl:……..Wendy Murray
Representative of Enquiries Department:……..Ray Jones
Bank clerk:………Robin Browne
Uncle:…….Stephen Thorne
Leni:……..Miriam Margolyes
Titoralli/The Whipper:……….Jim R
The Monday Play: The Trial
Mon 29th Nov 1982, 20:00 on BBC Radio 4 FM
The Trial is a novel written by Franz Kafka between 1914 and 1915 and published posthumously on 26 April 1925.
Stripped of the variations which Kafka improvises round it, the story of The Trial is both simple and mysterious. Josef K., the hero, wakens one morning to find that he is under arrest, without having done anything to deserve it. He is called before certain curious tribunals, of whose purpose and competence he is quite ignorant. He engages advocates whose status he cannot discover; he seeks the advice of experts who really know nothing about the case; indeed nobody knows, except by hearsay. He cannot discover what his offence was, nor if his trial has any hope of a reasonable end. He is told that there are only three courses he can follow: ask that his case should be lingered out as long as possible, so that the verdict may be indefinitely delayed; sue for ' ostensible pardon,' which is easy to win but lasts only for a short time, after which he will be arrested again; or demand real pardon, of which nothing is known, except in ancient history. In this strange fable, even stripped like this to its skeleton, it is not hard to see a fantastic image of human life.
Edwin Muir
Joseph K. is an unexceptional man. He lives a quiet life and works in a bank. But one ordinary morning he is woken by two men. and finds himself under arrest. What is his crime? From that moment on, Joseph K. enters a strange, bewildering world of nightmare.
Joseph K:……Mike Gwilym
Willem:…….David Peart
Franz:……..Stuart Organ
Frau Grubach:……..Madi Hedd
Inspector:…….Simon Hewitt
Nelghbour:………Eva Stuart
Block:……..Michael Bilton
Woman in courtroom:………Rosalind Adams
The Advocate:……..Nigel Graham
Examining magistrate:……..Edward Cast
Secretary:…….Jean Trend
Girl:……..Wendy Murray
Representative of Enquiries Department:……..Ray Jones
Bank clerk:………Robin Browne
Uncle:…….Stephen Thorne
Leni:……..Miriam Margolyes
Titoralli/The Whipper:……….Jim R
The Monday Play: The Trial
Mon 29th Nov 1982, 20:00 on BBC Radio 4 FM
The Trial is a novel written by Franz Kafka between 1914 and 1915 and published posthumously on 26 April 1925.
Stripped of the variations which Kafka improvises round it, the story of The Trial is both simple and mysterious. Josef K., the hero, wakens one morning to find that he is under arrest, without having done anything to deserve it. He is called before certain curious tribunals, of whose purpose and competence he is quite ignorant. He engages advocates whose status he cannot discover; he seeks the advice of experts who really know nothing about the case; indeed nobody knows, except by hearsay. He cannot discover what his offence was, nor if his trial has any hope of a reasonable end. He is told that there are only three courses he can follow: ask that his case should be lingered out as long as possible, so that the verdict may be indefinitely delayed; sue for ' ostensible pardon,' which is easy to win but lasts only for a short time, after which he will be arrested again; or demand real pardon, of which nothing is known, except in ancient history. In this strange fable, even stripped like this to its skeleton, it is not hard to see a fantastic image of human life.
Edwin Muir
Comments
Post a Comment