East
Anglian Holiday was released by British Transport Films in the UK
during 1954. It is a short travelogue
film that promoted the countryside and seaside of East Anglia, designed to be
presented between the ‘big’ picture and the ‘B’ movie at cinemas across the
nation.
The advertising ‘blurb’ for the
film notes that: “From
The Wash right round to Southwold in Suffolk runs a coastline ideal for the
children's seaside pleasure and the skill of the offshore fisherman. The open
country of Norfolk is a delight to the gardener and the naturalist, while south
Suffolk has that intimate lushness which Constable made famous. In both
counties, the churches and the old history-soaked houses are among the finest
in the country; and then there are the Broads, the home of sails and windmills
and quiet waterways.”
The film was directed by Michael
Clarke under the executive watch of Edgar Anstey. The narration is by Frank Duncan, a British
actor best recalled for his parts in Empire
in the Sun (1987) and Far From the
Madding Crowd (1967) and Richard George was an actor remembered for his
characters in Great Expectations and 49th Parallel. The commentary
is given in both ‘Norfolk accent’ and ‘received pronunciation.’ Doreen
Carwithen provided the music which was conducted by the ubiquitous Muir
Mathieson.
This 1954 film was one of the
BTFs earliest travelogues, and used a well-established format that had been
used in West Country Journey (music
by Hubert Clifford) the previous year. Michael Brooke has pointed out that
although the film’s main thrust was to attract holiday makers there are plenty
of historical and topographical details. There are references to John
Constable’s paintings of the area – ‘you can see it all around these parts,
along with a lot more he never had time to paint’. The film-goer’ attention is
drawn to Ely Cathedral, the churches and Guildhall of Norfolk and fishing
industry at Lowestoft. From my point of view, the nostalgic images of holiday
makers, classic cars and buses from two generations ago are fascinating.
Although the film was made a couple of years before I was born, it is packed
full of images that I can half-recall from my childhood: things did not seem to
change too much until the nineteen-sixties.
Doreen Carwithen has contributed
a wonderfully evocative score that is a perfect accompaniment to the nostalgic
details of this film. Philip Lane has recreated this score as a miniature
(actually not too miniature – it lasts for 15 minutes) tone poem for orchestra.
It is not too fanciful to suggest that this is like discovering a ‘lost’
rhapsody by Delius, complete with powerful climax. Paul Snook has highlighted that
this music ‘is full of incisively rustic, spirited themes in a quasi-folk style,’
which never really seem to quote a well-known tune. Listening to this music
easily carries one back to a time when life was simpler, there were no wind
farms, people went to Hunstanton and Great Yarmouth for their holidays and the Broads
were just beginning to become a popular playground for ‘messing about in boats’.
1 comment:
Thanks for another fascinating post, John. Readers might also like to note that in 1964 Doreen Carwithen reworked the "East Anglian Holiday" score for an orchestral suite "Suffolk Suite" - included on the Chandos CD of her orchestral work. Be interested to hear your thoughts on how they compare.
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