Front Row - Gillian Anderson, South Georgia artist commission, the role of literary prizes

Gillian Anderson, South Georgia artist commission, the role of literary prizes

Download Gillian Anderson, South Georgia artist commission, the role of literary prizes

Gillian Anderson on her technique for perfecting Margaret Thatcher’s distinctive voice in the fourth season of The Crown, and the recent debate the TV series has ignited over what is fact and fiction.

South Georgia is a remote, windswept and icy Antarctic island, with no permanent population. But much of the industrial whaling industry was based here until the 1960s, when there were scarcely any whales left to slaughter. Now, though, whales are returning. Rats and mice that came with the whaling ships and ate chicks in their nests and burrows have been eradicated, and the seabirds are flourishing. To mark this history and celebrate the change there's been a competition to create an artwork on the site of the Grytviken whaling station. We speak to the Scottish sculptor Michael Visocchi about his inspiration and plans.

We’ll soon know who has been awarded the 2020 Booker Prize. Novelist Sara Collins, whose debut The Confessions of Frannie Langton won the 2019 Costa First Novel Award, Ellah Wakatama, Editor at Large at Canongate, and literary critic John Self discuss the role of literary prizes with the BBC’s Elle Osili-Wood on the eve of one of the biggest highlights of the literary calendar.

Producer: Julian May
Presenter: Kirsty Lang

Main image: Gillian Anderson as Margaret thatcher in The Crown
Image credit: Des Willie/Netflix

Published on Wednesday, 18th November 2020.

Available Podcasts from Front Row

Subscribe to Front Row

We are not the BBC, we only list available podcasts. To find out more about the programme including episodes available on BBC iPlayer, go to the Front Row webpage.