Alchemy
Failed to add items
Add to cart failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
Written by:
About this listen
As Walthamstow Assembly Hall opens in March 1943, culture, ceremony and civic pride take centre stage. Concerts, fairs and beauty contests unfold beneath glitter, blackout restrictions, anti-aircraft fire and a war that is still very much alive.
Alchemy explores a moment of contradiction: a town hall transformed into both cultural palace and operational machine; an assembly learning how to listen, watch and gather under pressure.
As the tide of the war begins to turn, crucial decisions are taken behind closed doors. Intelligence circulates that cannot yet be shared. Preparations are made for threats the public cannot be warned about — not because the danger is small, but because it is not yet imaginable.
Ross Wylde is called to a top secret conference and instructed to carry this knowledge silently. The government argues disclosure would cause panic. Wylde does not agree.
Rachmaninoff passes away. The same day the doors to Walthamstow Assembly Hall open for the first time...
Selected audio excerpts featured in this episode:
- 'The war over Walthamstow: the story of Civil Defence 1939 1945' by Ross Wylde © Waltham Forest Council (historical reference)
- 42nd Street (1933), featuring Bebe Daniels
- Yours, performed by Vera Lynn
- Brief Encounter (1945), directed by David Lean
- The Misfits (1961), directed by John Huston | Script supervisor: Angela Allen
- The wonderful book 'Goodbye Russia: Rachmaninoff in Exile' by Fiona Maddocks
- Music excerpt: Vocalise (Rachmaninoff), arrangement by Angela Morley (credited at the time as Wally Stott), from Inspiration (1961)
- All other music by Simon Mills
Audio excerpts are used under UK fair dealing provisions for the purposes of criticism, review, and historical illustration. Full rights remain with the respective rights holders.
Selected newspaper excerpts were accessed via the British Newspaper Archive. Newspaper titles and dates are cited where possible. All rights remain with the respective publishers. Audio and music excerpts are used under UK fair dealing provisions for the purposes of criticism, review, and historical illustration. Full rights remain with the respective rights holders.
Episode 4 is the final main episode of Season One of WAR HALL: A Theatre of the Mind. An epilogue follows.
War Hall is an independent production. If we ever make a profit, half will go to War Child, with the rest supporting our small team. If you’d like to help us make future episodes, you can join our Patreon — even the smallest contribution helps us pay artists fairly.
Follow War Hall: A Theatre of the Mind wherever you get your podcasts, and please leave a review to help others find the show.
Some clips are used under fair dealing and fair use for historical illustration.
Music and sound design by Simon Mills.
Produced by Alison Williams, Professor John Thomas, and Susie Williams.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.