Bright Young Things discussion

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P.G. Wodehouse
Historical Context
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Wodehouse in Exile
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This times nicely with the publication of the letters book.



It seems laughable now that PG Wodehouse could ever have been accused of treachery and yet this drama effectively explained how that scenario came about.
His crime was to have been released a few months early from an internment camp in 1941, whereupon he was enthusiastically used by the German propaganda machine to make a series of radio broadcasts to tell the Americans about life in the camp. PG Wodehouse naïvely thought his broadcasts would show the world unbroken British resolve. Back in London the response was anger. Sadly he never lived long enough to see the accusations finally disproved when MI5 eventually made the contents of the Cullen report public and was apparently plagued by questions about the wartime broadcasts for the rest of his days.
It's on iPlayer now.

The investigation by the security services exonerated him completely. It might have been better for him if it hadn't, because then there would have been a high-profile trial and he would have had a chance to explain.
Wodehouse in Exile
Mon Mar 25, 9-10.15pm, BBC4
Was P.G. Wodehouse a traitor, as so many people thought for so many years? Apparently not; the release of the Cullen report by MI5 last year finally cleared the ‘Jeeves and Wooster’ creator of the long-held belief by many that he had consciously assisted the Germans in WWII, paving the way for this one-off drama by Nigel Williams.
Its initial theatricality and wooden staging fail to engage, undermining a terrific true story, but as that story begins to unfold things pick up no end, and we begin to understand how one very unworldly Englishman could be so easily manipulated into a position that would lead to his downfall and exile. Tim Pigott-Smith plays Wodehouse with aplomb, frustrating us with his naivety, and it’s left to Zoe Wanamaker’s spiky and sassy Ethel Woodhouse to provide clues as to why he would have so foolishly walked into such an obvious trap.
Let it draw you in and you’ll be rewarded by a nuanced, thoughtful story that has a rare impact.
http://www.timeout.com/london/tv-and-...