James Herriot

From the collection of

Yorkshire Film Archive
The Yorkshire Film Archive at York St John University save and celebrate screen heritage made in or about Yorkshire. They connect broad and diverse audiences to their cultural and socially significant collection that reflects the life, landscape, and identity of the people of the region since the 1890s. Together with their sister archive in the North East they form the Yorkshire and North East Film Archive, a unique pan-regional resource with over 75,000 moving image artefacts. They unlock the collections for artists, academics, curators, programmers, researchers, and producers to reveal compelling stories from the vaults. www.yfanefa.com

James Herriot (Calendar People)

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A series of interviews with prominent figures from the Yorkshire region.

After spending 35 years as a vet in North Yorkshire, hugely successful writer Alf Wight, pen name James Herriot, says he has no intention of giving up his veterinary career in pursuit of fame and fortune. He continues to write in his spare time, which is very little. Wight credits his wife for getting him to write his first novel, when she told him, "nobody starts writing at the age of 50." To prove her wrong, Wright immediately rushed out to buy a large stack of paper and began. His first two novels were adapted into the film All Creatures Great and Small. The original film was released in 1975 and the later adapted BBC television series aired 90 episodes from 1978 to 1990. The series remains hugely popular, with a modern reboot commissioned and broadcast in 2020.

Richard Whiteley talks to veterinary surgeon and writer Alf Wight - pen name James Herriot - whose semi-autobiographical works are the basis for a new feature film called All Creatures Great and Small.


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From the collection

Let Them Talk: TV Chat Shows

Celebrating the gift of the gab through decades of studio chat.
For as long as there’s been television, there’s been talk – in many ways the formative influence on the small screen wasn’t film, but radio. But the modern chat show was forged in the age of mass television and the rise of celebrity culture in the later 20th century. Ready access to generations of stars and insatiable public curiosity about them has made chat shows a gift that keeps giving. For broadcasters, of course, stardom is an easy route to audiences. For guests, a seat on the armchair or sofa is a chance to self-promote, to plug a new film, book or record... or to rescue a flagging career. Audiences, meanwhile, can hope for a surprise revelation, a glimpse of the ‘real’ person behind the celebrity mask, or just enjoy the illusion that these sparkling stars are guests in our own living rooms. We can chart the changes in the celebrity weather through decades of chat show guests. We might recognise the Hollywood stars, pop icons or sporting legends who made up the ‘A-list’ of decades ago, but often it’s the less guarded ‘B-listers’ (or below) who can intrigue us most, with a well-turned story, a flash of wit, or an insight into what it’s like to live a life in the public eye.

22 videos in this collection

1

Victoria Wood & Julie Walters (Live from Two

2

Reeves & Mortimer / Nirvana (Tonight with Jonathon Ross)

3

Alan Bennett / Jackie Collins (The Russell Harty Show)

4

Catherine Deneuve / Anthony Hopkins (Aspel & Company)

5

Appointment with John Freeman

6

Michael Palin (Live from Two)

7

Emma Thompson / policing (The Frost Programme)

8

Linton Kwesi Johnson / John Cooper Clarke (Late Night from Two)

9

Jilly Cooper / Jean Rook (Calendar People)

10

Vanessa Redgrave / Mick Hucknall (Aspel & Company)

11

Sir Len Hutton

12

Dennis Potter / Natalie Cole (Russell Harty)

13

Anthony Daniels (Kelly)

14

Jack Ashley (Live from Two)

15

James Herriot

16

Bob Hoskins / Hugh Laurie (Aspel & Company)

17

Appointment with Victor Gollancz

18

Pat Phoenix &Tony Booth (Live from Two)

19

Ian Carmichael / Brian Rix (Calendar People)

20

Diana Ross / Shirley MacLaine (Aspel & Company)

21

Best of the Stark Truth

22

Runrig to Robbie Coltrane

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