Sleuths, Spies & Sorcerers: Andrew Marr's Paperback Heroes: Spies


12:00 am - 01:00 am, Thursday, February 5 on BBC Four (9)

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About this Broadcast

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Spies

The broadcaster explores the espionage genre, arguing that the British examples of it allows readers to engage with big questions about the human condition. The conventions of writing about spies are gleaned from Frederick Forsyth, William Boyd, Gerald Seymour, Charles Cumming and former MI5 director general Stella Rimington, and Andrew travels to Berlin in the footsteps of John le Carre, whose experience of witnessing the Wall being erected in 1961 inspired him to write The Spy Who Came in from the Cold


HD subtitles 16x9 audio-description finale series
Arts/Culture (without Music) Documentary Literature News/Current Affairs

Cast & Crew

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Andrew Marr (Presenter)
Matthew Thomas (Producer)
Sebastian Barfield (Series producer)
Michael Poole (Executive producer)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Andrew Marr (Presenter)
Born: July 31, 1959 in Glasgow
Best Known For: The Andrew Marr Show.
Early-life: Andrew William Stevenson Marr was born in Glasgow on 31 July 1959 and attended Dundee High School, Craigflower School in Fife, and Loretto School, an independent boarding school in Musselburgh. He went on to gain a BA in English from Trinity Hall, Cambridge.
Career: In 1981, Marr joined The Scotsman newspaper as a trainee and junior business reporter and became parliamentary correspondent in 1984 and political correspondent in 1986. He worked for two years at The Independent and moved to become political editor at The Economist from 1988 to 1992. He then returned to the Independent as chief political commentator in 1992 and was promoted to editor in 1996. He became a columnist for The Express and The Observer in 1998 before being appointed as BBC political editor in May 2000. In 2005, he fronted a new Sunday morning programme on BBC1 called Sunday AM and it later became The Andrew Marr Show. He also presents the BBC Radio 4 programme Start the Week. He has fronted a number of documentary series, including Andrew Marr's The Making of Modern Britain, The Diamond Queen, and Andrew Marr's History of the World. He suffered a stroke in January 2013 and was in hospital for two months. He returned to The Andrew Marr Show in September of the same year.
Quote: "One of the things I've learned is that if you try to be a different person on TV than you are in real life then the viewer knows there's something not right."
Trivia: Marr has published several books, including The Battle for Scotland, My Trade: A Short History of British Journalism and A History of Modern Britain. His first novel, Head of State, was released in 2014.
Matthew Thomas (Producer)
Sebastian Barfield (Series producer)
Michael Poole (Executive producer)

Before / After

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