... The
Red Badge of Courage... 
http://www.opengroup.com/pabooks/066/0660185563.shtml Net.Store USA ... to order
CBC Radio (Canada) is doing a radio drama co-production with BBC
(British)
Radio of an adaptation of the novel., "
The      
Red Badge of Courage", written by Stephen Crane about the American
Civil
War.  Mickey will be playing two characters;
Jim  Conklin and  Simpson  (no first name given) 
who are fellow Union soldiers with the main character in the story,
Henry
Fleming  and figure prominently in his story.  Although the
men
are Northerner's,  most characters are written phonetically in the
novel as speaking like boys from the South. With this in mind, Mickey
did
a Kentucky ( Bowling Green) accent for Jim Conklin, and a Virginia
(Richmond) 
accent for Simpson.
The taping  was done in January and will air in March., 2001
 
March 25 @ 10:05 PM EST on CBC Radio 1 which is 99.1 FM in Toronto
March 26 @ 9:05 PM EST on CBC Radio 2 (don't know station number)
April 15 @ 15:02 (local British time) on BBC
April 21 @ 21:02 (local British time) on BBC
If you listened to the broadcast and want to comment, contact Mr. James Roy. To learn more about CBC Radio, Click on the link below !!!!
James Roy
Executive Producer
CBC Radio Arts & Entertainment
Box 500, Station A
Toronto, Canada
M5W 1E6
(off) 416-205-5989
(fax) 416-205-5731
phone: 1-877-Bowdens or e-mail: radiodramaoncd@toronto.cbc.ca. and order by credit card.
or
mail:
Radio Drama on CD
% CBC
P.O. Box 500, Station A
Toronto, Ontario, M5W 1E6
 
Letter from CBC..
"The Red Badge of Courage" has just been released on CD for
$21. 
You have
3 options to place your order.  You can reply to this message
and send me
your information, you can call (416) 205-5966 which is the Radio Drama
on
CD order line, or you can write to Radio Drama on CD care of CBC box
500
station A Toronto M5W 1E6.
The information that I will need is the type of credit card you are
using,
the number, expiry date and your mailing address.
If you are ordering by mail you can send a cheque payable to CBC.
Thanks
Radio Drama On CD
..........
..........
..........
Brief Stephen Crane Biography
   Although he was born more than six years after the end
of the American Civil War,
   Stephen Crane's novel The Red Badge of Courage
depicted that war so vividly,
   and rendered the fears of men in battle so intensely,
that many veterans who read
   the book were convinced that he was one of them. In a
career of less than ten
   years, Crane produced a body of work that, in its striking
and concise phrasing
   and its unflinching confrontation of smugness and
hypocrisy,
helped set the
   course of American fiction and poetry in the twentieth
century.
   Born in Newark, New Jersey, on November 1, 1871,
Stephen
Crane was his
   parents' fourteenth (and last) child. His father, Dr.
Jonathan Townley Crane, was a
   Methodist minister, as were his maternal grandfather and
other relatives on both
   sides of his family. Dr. Crane's successive ecclesiastical
appointments led the
   family to move in 1876 to Paterson, New Jersey, and in
1878 to Port Jervis, a
   town in upstate New York that, with its surrounding
countryside,
would become the
   setting for a number of Crane's works, including
Whilomville
Stories, the novel
   The Third Violet, and one of his greatest short stories,
"The Monster." After Dr.
   Crane's death in 1880, his widow moved the family to
Asbury
Park, New Jersey.
   Crane attended the Hudson River Institute in Claverack,
New York, from 1888 to
   1890, where he was taught history by John B. Van Petten,
who had been an
   officer in the Civil War. In September 1890, he enrolled
at Lafayette College to
   study mining engineering, but left without completing
his first semester. He
   entered Syracuse University in January 1891, where he
showed more interest in
   catching for the varsity baseball team than in his
studies.
In his single semester at
   Syracuse, he passed only one course of six--English
literature,
for which he
   received an A. He had also begun to write for the New
York Tribune, and even
   though he was to lose that position the following year
for writing a satirical account
   of a parade by the Junior Order of United American
Mechanics,
journalism would
   remain one of his principal means of support and avenues
to fame for the rest of
   his brief life.
   Crane later maintained that he wrote his first major
work
of fiction, Maggie: A Girl
   of the Streets, in two days just before Christmas of 1891.
He borrowed money
   from one of his brothers to have it printed, since he
was unable to publish it
   commercially because of its bleak and uncompromising
presentation
of life in the
   slums of New York City: the title character is forced
to turn to prostitution after
   being self-righteously rejected by everyone she has loved
and trusted. The book
   appeared early in 1893 under the pseudonym Johnston Smith,
and, while very few
   copies were sold, it won favorable attention from the
influential novelists Hamlin
   Garland and William Dean Howells.
   Also in early 1893, Crane wrote a first version of what
would become The Red
   Badge of Courage. This novel, his masterpiece, was
published
in 1895 in both
   the United States, where it became a bestseller, and
England,
where it also
   attracted a great deal of positive notice. In vivid and
impressionistic prose,
   studded with the kinds of striking similes that were a
hallmark of Crane's style, the
   novel relates the experiences of "the youth" Henry Fleming
and his comrades as
   they test themselves on the field of battle. Also in 1895
appeared The Black
   Riders, the first of Crane's two collections of free
verse.
These often fable-like
   little poems, with their stripped-down lines and stark
phrasing concentrated on the
   rendering of a single effect, were to influence the
Imagist
movement in
   Anglo-American poetry in the second decade of the
twentieth
century.
   Crane was himself a dashing figure, whose life was
often
as much of a story as
   anything that came from his pen. One night in September
1896, he interviewed
   several chorus girls for a series of articles about New
York City. After leaving a
   restaurant at two in the morning, Crane and his party
were stopped by a
   policeman named Charles Becker, who two decades later
would be the principal
   figure in a much more notorious affair. Becker arrested
Dora Clark, one of the
   women with Crane, on a charge of soliciting. Crane
vigorously
asserted her
   innocence in the matter and appeared in court to denounce
the arresting officer.
   The incident caused a sensation in the then-lively world
of New York City
   newspapers, with Crane exalted (largely by his own paper)
as a selfless defender
   of womanhood and scourge of a corrupt police force,
pilloried
as a meddler and a
   publicity hound, and libeled as a drug addict and
frequenter
of prostitutes.
   Whatever Crane's motives may have been, the affair was
a highly stressful one for
   him and took a great toll, costing him, among much else,
the friendship of then
   New York City Police Commissioner Theodore Roosevelt.
   In November of 1896, Crane met Cora Taylor, an
intelligent
woman with literary
   inclinations several years his senior, who was operating
a house of assignation in
   Jacksonville, Florida. She was to become his companion
for the rest of his
   life--although she called herself Cora Crane and was
introduced
by Crane as his
   wife, no evidence of a marriage has ever come to
light--and
an untiring champion
   of his work and reputation after his death. They settled
in England in 1897, where
   they were quickly accepted into a circle of British and
American novelists,
   including Henry James, Joseph Conrad, Harold Frederic,
and Ford Madox Ford.
   Meanwhile, Crane continued his astonishing productivity
as both journalist and
   literary artist, covering the Greco-Turkish War in 1897
and the Spanish-American
   War in 1898, and publishing in the single year of 1898
some of his finest short
   stories, "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky," "Death and the
Child," "The Monster,"
   and "The Blue Hotel."
   In the last year or so of his life, Crane suffered from
increasingly virulent attacks of
   tuberculosis, aggravated by a punishing work schedule.
Many of these writing
   projects were hack work undertaken out of financial need.
With their money
   virtually gone and surviving on the generosity of friends,
Cora brought Stephen to
   a health spa at Badenweiler, Germany, where he died on
June 5, 1900, at the
   age of twenty-eight.
   Although there was an element of romance and swagger in
his life and in some of
   his writing, his best work remains as fresh and effective
as when it was written.
   Identifying with the fearful and the outcast, attacking
complacency and intolerance,
   presenting even the most unsavory aspects of existence,
disciplining style and
   structure to a unity of effect, and doing all of these
things in works of great power
   and insight, Stephen Crane made permanent contributions
not only to the body of
   American literature but also to its very shape and
direction.
Text from... http://longman.awl.com/kennedy/crane/biography.html