Lord Peter Wimsey - Guady Night 3

Пікірлер: 59

  • @Jane-he4xx
    @Jane-he4xx Жыл бұрын

    Gosh, that was excellent! Just binge watched all three... became immersed in their world and don't want to leave! So sorry there are no more episodes... I will miss their company:)

  • @masuganut2082

    @masuganut2082

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly how I feel ❤

  • @sandraelder1101

    @sandraelder1101

    Жыл бұрын

    Same. I think I’ll read them now.

  • @myroslavajacklitsch6039

    @myroslavajacklitsch6039

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here!

  • @susandevine3907

    @susandevine3907

    11 ай бұрын

    Jill Paton Walsh wrote some sequels that are quite good, particularly “A Presumption of Death.”

  • @sccourteney8937

    @sccourteney8937

    5 ай бұрын

    Same. I dont want to part ways. I will re watch again. Wish they would have done more series. What a joy & treat indeed. Thrilled to learn I am not the only one .. ❤

  • @elisecurran9497
    @elisecurran9497 Жыл бұрын

    I LOVE how the Dean smiles when Harriet says she wants to get a "second opinion" of the room. She knows, and she loves it!

  • @sccourteney8937
    @sccourteney89375 ай бұрын

    This was thrillingly excellent indeed!! I watched ALL 3 series and each episodes the last 2 days. I didn't want to part ways nor leave those marvellous stories & time period & stellar cast. I will miss them dearly. What a fabulous series I enjoyed every moment. I wish there would be more episodes. THANK YOU so much for sharing. Will watch them again just to immerse myself again into this fabulous time ... what a treat 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @shireboundscribbles
    @shireboundscribbles10 ай бұрын

    I wish that Edward and Harriet had completed the series with Busman's Honeymoon on the audiobook. I cannot get with anyone other than them playing the roles.

  • @terrymitchell2533
    @terrymitchell2533 Жыл бұрын

    Thoroughly enjoyed. Thank you so much. 👍👏🥂

  • @deborahrobertson8606
    @deborahrobertson8606 Жыл бұрын

    They had to condense this adaptation into 3 rather than 4 parts, thereby losing much of the nuance and detail. I know that this frustrated the actors. But they are still eminently watchable. Thank you!

  • @fjdkfdfjdf33
    @fjdkfdfjdf3311 ай бұрын

    That was the most plausible conclusion to a mystery i've ever seen. Believable and convincing. Well written dialog and characters. Bravo!

  • @ynys_mon6928
    @ynys_mon69289 ай бұрын

    I love this novel. Although I could never aspire to Oxford, I was the first person in my family to go to University, so all the descriptions of how difficult it was for women to gain recognition as scholars very much resonated with me.

  • @chiccachannel
    @chiccachannel10 ай бұрын

    I just wish they went on with this series... Ian Carmichael's portrait of Lord Peter Wimsey was so inadequate...

  • @dorriegalea6449

    @dorriegalea6449

    3 ай бұрын

    I wouldn’t say Mr Carmichael was inadequate….far from it!

  • @LISA-gv5yo

    @LISA-gv5yo

    Ай бұрын

    Inadequado? Porquê? Ian Carmichael como Winsley não se casou com uma ex lésbica, e ex amante de um homem pelo qual foi acusada de assassinato! Esse personagem é de longe Inadequado! Veja que ele se casou com uma mulher celibatária.....qual a dignidade nisso?

  • @babybutchie

    @babybutchie

    Ай бұрын

    @@dorriegalea6449 More a tour de force than inadequate.

  • @myroslavajacklitsch6039
    @myroslavajacklitsch6039 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing! Coming back to the series,whenever the life overwhelms.

  • @kateleblanc604
    @kateleblanc604 Жыл бұрын

    Shame they stopped making the series here.

  • @Dragonomics42

    @Dragonomics42

    Жыл бұрын

    The BBC was unable to obtain the filming rights. Edward Petherbridge and his wife Emily Richards were the main characters in the stage play of Busman's Honeymoon.

  • @generalpublic3744
    @generalpublic37449 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the uploads, I've really enjoyed them and I always like a happy ending. 🥰😉

  • @caseyjonessnr1200
    @caseyjonessnr12002 жыл бұрын

    Another excellent series.

  • @bernaclischurchill4463
    @bernaclischurchill4463 Жыл бұрын

    Great series. On the contrary, she can be brought before a court of law & charged, with vandalism & destruction of college property, two counts of assault and battery, & threats of bodily harm. She could have also been sued in a civil count of law, as well as fired. What a sad person, as if all that was going to bring her husband back. He knew he was wrong, and so did she, but instead of facing up to what he did, and moving on with his life. He took the crowds way out. Ms. B. Churchill

  • @OrthodoxGraceB

    @OrthodoxGraceB

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the implication is that they're not going to charge her in court because it would mean the whole thing becoming public, which they had wanted to avoid the entire time. So she loses her position without any chance of getting their recommendation, and that'll have to be enough, by way of punishment(?) I'm not sure it would be enough for me, if I were Miss Devine. The woman's obviously unbalanced, and now, she has nothing to lose.

  • @bernaclischurchill4463

    @bernaclischurchill4463

    Жыл бұрын

    @@OrthodoxGraceB I totally agree. No one not knowing her married name was odd, not unless she used her maiden name so that they would not make the connection, which is most likely. Ms. B. Churchill

  • @MrSullismom

    @MrSullismom

    11 ай бұрын

    @@OrthodoxGraceB In the book it is revealed that Annie's condition will be dealt with by treatment at the expense of the college.

  • @joansavage1857
    @joansavage1857 Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant! Thank you…

  • @allencampbell8322
    @allencampbell83222 жыл бұрын

    Good show old chap

  • @frglee
    @frglee9 ай бұрын

    And this story leads straight into 'Busman's Honeymoon', the final Dorothy L Sayers published novel of Lord Peter Wimsey and Harriet Vane which the BBC was unable to film. The screen rights had previously been sold to a film company for the1940 film 'Haunted Honeymoon'. A play and several radio versions were made of 'Busman's Honeymoon, including a version for BBC Radio 4 in 1983 with Ian Charmichael as Lord Peter. Edward Petherbridge appeared in a stage version in 1988. Dorothy L Sayers' unfinished LPW/HV story 'Thrones, Dominions' was completed by Jill Paton in 1998, who wrote three more novels using the characters. Interestingly a short and lighthearted LPW/HV story, 'Tallboys' was written by Sayers in 1942, about a trivial theft of peaches from a neighbours garden.

  • @ynys_mon6928

    @ynys_mon6928

    9 ай бұрын

    I’m so lucky! My husband and I saw a stage production of Busman’s Honeymoon in the late 1980s, featuring Edward Petherbridge and his wife Emily.

  • @clarissagafoor5222
    @clarissagafoor52229 ай бұрын

    i do wish they`d made the last book into a show with these three actors.

  • @Dragonomics42
    @Dragonomics42 Жыл бұрын

    It's spelled GAUDY Night... from the Latin gaudete, meaning 'rejoice'.

  • @jjroseknows777
    @jjroseknows7772 жыл бұрын

    18:51 "The only principle that has made science possible is the ethical one: that the truth must be told at all times and if we do not penalize false statements made in error then we open up the way for false statements by intent and a falsification of fact made by intent is he most serious of crime that a scientist can commit."

  • @wintershu3422

    @wintershu3422

    2 жыл бұрын

    What does it mean?

  • @jjroseknows777

    @jjroseknows777

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@wintershu3422 It's about truth; if you don't tell the truth about science (roots -- meaning "to know". If we can't know with science, we're doomed.

  • @jjroseknows777

    @jjroseknows777

    2 жыл бұрын

    The Ignoble Lie Victor Davis Hanson October 28, 2021 In a controversial passage in Plato’s “Republic,” Socrates introduced the idea of the “noble lie” (“gennaios pseudos”). A majestic fiction, he says, could sometimes serve society by persuading uninformed citizens of something good for them. Ever since, many prevaricators have used the excuse that they lied for the common good. Take Dr. Anthony Fauci, our point man on the COVID-19 epidemic. Fauci misled the country about mask-wearing during the pandemic by claiming they were of little use. But he argued that he lied so the public would not make a run on masks, deplete the supply, and thus rob medical professionals of protective equipment. Fauci also told “noble” lies about the likely percentage of the public needing to be vaccinated to achieve herd immunity. He kept raising the bar-from 60 percent to 70 percent to 75 percent to 80 percent, to 85 percent. Apparently, Fauci feared a lower figure, even if accurate, might lull people into complacency about getting inoculated. Fauci also lied about his own role in routing U.S. aid money to subsidize gain-of-function viral research at the Wuhan virology lab-the likely birthplace of COVID-19. Either Fauci was hiding his own culpability, or he believed the American people might not be able to fully accept that some of their own health officials were promoting the sort of research that was partially responsible for more than 700,000 American deaths. Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas has serially lied about the number of undocumented immigrants who have crossed into the United States. He falsely claimed mounted agents were whipping migrants. He fibbed about the purported lack of federal data of apprehensions, detentions, and deportations. His assertion that the border is secure was a joke. Apparently, Mayorkas believes the public would go ballistic or his own administration would be roundly despised, if he told the bitter truth about the border: by intent, the Biden administration has apparently deliberately left it wide open. And it will likely allow 2 million undocumented immigrants into the country in the current fiscal year. Commentary Lots of other unelected federal officials lied over the past five years by claiming or implying that harming the Trump administration was in the public interest. Former FBI directors Andrew McCabe and James Comey likely misled the nation. McCabe admittedly lied that he did not leak FBI information to the media. James Comey lied under oath on multiple occasions in congressional cross-examinations and claimed he did not know or could not remember basic facts about his own role in promoting the Russian collusion hoax. Apparently, Comey and McCabe believed that by being less than truthful, they might better emasculate Donald Trump. And that result would be beneficial to America. Our former intelligence leaders may have been the most brazen liars. Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper lied to Congress about the NSA surveillance program, though he denied it. When caught in the untruth, Clapper reverted to the noble lie that he gave the least untruthful answer, apparently on the pretense that he did not wish to damage the reputation of an important intelligence agency. Ditto John Brennan, the former head of the CIA. On two occasions he lied under oath about the agency’s monitoring of Senate staffers’ computers and the deaths of civilians caused by U.S. drone assassination missions along the Afghanistan border. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Mark Milley lied for days about the details of an accidental drone strike that killed innocent women and children in Afghanistan. Either Milley is now lying when he says he warned Joe Biden about the disasters to come in Afghanistan or Biden is lying when he denies hearing any such advice. Many of the details of Milley’s conversations with authors Bob Woodward and Robert Costa as reported in their recent muckraking book were abjectly denied by Milley. The list of such lies could be vastly expanded. IRS functionary Lois Lerner never told the whole untruth about weaponizing the IRS. Former Attorney General Loretta Lynch spun an implausible yarn that she accidentally bumped into Bill Clinton on a tarmac in Phoenix and never discussed the then-current FBI investigation of Hillary Clinton. Special counsel Robert Mueller told a whopper under oath, claiming to know almost nothing about the Steele dossier and the misadventures of Fusion GPS. Both were the two catalysts that prompted his entire investigation of “collusion” in the first place. In some of these cases, when caught and exposed, the liars will hedge by claiming temporary amnesia. But sometimes they admit they lied but suggest they did so for higher purposes like national security. In truth, in most cases there was nothing noble at all in their lying. They simply spread untruths to protect their own endangered careers by masking their own wrongdoing or fobbing it onto others. In other words, “noble lies” are rarely spun for anyone’s interests other than those of the liars themselves.

  • @wintershu3422

    @wintershu3422

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jjroseknows777 thanks ever so much for taking the time to reply. I understand your reference now 🙂 You sound really well-read!

  • @jjroseknows777

    @jjroseknows777

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@wintershu3422 I have read of the past and try to keep up with the present -- knowledge is a heavy cross to bear. Although my father used to say, "Jane, knowing and doing are two different things." So I suffer knowing, but don't do much about it. God bless you in all good.

  • @billybogg3602
    @billybogg36029 ай бұрын

    thanks for posting

  • @digitallifeline162
    @digitallifeline1622 жыл бұрын

    A more modern version of this would have been about social media bullying.

  • @tooleyheadbang4239

    @tooleyheadbang4239

    11 ай бұрын

    That would be TERRIBLY exciting...

  • @leavingitblank9363
    @leavingitblank9363 Жыл бұрын

    So there you have it. She finally succumbs, and thus ends the series. It was all just one, long, romantic ploy.

  • @ynys_mon6928

    @ynys_mon6928

    9 ай бұрын

    Is that bad?

  • @leavingitblank9363

    @leavingitblank9363

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ynys_mon6928 Anti-climactic.

  • @user-uz3hm3ut4u
    @user-uz3hm3ut4u10 ай бұрын

    It's spelt Gaudy!!!!!!

  • @susandevine3907
    @susandevine390711 ай бұрын

    Jill Paton Walsh wrote some sequels with Peter and Harriet, one of which Dorothy L. Sayers had begun before her death. I particularly like “A Presumption of Death.”

  • @latimeralder1

    @latimeralder1

    9 ай бұрын

    JPWs stores are indeed very good.

  • @sandraelder1101
    @sandraelder1101 Жыл бұрын

    Guady?

  • @gardenphoto

    @gardenphoto

    Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunate misspelling; Gaudy comes from the Latin "Gaudet" which means "rejoice" or "delight" or "Jubilation." For a simply resounding example of how the word was used in very early church music (vocal only, of course), refer to Anúna's recording of "Gaudete" on their "Celtic Origins" album... sublimity and otherworldliness! Mike D.

  • @LISA-gv5yo
    @LISA-gv5yoАй бұрын

    🤔🤔🤔 Eu não estou entendendo! Não reconheço lorde Winsley nessa série! Ele é casado com uma mulher que prefere o celibato? Depois de ter sido amante de um homem, e ter tido relacionamento vulgar com mulheres? E depois de ter sido acusada de assassinato! Entendem? O personagem desse lord fica longe da personificação de Ian Carmichael. Isso está nos livros? Me desculpem eu não consegui nem um exemplar! Mas, de antemão, fica minha indignação e insatisfação com essa série!

  • @joytotheworld6804
    @joytotheworld68043 ай бұрын

    What boring, slow old story.