Mark Lawson Talks to...

Season 2015

A series in which arts presenter Mark Lawson has a 60-minute in-depth conversation with a notable figure.

Where to Watch Season 2015

7 Episodes

  • PD James
    E1
    PD JamesMark Lawson talks to one of Britain's greatest exponents of the detective novel, PD James.
  • Frances de la Tour
    E2
    Frances de la TourMark Lawson talks to actress Frances de la Tour about her life and career.
  • Celia Imrie
    E3
    Celia ImrieFrom Calendar Girls to Cranford, Celia Imrie has been a familiar face on both TV and film for more than four decades. Ahead of her latest cinema release The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, and the publication of her first novel Not Quite Nice, the actress talks to Mark Lawson about her life and career.
  • Kazuo Ishiguro
    E4
    Kazuo IshiguroMark Lawson talks to the Booker Prize-winning writer Kazuo Ishiguro about his life and career. Ishiguro, who was born in Nagasaki in 1954, discusses the influence of Japan on his early novels A Pale View of Hills and An Artist's View of the Floating World, and the impact of American cowboy series and Victorian novels on his grasp of English as a child.
  • Alexander McCall Smith
    E5
    Alexander McCall SmithMark Lawson talks to the internationally successful author Alexander McCall Smith, whose No.1 Ladies Detective Agency series of books, set in Botswana and centring on the investigations of the redoubtable Precious Ramotswe, have sold in their millions around the world.
  • Jonathan Pryce
    E6
    Jonathan PryceFrom princes to professors and cardinals to comedians, star of stage and screen Jonathan Pryce is one of Britain's most versatile actors. Here he talks to Mark Lawson about his life and extensive career.
  • David Hare
    E7
    David HareMark Lawson Talks To... - David Hare Award-winning writer and director Sir David Hare talks frankly to Mark Lawson following the publication of his much-anticipated memoir The Blue Touch Paper. Hare, one of Britain's foremost political playwrights, rose to fame in the 1970s with Plenty, his play about post-war disillusion. He then went on to write a string of successes for the National Theatre, most notably his 1990s state-of-the-nation trilogy. Hare has also written screenplays including The Hours and The Reader and recently wrote and directed the political thriller The Worricker Trilogy for TV.

 

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