← NewsAll
Ukraine Unbroken: Front Row presents new plays responding to the war
Summary
BBC Radio 4's Front Row marks four years since the full‑scale invasion of Ukraine with Ukraine Unbroken, an evening of five new plays and live bandura performance, and also discusses new Ofcom streaming oversight and the International Booker longlist.
Content
Today marks four years since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. BBC Radio 4's Front Row presents Ukraine Unbroken, an evening of five new plays written in response to the war; David Edgar discusses his play Five Days and Ukrainian musician Maraiia Petrovska performs on the bandura. The programme also features a conversation with cinematographer Sir Roger Deakins, explores the government’s announced plan for Ofcom monitoring of streaming services, and notes the International Booker longlist announced with judge Natasha Brown.
Key points:
- The broadcast is framed by the four-year anniversary of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine and presents five new plays responding to the conflict.
- David Edgar’s Five Days is described as imagining a puppet government waiting to move in should Kyiv fall.
- Ukrainian musician Maraiia Petrovska performs live and discusses the bandura, described as the national instrument that was once banned.
- Front Row also covers Sir Roger Deakins’s visual memoir, the government announcement on Ofcom monitoring of streaming services, and the International Booker Prize longlist.
Summary:
The programme brings together theatrical responses, live music and cultural conversation alongside reporting on proposed broadcasting oversight and prize longlist news. Undetermined at this time.
