Last Days of Grace: A BBC Radio 4 drama

· BBC Digital Audio · Narrated by Kenneth Cranham, Christopher Martin-Jenkins, and Benedict Cumberbatch
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43 min
Unabridged
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About this audiobook

A cricketing legend faces his final innings in this moving BBC radio drama starring Kenneth Cranham and Benedict Cumberbatch

Easter Monday, 1908, and there's snow on the ground as ageing icon W.G. Grace arrives at the Oval to contemplate another day in his lifelong cricketing obsession. He can't face the thought of sitting in the clubhouse and meeting the same old people - so instead, he trudges out in the cold to the groundsman's hut, where he encounters a young stranger.

Their talk turns, naturally, to cricket, and the two men recall the highlights of Grace's long career: his debut for the All-England team in 1866, when he made 100 runs on the first day, and his first Test Match at the Oval in 1880 where he scored 152 against Australia, becoming England's first centurion.

But those triumphs occurred decades ago, and Grace no longer dominates the world of cricket as he once did. At nearly 60, he knows in his heart that it's time to retire, but he cannot bear the idea of giving up the game he loves. Can the stranger persuade him to bow out with dignity?

Written by Nick Warburton, who won the 2007 Peter Tinniswood Award for Best New Play on Radio, this poignant, bittersweet drama stars Kenneth Cranham as Grace, with Benedict Cumberbatch as the young man and Christopher Martin-Jenkins as the Voice of Cricket.

Produced by Steven Canny

Cast
W.G. Grace - Kenneth Cranham
GF - Benedict Cumberbatch
Voice of Cricket - Christopher Martin-Jenkins

First broadcast on BBC Radio 4, 24 September 2008

About the author

Christopher Martin-Jenkins is cricket correspondent for the Daily Telegraph. He was for many years cricket correspondent for the BBC and editor of The Cricketer. Pat Gibson has been writing about cricket for more than twenty-five years as cricket correspondent of the Nottingham Evening Post, the Daily Express and, since 1987, the Sunday Express. He has also contributed to numerous cricket magazines and brochures and collaborated in books with Jim Laker, John Emburey and John Lever.

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