Top 107 Quotes & Sayings by Melvyn Bragg - Page 2

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English journalist Melvyn Bragg.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Like university science departments, the arts have shown how they can earn their way and point to an economically newborn future for this country. They show that the U.K. could be a prime provider of imaginative riches and intellectual adventure, which I think are the two great prizes of the 21st century.
There is an army of the informed wanting to be more informed.
A lot of the novels that I've really enjoyed in my life, whether it's Tolstoy's 'Cossacks,' or 'Sons and Lovers' or 'Jude the Obscure' or 'David Copperfield' or 'Herzog,' have an autobiographical spine.
Autobiographical fiction is very tricky. — © Melvyn Bragg
Autobiographical fiction is very tricky.
In music, the Specials brought a city, Coventry, bombed out for a second time and riven with racism, to a celebration between black and white musicians and their music.
Film has changed the way we look at the past.
I got the job I wanted when I was 22, and I'm not going to give it up now.
I think television does tease out a certain vanity in everybody when you look at yourself and you go, 'Oh Christ.' Maybe that's why my intros get shorter and shorter.
Few places on earth have been as affectionately alchemised into literature as the Lake District.
Control, like curiosity, can be an exterminator.
The class barricades have been stormed by the forces of a broad culture, which is made up of clusters of individuals who have decided for themselves what they will be in society.
In 1997, the Labour government set out to strengthen funding for the arts - and achieved it.
As the 20th century unspooled, a cultural warming melted down many frozen class characteristics.
Love of place is one of the characteristics I enjoy most about novelists. — © Melvyn Bragg
Love of place is one of the characteristics I enjoy most about novelists.
I do think the BBC could do more, but I've always thought the BBC could do more - I think there should be more arts programmes full stop.
The success of the arts has come through a mix of public subsidy, substantial private support, and good box-office receipts, but central to Labour's post-1997 programme has been a determination to increase access as much as excellence.
If you look at the creative economy in this country, it's per capita way bigger than any other in the world.
Writers are looking for a story. Using your own life as the basis for a story gives it an association with reality that's a wonderful starting point.
We got a copy of the 'New Statesman' at my grammar school in Wigton, Cumbria, in the 1950s. It sat mint fresh every week on the library table, with two or three other bargain-offer magazines. The 'Statesman' came out of the unimaginable Great World. I started to read it then and have pegged along ever since.
In an arts programme, my job was to go where the talent was. And the talent was in popular culture.
Magna Carta has become totemic. It is in the comedy of Tony Hancock, in the poetry of Kipling, never far from the front pages in a constitutional crisis.
Is it rather stupid and dangerous to take Magna Carta so much for granted, as many of us seem to do, and to think of this attitude as 'very English?'
I sometimes think the only true record of England is the 'Cumberland News.'
It is very difficult for middle-aged, institutionalised males who have done so well out of subsidy - and, fair play, given much back - to realise that there is a time to be a well-heeled revolutionary.
It's amazing that Sky is the only place that has two dedicated arts channels. The BBC is doing very well... but why don't they do more?
I love writing, and I love making arts programmes.
Grime reminds me, if there is an echo, of sort of near enough like Liverpool in the very early Sixties. It's a lot of kids obsessed with music - obsessed with it.
I actually admire some of the books by a lot of the writers who write magic realism very much, but it's not for me. It's not what I can do, but even if I could, I don't really want to try.
I enjoy writing. Would I rather be playing golf? No. Would I rather be fishing? No.
I was the only BBC graduate trainee in 1961 interested in arts broadcasting. I knew I wanted to write, and I had to make a living.
The theatre always seems to be in trouble but always thriving. It's deeply comical to me that we agonize about our crap football teams and indifferent Test sides when in front of our noses is a great world success story that no one's interested in apart from those who work in it.
Compared to the big 19th-century novelists, I've got a slim volume of work.
I have written favourably in support of subsidy for the arts since the 1960s, and I continue to believe absolutely in subsidy, as I do in the BBC licence fee. — © Melvyn Bragg
I have written favourably in support of subsidy for the arts since the 1960s, and I continue to believe absolutely in subsidy, as I do in the BBC licence fee.
In the 40 or so years I've known David Puttnam, not only has he pursued an outstanding career in films and now politics, but he has been the keeper of the flame of the British film industry.
A lot of the novels I admire are 'admirably provincial.'
I'm a Labour party supporter, but I'm also a democrat.
Television, above all, is the place where people can see the world they live in, and if the world they live in is a world without the arts, so much the worse for television, and so much the worse for the viewers.
Miliband failed us, his Labour supporters. And Labour will now, because of him, be in a disaster zone for a long time.
There are two big beasts in the arts: the BBC and Sky Arts - challenging, leading the way.
One of the great things about making 'Reel History' was meeting British people from all over the class system. It made me realise that London is a different country.
When anybody tells you something about writing, somebody will tell you something completely different and they will also be right
History is too often the refuge of the tidy-minded, making neat patterns when the dust has settled.
There's nothing the British like better than a bloke who comes from nowhere, makes it, and then gets clobbered. — © Melvyn Bragg
There's nothing the British like better than a bloke who comes from nowhere, makes it, and then gets clobbered.
To hear the Treorchy Male Choir in full throat is one of the great joys of choral music.
More people now work in the arts than the steel, coal and car industries combined.
Writing novels is a way of living alternative lives.
Occasionally now I feel a wang that goes in my head - once you've got it you've got it. The [illness] was quite severe, leaving me deeply unhappy and frightened.
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