Lost Hearts (A Ghost Story for Christmas)

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"Lost Hearts"
A Ghost Story for Christmas episode
Lost Hearts 1973 title card.jpg
Title screen
Episode no.Episode 3
Directed by Lawrence Gordon Clark
Written by Robin Chapman
Based on"Lost Hearts"
by M. R. James
Produced byRosemary Hill
Original air date25 December 1973 (1973-12-25)
Running time34 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
 Previous
"A Warning to the Curious"
Next 
"The Treasure of Abbot Thomas"
List of episodes

"Lost Hearts" is a short film which serves as the third episode of the British supernatural anthology television series A Ghost Story for Christmas . Written by Robin Chapman, produced by Rosemary Hill, and directed by the series' creator, Lawrence Gordon Clark, it is based on the 1895 ghost story of the same name by M. R. James and first aired on BBC1 on 25 December 1973. [1] [2] It is the first instalment to have been broadcast on Christmas Day itself, and one of only three in the series' history. [3]

Contents

It stars Joseph O'Conor as Mr. Abney, a reclusive alchemist who takes in his much younger cousin, Stephen (Simon Gipps-Kent). Stephen finds himself troubled by visions of two children who are revealed to have previously been taken in by Abney, and whose grisly fates potentially foreshadow his own. [4]

"Lost Hearts" was the first instalment not to be written and produced by Clark, who had helmed the first two singlehandedly under the auspices of the BBC Documentary Unit. A "victim of his own success", the series was brought under Hill at the Drama Department, with Clark staying on as director for all but the final entry in the original run. [5] Since airing it has received praise from critics, though some have lamented the loss of Clark's personal touch from the earlier films.

Synopsis

The drama tells the story of Stephen Elliott, a young orphan aged 11 years and of an inquiring frame of mind, who is sent to stay with his much older cousin, the scholarly Mr Abney, at a remote country mansion, Aswarby Hall, in Lincolnshire. His cousin is a reclusive alchemist obsessed with making himself immortal. Abney's library "contained all the then available books bearing on the Mysteries, the Orphic poems, the worship of Mithras, and the Neo–Platonists." [6] Stephen is repeatedly troubled by visions of a young gypsy girl and a travelling Italian boy with their hearts missing.

Cast

Production

Locations

Grade II* listed Ormsby Hall in South Ormsby in Lincolnshire stood in for the exterior shots of Aswarby Hall, while the churchyard of the nearby St Leonard's church in the village featured in the final scenes including the ghostly children waving to Stephen.

Harrington Hall in Harrington, Lincolnshire was used for the interior of Aswarby Hall, as well as a few outside scenes. The interiors seen in the film were all destroyed by a fire which occurred in 1991.

The Pelham Mausoleum near Brocklesby in Great Limber near Grimsby also featured in the production.

Music

Most music from the film is taken from Hyperion III, a 1966 avant-garde piece by Bruno Maderna. The 25-minute recording was performed by the Southwest German Radio Symphony Orchestra, Baden Baden, with Severino Gazzelloni on the flute. [7] Also featured is My Bonny Boy from Ralph Vaughan Williams English Folk Song Suite , performed by the London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Sir Adrian Boult. [8] This piece accompanies the scene of Stephen flying his kite. Two pieces from The Minstrel of Clare, a collection of Irish folk music by Willie Clancy, also feature: The Templehouse and Over the Moor to Maggie, and Caoineadh an Spailpín (The Spalpeen's Lament). [9] These are used during the flashbacks to Phoebe's arrival at, and disappearance from, Abney's house.

The adaptation is noted for the distinctive hurdy-gurdy music that accompanies appearances of the two ghostly children. This has been wrongly identified as L'amour de Moi, a 15th Century French folk song, [10] but BBC copyright documentation confirms that this title is instead the tune hummed briefly by Joseph O'Conor. The actual hurdy-gurdy tune is listed as an instrumental folk song; no title, performer or recordist are given.

Home video

"Lost Hearts" was first released on DVD in Australia in 2011 by Shock Entertainment as part of the box set The Complete Ghost Stories of M. R. James. [11]

In 2012, to mark the 150th anniversary of James' birth, "Lost Hearts" was released on DVD by the BFI alongside "The Treasure of Abbot Thomas" (1974) and "The Ash Tree" (1975) in the same release, and the entire run of A Ghost Story for Christmas from 1971-2010 was released in a DVD box set, which was updated the following year to include additional material. [12] [13] All three releases featured an essay on "Lost Hearts" by author Ramsey Campbell and a filmed introduction by Lawrence Gordon Clark.

In 2022 it was remastered in 2k resolution by the BFI and released on Blu-ray alongside "Whistle and I'll Come to You" (1968 and 2010), "The Stalls of Barchester" (1971), and "A Warning to the Curious" (1972) as Ghost Stories for Christmas - Volume 1. [14] This included Ramsey Campbell's essay, the Lawrence Gordon Clark introduction, and a newly-recorded commentary by critics Kim Newman and Sean Hogan.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Adaptations of works by M. R. James</span>

The author and medievalist M. R. James (1862-1936) wrote over 30 ghost stories, which have been widely adapted for television, radio, and theatre. The first adaptation of one of his stories was of A School Story for the BBC Midlands Regional Programme in 1932, the only one produced in James' lifetime. The only notable film adaptation is Night of the Demon (1957), directed by Jacques Tourneur and based on Casting the Runes, which is considered one of the greatest horror films of all time. The most celebrated adaptations of his works are those produced for British television in the 1960s and 1970s, which have made him, according to critic Jon Dear, “the go-to folk horror writer for television.”

References

  1. 1 2 Lost Hearts (1973), British Film Institute (BFI) database
  2. 1 2 "BBC Four - Lost Hearts". BBC.
  3. The other two to air on Christmas Day are The Ice House (1978) and The Tractate Middoth (2013).
  4. "Lost Hearts". British Film Institute Database. Archived from the original on 16 January 2009. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
  5. Farquhar, Simon (30 June 2015). "Ghosts of Christmas past: M.R. James, Lawrence Gordon Clark and A Ghost Story for Christmas". Sight & Sound . Retrieved 2016-09-02.
  6. Lost Hearts (1895), Project Gutenberg Canada Ebook
  7. Severino Gazzelloni - Flute Works By Debussy, Busoni / Weill, Varese, Bussotti, Matsudaira, Maderna, 2023-04-01, retrieved 2023-10-30
  8. Elgar, Vaughan Williams, London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Adrian Boult - Enigma Variations, English Folk Song Suite, Fantasia On 'Greensleeves', 1971, retrieved 2023-10-30
  9. Willie Clancy - The Minstrel From Clare, 1967, retrieved 2023-10-30
  10. "The Aural Aesthetics of Ghosts in BBC Ghost Stories – Part 4 (Music). – Celluloid Wicker Man". 2021-04-19. Archived from the original on 2021-04-19. Retrieved 2023-10-29.
  11. "Ghost Story for Christmas (A) AKA Ghost Stories for Christmas (TV) (1968-2022)". Rewind. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
  12. BFI press release Archived 11 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine , Retrieved 2012-5-18
  13. BFI releases, retrieved 2014-1-21
  14. "Ghost Stories for Christmas: Volume 1". BFI. Retrieved 4 December 2022.