Great_Little_Railways

<i>Great Railway Journeys</i>

Great Railway Journeys

British TV series or programme


Great Railway Journeys, originally titled Great Railway Journeys of the World, is a recurring series of travel documentaries produced by BBC Television. The premise of each programme is that the presenter, typically a well-known figure from the arts or media, would make a journey by train, usually through a country or to a destination to which they had a personal connection. The first series, which used the longer title, was broadcast on BBC2 in 1980. After a 14-year hiatus, a further three series were broadcast between 1994 and 1999, using the shorter series title. Similar series were broadcast in 1983, Great Little Railways, and 2010, Great British Railway Journeys.

Quick Facts Great Railway Journeys, Country of origin ...

The first series featured the first television travelogue by comedian and comic actor Michael Palin ("Confessions of a Trainspotter"), who later presented a number of travel series starting with Around the World in 80 Days with Michael Palin in 1989.

English musician and sound artist Chris Watson worked as an audio recorder for the fourth episode "Los Mochis to Veracruz" of the fourth series. Having spent between five weeks to a month on the train, Watson used field recordings of the journey for his 2011 album El Tren Fantasma.[1][2][3]

Series

Series 1: Great Railway Journeys of the World (1980)

Episode summary for Series 1:[4]

Episode no.Episode titleUK broadcast datePresenterDetails of journeyCountries visited
#1.0Introduction (extracts from forthcoming episodes in the series)1980-10-23---
#1.1"Coast to Coast"1980-10-30Ludovic KennedyNew York City to Los AngelesUnited States
#1.2"The Long Straight"1980-11-06Michael FraynSydney to PerthAustralia
#1.3"Deccan"1980-11-13Brian ThompsonBombay to CochinIndia
#1.4"Confessions of a Trainspotter"1980-11-27Michael PalinLondon to the Kyle of LochalshEngland, Scotland
#1.5"Zambezi Express"1980-12-04Michael WoodCape Town to Victoria FallsSouth Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe-Rhodesia
#1.6"Three Miles High"1980-12-11Miles KingtonLima to La PazPeru, Bolivia
#1.7"Changing Trains"1980-12-18Eric RobsonParis to BudapestFrance, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary

Series 2: Great Railway Journeys (1994)

Episode summary for Series 2:[5]

Episode no.Episode titleUK broadcast datePresenterCountries visited
#2.1"Hong Kong to Ulaanbaatar"1994-01-13Clive AndersonHong Kong, China, Mongolia
#2.2"Cape Town to The Lost City"1994-01-20Rian MalanSouth Africa
#2.3"St. Petersburg to Tashkent"1994-01-27Natalia MakarovaRussia, Uzbekistan
#2.4"Derry to Kerry"1994-02-03Michael PalinNorthern Ireland, Republic of Ireland
#2.5"Santos to Santa Cruz"1994-02-10Lisa St Aubin de TeránBrazil, Bolivia
#2.6"Karachi to The Khyber Pass"1994-02-17Mark TullyPakistan

Series 3: Great Railway Journeys (1996)

Episode summary for Series 3:[5]

Episode no.Episode titleUK broadcast datePresenterCountries visited
#3.1"Crewe to Crewe"1996-09-04Victoria WoodUnited Kingdom
#3.2"Aleppo to Aqaba"1996-09-11Alexei SayleSyria, Jordan
#3.3"Great Zimbabwe to Kilimatinde"1996-09-18Henry Louis Gates Jr.Zimbabwe, Zambia, Tanzania
#3.4"The High Andes to Patagonia"1996-09-25Buck HenryArgentina
#3.5"Mombasa to the Mountains of the Moon"1996-10-02Benedict AllenKenya, Uganda
#3.6"London to Arcadia"1996-10-09Ben OkriEngland, France, Switzerland, Italy, Greece
#3.7"Halifax to Porteau Cove"1996-10-16Chris BoningtonCanada

Series 4: Great Railway Journeys (1999)

Episode summary for Series 4:[5]

Episode No.Episode titleUK broadcast datePresenterCountries visited
#4.1"India East to West"1999-01-05Ian HislopIndia
#4.2"Granada to Salamanca"1999-01-12Michael PortilloSpain
#4.3"Tokyo to Kagoshima"1999-01-19Fergal KeaneJapan
#4.4"Los Mochis to Veracruz"1999-01-26Rick SteinMexico
#4.5"Guantanamo to Pinar del Rio"1999-02-02Nick HancockCuba
#4.6"St Louis to Dogon Country"1999-02-09Danny GloverSenegal, Mali
#4.7"Singapore to Bangkok"1999-04-06Stephen TompkinsonSingapore, Malaysia, Thailand

Great Little Railways

In 1983, the BBC made a further series on rail travel entitled Great Little Railways, this time exclusively featuring narrow gauge railways.[6] This series relied on narrators rather than presenters who appeared on camera. In some cases, the narrator did not partake in the train journey, and read the writing of that episode's producer.

Episode no.Episode titleUK broadcast dateNarratorWriterDetails of journeyCountries visited
1"The Gold Rush Line"1983-02-15Simon HoggartSimon HoggartWhite Pass and Yukon RouteAlaska, US and Yukon, Canada
2"The Other Poland"1983-02-22Brian BlessedLyn WebsterNasielsk to Pułtusk & Komańcza to CisnaPoland
3"Slow Train to Olympia"1983-03-01Michael WoodMichael WoodAthens to OlympiaGreece
4"The Dragons of Sugar Island"1983-03-08Colin GarrattColin GarrattNegros IslandPhilippines
5"Line of Dreams"1983-03-15John ShrapnelGerry TroynaJodhpur and Jaipur[7]India
6"Journey to the Land Beyond the Mountains"1983-03-22Ray GoslingRay GoslingDouro Valley (including the Corgo line)Portugal
7"The Good and The Quick"1983-03-29Stanley ReynoldsStanley ReynoldsGuayaquil to QuitoEcuador

Great British Railway Journeys

From January 2010, BBC Two broadcast Great British Railway Journeys, a documentary with a similar idea to Great Railway Journeys but a different format.

Journeys are mainly focused on Great Britain, but occasionally venturing onto railways in Ireland under the title Great British Railway Journeys Goes to Ireland. The programmes are presented by the ex-politician and broadcaster Michael Portillo. The first series detailed four railway journeys following an 1840 Bradshaw's guide, split into a run of 20 separate episodes. A second series followed a year later.[8]

By 2024, 15 series had been made, totalling 275 episodes.

Great Continental Railway Journeys

From 2012, BBC Two also broadcast series of Great Continental Railway Journeys, documentaries with the same idea as Great British Railway Journeys, also presented by Portillo. It follows railway journeys in mainland Europe, following a 1913 Bradshaw's guide to European rail travel.

Other similar series followed: Great Indian Railway Journeys in 2018; Great Alaskan Railroad Journeys, Great Canadian Railway Journeys, and Great Australian Railway Journeys in 2019; and Great Asian Railway Journeys in 2020.

Media

Although there have been no complete series of Great Railway Journeys released on DVD, Michael Palin's 1980 and 1994 programmes are available individually (BBCDVD1626) and as part of a box set of his collected travel documentaries, The Michael Palin Collection (BBCDVD2214). All seven of the 1980 Series 1 programs, including Palin's Confessions of a Train Spotter, were released in 1986 in cooperation with the BBC on VHS tapes by Pentrex, a California railroad video company. They are now long out-of-print, but occasionally are offered from online sellers. The six episodes of 1994's Series 2 were also released on VHS. Often available in a six-pack of programmes, though also out-of-print, they are commonly found for purchase online. In 2020, the BBC made series 2 available on the BBC iPlayer, followed by most episodes of series 4 in 2024.

Books have been published to accompany the first three series, with a chapter by each of the presenters on their particular journey:

  • Frayn, M. et al. (1981), Great Railway Journeys of the World, BBC Books, hardcover, ISBN 0-563-17903-1
  • Anderson, C. et al. (1994), Great Railway Journeys, BBC Books, hardcover, ISBN 0-563-36944-2
  • Allen, B. et al. (1996), More Great Railway Journeys, BBC Books, hardcover, ISBN 0-563-38717-3

A similar book was also published on Great Little Railways:


References

  1. Currin, Grayson; Masters, Marc (21 October 2011). "Turning the World into Art". Pitchfork. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  2. Pescovitz, David (4 November 2011). "El Tren Fantasma: ambient recording of a ghostly train journey". Boing Boing. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  3. Turner, Luke (2 December 2011). "Chris Watson". The Quietus. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  4. "Michael Portillo films Great Railway Journeys". North Yorkshire Moors Railway. 10 June 2010. Archived from the original on 12 August 2010. Retrieved 19 August 2010.

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