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May 2008 ~ Issue two of BooksMonthly ~ Return to the Cover page

THE FRIGHTFUL FIRST WORLD WAR EXHIBITION - IMPERIAL WAR MUSEUM NORTH

HORRIBLE HISTORIES: Frightful First World War – The Exhibition is a partnership between Imperial War Museum North, Terry Deary and Scholastic Children’s Books. Visitors can see it at the award-winning Imperial War Museum North between 24 May 2008 – 4 January 2009 . FREE.

AN INTERVIEW WITH TERRY DEARY APRIL 2008

You have personally adapted Horrible Histories: Frightful First World War along with the exhibitions team at Imperial War Museum North. Why is it going to be such a landmark / unmissable exhibition?

The First World War was such a significant episode in human history I feel the need to reach as many young people as possible. I have done that with the books, with an audio CD, with stage productions and with television. A museum exhibition is yet another doorway into the consciousness of more young people. But the IWM North exhibition can offer something the other media can’t - authentic artefacts from the Museum’s own collection. Combine the populism of the Horrible Histories books with the distinction of the IWM collection and you have something fresh and unique.
What made the First World War “frightful”?
The standard answer is the misery of the trenches but the “Horrible Histories” interpretation is to add the suffering of the non-combatants on both sides. No previous war had ever affected so many women and children.

What are you most looking forward to about the exhibition? What are your own personal highlights?

The recreation of the trench in a stunningly original way – a combination of the talents of the design team, Ingenious Creative, and the Horrible Histories illustrator Martin Brown.

What is your favourite fact / story about the First World War?

Improvising a gas mask by peeing into your handkerchief – pure Horrible Histories stuff. Horrible, unbelievable but a sign of the lengths humans drive one another to.

What is your favourite object or section of the exhibition?

The photographs are simply riveting. You can look at them a hundred times and be drawn in to a world of people who are long dead yet whose lives were frozen forever in the click of a shutter.
There are anniversaries all the time. Why is the 90th anniversary of the First World War so important to mark and why is it important for children to learn about it?
It is the last major anniversary when there will be any veterans around who were there at the time and almost the last when people have memories of the time.

Why did you choose to work with Imperial War Museum North?

Because the world seems to revolve around an axle called London. Anything that can shift that balance is welcome. Manchester is a vibrant and booming city. It is also a Northern city and, being a northerner, I feel an empathy with the whole place.

Do you think Museums are a good place to learn?

Not traditionally. Museums have a deserved reputation of being forbidding and precious about their collections. I have managed a museum and know curators who would be happy if the public were never allowed to see their artefacts let alone touch them or interact with them. Exhibitions like this show what is possible and museums have to evolve or die. 

Horrible Histories are some of the best-selling books of all time. What do you think is the reason for their success?

They are “history” books written by someone who is not an historian. I am a children’s author. My skill is in re-presenting the interesting facts about human behaviour in a way a “text-book” writer cannot do. Horrible Histories are not about history – they are about something far more important – people.

How did you become interested in history?

As I say I have no interest in history. I don’t connect with historians. But I am interested in education. I want people to explore the only question that matters in education: “Why do people behave the way they do?” By looking at anecdotes from the past we can start by asking “Why did people behave the way they did?”

Why should we be interested in history?

Because until we learn how people work we will never learn about ourselves. Once you begin to understand yourself you can find happiness and, more importantly, bring happiness to other less fortunate.

Why is humour important in telling such stories?

No one learns anything unless they are “engaged” by a narrative. You can do this by using techniques like surprise or suspense. Or by making them laugh. People like to laugh. But when the laughter dies you are maybe left with something deeper that remains behind. Knowledge or understanding or both.

What are you working on next?

2008 looks like being absolutely packed. The Horrible Histories Tudor and Victorian plays are re-launched with Birmingham Stage Company. In addition I am writing 4 new “City” plays that will be permanent tourist attractions in the cities, Cardiff, Windsor, Nottingham and London while I will write Horrible Histories plays on WW1 and WW2 for touring in 2009 as well as a play on Welsh history. Horrible Histories on television will premiere in May 2009 but I am running up and down to London a lot in 08 to write and act in the recordings of the 13 episodes. I also have a few of my own (non-Horrible Histories) television and radio shows to write and record. There is a major heritage project to create in Durham. The b-i-g dream for 2008 is to turn my "Fire Thief" fiction into a movie and a producer is already working on it. Horrible Histories will launch a new fiction series this year and  I am contracted to write a further 22 fiction books in 08 and 09 (in four different series)About Terry Deary

Terry Deary is the author of 185 books in the UK mainly for children and teenagers. His books are sold in 38 languages from Russia to Brazil, Scandinavia to China. He was born in Sunderland, England, in 1946 and now lives in County Durham, in the North-east of England. Terry is a former actor, theatre-director and museum manager. In 32 years as an author his writing has included fiction for juniors and teenagers, and popular non-fiction series (Horrible Histories, being the best-selling with over 20 million worldwide.)  In 2000 a Schoolsnet survey made him the most borrowed British author in school libraries while a Guardian survey of March 05 made him Britain’s fifth most popular living children’s author. For further information see http://www.terry-deary.com

For a detailed biography see http://www.terry-deary.com/homepage/biog.htm

Scroll down the page for photographs of British servicemen in the trenches during the first world war, just a few of the many photographs, facsimiles and artefacts on show in the exhibition

 

Of all the history in all theworld the story of the First World War, also known as the Great War, is perhaps the most horrible. It's a story of what happens when machines go to war and human beings get in the way. But it.s also a story of courage and craziness, brave people and batty people, friendships and fierce hatreds, love .and lice.. (Terry Deary, Horrible Histories: Frightful First World War)

Imperial War Museum North presents an unmissable family exhibition, specially designed for younger visitors,to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the end of the First World War. Based on Frightful First World War, one of the most popular books in the Horrible Histories.series by Scholastic Childrens Books, (the world's best-selling history series for children) the exhibition sets author Terry Deary's powerful words and artist Martin Brown's acerbic illustrations alongside Imperial War Museum.s unrivalled collections, to tell the stories of the men and women, servicemen and civilians, who shaped and endured what was described as the war to end all wars. Follow the Frightful First World War timeline and see rare objects, art, film and photographs to find out dire details of a war that affected everyone . from peace-loving protestors to suffering soldiers and civilians. Find out about the horrors and hardships of the war that was meant to last four months but ground on for four grim years. Get a first look at illustrations from the forthcoming Horrible Histories Handbook -Trenches (published by Scholastic Childrens Books this September), which has been specially commissioned to coincide with this landmark exhibition. Discover how the woeful war made people tell lies, how the enemies in the trenches stopped fighting to play friendly football matches and how the war brought foul food and worse water. Find out how soldiers dealt with fierce flies, lovely lice, gruesome gas, sickness and sores. Explore who wore what where in the war and what their curious clothing felt like. Smell the stenches, disguise yourself in a camouflage tree and peer into no man's land with a periscope in a large-scale trench, specially drawn for the exhibition, by the Horrible Histories.artist Martin Brown. Discover the sport of beetle racing, how women's roles changed beyond recognition and how Daft Dora. introduced new rotten rules . would you have known which ones to obey? See rare objects first hand such as Kaiser Wilhelm II's greatcoat (especially made for him to accommodate his shorter left arm) on public display for the first time. Other highlights from the IWM collections visit IWM North for the first time such as a half-ton German Trench Mortar (with traces of original camouflage paint), the helmet which King George V wore to visit the Western Front, a letter from Siegfried Sassoon (written in Craiglockhart War Hospital while being treated for Shell Shock), a collection of documents relating to the famous Christmas truce, the pen which signed the prolongation armistice, original signs from trenches and even German toilet paper! View unique footage of female munition workers playing football in their leisure time in 1918 and much, much more! Discover how almost every family in Britain, France, Germany and Russia lost someone, search for memorials in your area and find out if your family name is on the Commonwealth War Graves register in Your History on the ground floor.

See, hear, smell and learn about the First World War through ropey rhymes and sad songs, sinister superstitions and frightful facts in a great free day out for all of the family.

Horrible Histories.author Terry Deary says .Horrible Histories are black comedy for young readers so the First World War is an appropriate subject. It was the gallows' humour of the people that helped them survive the horrors. It's a lesson in how humanity copes with the worst the world can throw at us. That's what education should be about -preparing us for life, the horrible as well as the good.

Jim Forrester, Director of Imperial War Museum North says: It certainly was a horrible war and Terry Deary communicates this in a way that every youngster will respond to and many already know well. By putting Terry's words and Martin Brown's wonderful illustrations alongside the Imperial War Museum.s collections and photographs, we will be creating a poignant and memorable experience for young and old alike in this 90th anniversary year. .

Lisa Edwards, publisher of the Horrible Histories.series at Scholastic Childrens Books says .We are delighted that Imperial War Museum North have given us this opportunity to see our First World War title brought to life with artefacts from their incredible collection, bringing the human story of the War to a wider audience..

THE FIRST WORLD WAR ON PERMANENT DISPLAY AT IMPERIAL WAR MUSEUM NORTH

Visit the Main Exhibition Space at Imperial War Museum North to see iconic First World War objects and stories on permanent display. These include the 13-pounder field gun that fired Britain.s very first shell of the First World War, the bell from the British passenger liner Lusitania (torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine while on the way back to Liverpool from New York), and personal effects belonging to Edith Cavell (the red cross nurse shot at dawn in Belgium for assisting allied servicemen to safety). Get hands-on with the Trench Action Station interactive to explore the terrible conditions in the trenches through .feely boxes. and smells to experience what creatures (creepy crawlies included) and terrible stenches would have kept the soldiers company.

Horrible Histories.: Frightful First World War .The Exhibition is sponsored by Vimto.

RELATED EVENTS

Family Fun Day

Throughout the Museum, Saturday 24 May , 11.00-5.00 Join us to get a first look at Horrible Histories and take part in a host of free activities. A special action packed day with lots to see and do. From costumes and craft to music and drama, there's something fun . and free! . for all the family.

What A Performance Special Exhibitions Gallery Saturdays 24 May, 21 June, 5 & 19 July, 2 & 16 & 30 August, Bank Holidays 26 May and 25 August Wednesdays 30 July, 6 August -11.15, 12.15, 2.15, 3.15. Meet a range of characters who will help you and your family explore the stories of the First World War within the Horrible Histories. exhibition. Specially commissioned for Imperial War Museum North, these short and lively performances will delight our drama-loving visitors.

For further press information please contact GEMMA GIBB (0161 836 4041 • ggibb@iwm.org.uk

Talks

Main Exhibition Space/Learning Studio . Themed presentations introducing a specific aspect of life during the First World War: a short gallery walk followed by a film screening and illustrated talk in the Studio with opportunities to handle objects with a member of Museum staff.

Trench  Life Sundays 11 May*, 22 June, 3 Aug* 2.15 Women and War Sundays 25 May, 6 July*, 17 Aug 2.15 Legacy Sundays 8 June*, 20 July, 31 Aug 2.15

* BSL signed at 2.15pm

Film Battle of the Somme Main Exhibition Space, Tuesday 29 July 6.30. A unique opportunity to see this World Heritage status film. This seminal piece of 1916 film is one of the gems of the IWM film archive and will be screened to a live musical accompaniment followed by Q&A with Dr Toby Haggith from the IWM Film Archive. Tickets: £8 Concessions: £5 Ticket price includes parking.

Family Fun Day Throughout the Museum, Monday 25 August, 11.00-5.00. Special action packed days with lots to see and do. From costumes and craft to music and drama, there's something fun . and free!  for all the family.

Performance: A November Day 8, 9, 11 November, 7.00pm . To mark Remembrance and the 90th anniversary of Armistice, puppet characters and live music tell the tale of a First World War veteran in this timeless fable of war and friendship by Thingumajig Theatre. Booking required (available from July), please see www.iwm.org.uk for further details.

 

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