Listen "Jamila Gavin"
Episode Synopsis
Jamila Gavin was born in the foothills of the Himalayas; her Indian father and English mother met as teachers in Iran and married in Mumbai. By the age of 12, she’d lived in an Indian palace in the Punjab, a bungalow in Poona - and a terraced house in Ealing, west London. Ealing was where the family settled in 1953; Jamila went on to study at London’s Trinity College of Music, and to become a sound engineer and then a director in television. She didn’t start to write until her late thirties, beginning a career distinguished by many awards for her novels, plays and short stories – around 50 books in all. It’s a rich world of myths and fairy-tales, orphans and adventures, ranging from 15th-century Venice to the mountains of India. She’s best known for Coram Boy, her prize-winning novel, later staged at the National Theatre, about the Foundling Hospital – to which Handel gave the royalties from his Messiah.In conversation with Michael Berkeley, Jamila Gavin reveals the shocking story, which inspired her to write her first book for children. Her books deal with serious themes: particularly slavery, both historic slavery and people-trafficking now. Reading them, you can forget that these are children’s books; but, she says, any experiences which children suffer should also be experiences they can read about. Jamila Gavin’s playlist includes Handel’s Messiah, Tippett’s A Child of Our Time, Schubert, Brahms, Stockhausen - and her favourite Night Raga. A Loftus Media production for BBC Radio 3
Produced by Elizabeth Burke
Produced by Elizabeth Burke
More episodes of the podcast Private Passions
Peter Purves
18/01/2026
Vanessa Williams
11/01/2026
Alison Weir
04/01/2026
Pam Ayres
21/12/2025
Louise Penny
23/11/2025
Lea Ypi
16/11/2025
Hugh Bonneville
09/11/2025
Annabel Croft
02/11/2025
The Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer
26/10/2025
Hollie McNish
19/10/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.