Moss Side Gym Stories
Seriously...
BBC
4.1 • 885 Ratings
🗓️ 10 June 2016
⏱️ 56 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Moss Side Gym Stories - Part 1: Moss Side is a small neighbourhood just outside of Manchester's city centre. In the 19th century Elizabeth Gaskell, inspired by the area, made her literary debut with the novel Mary Barton. She described Moss Side as a place of rural charm where Victorian workers and their families came to talk, play and relax. By the later part of the 20th century, the green fields that Gaskell knew had been replaced by housing estates, and Moss Side's reputation for riots, gangs and guns had spread nationwide. Growing up in Moss Side, Manchester's award winning poet Mike Garry, saw another side. Among its terraced rows Mike discovered a place where he could hear an echo of the qualities that caused Gaskell to put pen to paper - the Moss Side Leisure Centre. In the first of a two part programme Mike returns to the leisure centre to perform his epic poem, Men's Morning, an ode to the Friday morning male patrons of the centre. He spends time with the men who use the gym today to discover what, if anything has changed since he wrote the poem 20 years ago.
In the next programme Jackie Kay, acclaimed poet and Scotland's new Makar, writes her own poem inspired by time spent at the leisure centre, this time focusing on the women who use it.
Part 2: Jackie Kay, acclaimed writer and Scotland's new Makar, writes a poem, commissioned by the BBC and inspired by the women who use Manchester's Moss Side Leisure Centre.
Close to the Centre are streets named in honour of one of the city's most famous residents, Elizabeth Gaskell, who moved to Manchester in the 1830s and knew these streets, as fields. In her debut novel, Mary Barton, Gaskell described this area as a place of serene rural beauty, where Manchester's families would come to walk, talk, rest and rejuvenate.
By the later part of the 20th century, the green fields had been replaced by housing estates. Moss Side's reputation for riots, gangs and guns spread nationwide but its ability to inspire writers remained intact, and a peaceful oasis - otherwise known as the Moss Side Leisure Centre - could still be found. In the first of these two programmes, the poet Mike Garry returned to the Moss Side Leisure Centre to perform his epic poem, Men's Morning, inspired by the Centre and the men who used it.
In this programme, Jackie Kay premieres her 21st century response - Moss Side Mirrors - an ode to the women who, like their 19th century antecedents immortalised by Elizabeth Gaskell, have found in this neighbourhood a place to escape from the pressures of daily life - to breathe deeply, unwind, and renew themselves.
Produced in Salford by Claire Press and Ekene Akalawu.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to Seriously I'm Femme Martin on this edition of Seriously we have a two-part program, but thanks to the magic of |
| 0:15.8 | podcasting, we have audio glued those two parts together to provide you with one |
| 0:20.8 | seamless slice of storytelling. We head to Manchester Mosside to join |
| 0:25.8 | poets Mike Gary and Jackie Kaye as they present a very different view of the |
| 0:30.3 | notorious neighborhood, one that will certainly make you question those preconceptions of yester year. |
| 0:36.2 | At the start, we join Mike as he uses his poem Men's Morning to look at today's life in Mosside's gym, which leads to Jackie Kay's |
| 0:44.4 | specially commissioned rebuttal. This is Mosside Gym stories. |
| 0:49.0 | Wet Friday mornings in Northern England is a very special time. |
| 0:54.7 | Men assemble on winds swept corners, most of them sublime. |
| 0:59.0 | The odd cars are those of local people running errands here and there. The commuters have now parked their cars |
| 1:06.2 | clocked on, sat in their chairs. |
| 1:11.2 | Old Jamaican Charles appears from an old black side street. A towel is tucked inside his |
| 1:17.1 | coat, subtle and discreet. |
| 1:19.2 | I'm Mike Gary and I'm in Mossside. A tiny Manchester neighbourhood and an area |
| 1:27.4 | described by writer Elizabeth Gascal in her mid-nighth century novel Mary Barton as a place of rural charm where Victorian workers |
| 1:36.5 | and their families came to talk, relax and play. By the late 20th century the green fields that Gascal knew had been replaced by housing estates |
| 1:47.0 | and Mossside's reputation for riots, gangs and guns had spread worldwide. But growing up here, Mosside was my heaven, |
| 1:57.3 | with my playground and my university and it would later become a backdrop for my art. |
| 2:03.0 | My Moss side was very different to Gascals, |
| 2:06.0 | but there's still a place here where locals gather to rest |
| 2:11.0 | and renew. |
| 2:14.1 | And that place is Mossside Leisure Centre. In 1996 I wanted like Elizabeth Gascal to capture some of the lives of the people around me. |
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