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Nico on the rights to Barrie's plays, and Cynthia Asquith.

Elisabeth Bergner talks enigmatically about the cause of Barrie's death.

Gerrie calling Barrie "Uncle Jim" while Jack referred to him as "The Bart"

Nico recalling how Barrie could determine the severity of an on-coming cold by how far his false tooth flew across the room when he coughed!

Nico looking at photos of Eilean Shona

Gerrie talking about Michael, Jack and Nico

Gerrie talks about Arthur Llewelyn Davies’ death and his dependence on JMB

Nico rhapsodising about "Rosy Rapture" and sitting on Gaby Deslys' knee.

Nico's wife Mary talking about Michael.

Nico talking about emphesyma and smoking

Lord Boothby talking about holidays with Michael in Scotland

Jean Forbes-Robertson as Peter and Gordon Harker as Hook in the 1940 recording of "Peter Pan" - Act 4: The Pirate Ship

Barrie making a speech at Kirriemuir in June 1930, and recounting how as a child he had split the lip of his best friend, James Robb. "We were digging up a gooseberry bush in his mother’s garden, and I missed it, but I got him. We then bolted in opposite

Barrie making a speech at the unveiling of Thomas Hardy's statue in Dorchester, 2 September 1931: "Well ladies and gentlemen, you mustn’t make any noise, or the weather will find out that something untoward has happened. When the child Hardy was born, the

Peter Pan was revived annually from 1905 until World War 2, when the blitz was deemed too dangerous a risk for young audiences (most of whom had been evacuated). In order to fill the gap, Jean Forbes-Robertson consented to record her 1929 performance.

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