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  • A Tiger's Wedding

  • My Childhood in Exile
  • By: Isla Blair
  • Narrated by: Isla Blair
  • Length: 9 hrs and 13 mins

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A Tiger's Wedding

By: Isla Blair
Narrated by: Isla Blair
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Publisher's Summary

The actress Isla Blair’s extraordinary, moving and uplifting story of her childhood in India and her separation from her parents. Born in Bangalore India, during the fading days of the Raj, Isla grew up on a tea plantation managed by her father. She spent her early years in the lush, verdant hills of Kerala with her much loved older sister Fiona, secure in the love and affection of her parents and her adored “Ayah”.

This warm, spice-scented idyll was abruptly ended when, obliged by tradition and entirely believing they were doing the best for their daughters, her parents sent Isla and her sister “home” to boarding school. She was not quite six years old. But “home” was cold, gloomy, post-war austerity Scotland – a land of liberty bodices, chilblains, icy mornings and dank, drizzly days; an alien land where for several years she nursed an astonishing secret – of which only Fiona was aware. Isla Blair writes lyrically of her beloved India, stoically of term times in Spartan English boarding schools and holidays with grandparents and with great humour and vivacity of the time after school when she became one of the youngest students at RADA, training alongside Anthony Hopkins and others and throwing herself fully into life in London in the swinging ‘60s.

©2011 Isla Blair (P)2011 Creative Content Ltd

Critic Reviews

"This is a wonderful book, reminiscent of Rumer Godden; I couldn’t put it down. Isla Blair paints pictures with words and her scenes spring off the page like a film script. The agonies of a young girl turning into a woman have never been better done." (Joanna Lumley, OBE)
“There are wonderful things in this book. I loved the vivid picture of life on the tea plantations of the Raj, and felt the tears well as I read the account of being dumped back in Britain at the age of six. I was very moved, too, by the relationship that developed between Isla and her sister and astonished by the revelation of her secret.” (Michael Frayn)
"This is a true saga, a life’s journey of such compelling attraction. She very often moved me to tears and then her wit and sense of wicked fun restores the balance. She tells a wonderful story – so wonderfully.” (Sir Derek Jacobi, CBE)
"In the hands of most writers, this story would be either dull or, worse still, angry and sensational. But Isla Blair is not most writers. Far from taking the easy option of describing a miserable childhood or a star-studded career, she has decided to illuminate, as truthfully as she can, what it really felt like to be young at that bittersweet moment when the sun finally set on the British Raj." (Mail on Sunday)
“Actors’ autobiographies need to be more than just a meander through the curriculum vitae. Their work is ephemeral and descriptions of wonderful performances are never very engaging. They need a good story, set away from show-business. Isla Blair, in this regard, is fortunate to have had a miserable childhood. Many will be aware that she is a fine actress but it is not essential to know her work in order to appreciate her bookHer tale has a familiar ring to anyone who knows how British families working for the Empire used to organize themselves. Isla and her sister Fiona were raised in Kerala where their father was a tea planter. When Isla was four and Fiona eight they were sent to a boarding school in Scotland; they did not see their parents for another five years. The effect of this banishment has lived with Isla ever since: you get the feeling that only by writing this book has she finally come to terms with what happened. Yet, rather than a misery memoir, this is a mature dissection of colonial family life, laced with fascinating insights into a typical childhood of the time. The turbulence of life as a student actor and her early work are well drawn but this book remains primarily a family memoir – an account of her love for her parents, despite that deep sense of emotional abandonment in early life, and her compensatory adoration of her son and grandchildren.”(Robert Bathurst, The Tablet)

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