Martin Jarvis is a British acting institution — a voice so crisp and classically trained that he sounds equally at home reciting Chaucer and delivering Pratchett's absurdist chaos. His work on the Terry Pratchett BBC Radio Drama Collection showcases his range: he can conjure the gentle warmth of the Discworld universe while keeping the comedy sharp and precise. His narration of The Canterbury Tales brings genuine scholarly authority to Middle English storytelling without ever feeling stuffy. Jarvis has a cultured, slightly theatrical baritone that commands attention without overwhelming the material — he lets the writing breathe while adding just enough character distinction to keep you oriented. If you love classic British literature or comedy with wit and craft behind it, Jarvis is exactly the narrator you want. He's the kind of voice that makes you feel like you're in very good hands.
by Terry Pratchett, Martin Jarvis, Sheila Hancock, Anton Lesser, Alex Jennings, Philip Jackson, Mark Heap
Narrated by Alex Jennings, Anton Lesser, Full Cast, Mark Heap, Martin Jarvis, Philip Jackson, Sheila Hancock
by Oscar Wilde, Neil Bartlett, Ian MacDiarmid, Joely Richardson, Edward Fox, Diana Rigg, Martin Clunes, Michael Hordern, Judi Dench, Corin Redgrave, Sheila Hancock, Simon Callow, Simon Russell Beale, Ian McKellen, Neil Tennant, Stephen Fry
Narrated by Miriam Margolyes, Judi Dench, Diana Rigg, Michael Sheen, full cast, Martin Jarvis, Martin Clunes, Ian McKellen, Stephen Fry, Simon Russell Beale
by Robert Rankin
Narrated by David Warner, Rupert Degas, Andy Serkis, Martin Jarvis, Jason Isaacs, Sarah Douglas, Mark Wing-Davey
by Michael Frayn
Narrated by Rosalind Ayres, Allan Corduner, David Ellenstein, Julian Holloway, Peter A. Jacobs, Martin Jarvis, Michael York
by Geoffrey Chaucer, J.U. Nicolson
Narrated by Martin Jarvis, Jay Carnes, Ray Porter, John Lee, Malcolm Hillgartner, Ralph Cosham, Simon Vance
A rotating cast of seven narrators brings Chaucer's medieval voices alive with distinct personalities and accents, making the fourteenth-century banter feel less dusty textbook and more like eavesdropping on real people.