This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/magazine/8212248.stm
The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Riding the Greyhound | Riding the Greyhound |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Greyhound buses will hit UK motorways next month - starting with a two-hour service from London to Portsmouth and Southampton. But can an American transport icon find success across the Atlantic? | Greyhound buses will hit UK motorways next month - starting with a two-hour service from London to Portsmouth and Southampton. But can an American transport icon find success across the Atlantic? |
"'Kathy,' I said as we boarded a Greyhound in PittsburghMichigan seems like a dream to me nowIt took me four days to hitchhike from SaginawI've gone to look for America." | "'Kathy,' I said as we boarded a Greyhound in PittsburghMichigan seems like a dream to me nowIt took me four days to hitchhike from SaginawI've gone to look for America." |
Route to a new life far from here? | Route to a new life far from here? |
Simon and Garfunkel's song America is, for many, the first reference point for Greyhound buses. And British people who have never been to the US probably haven't seen the big metal bus on the road - just on screen. | Simon and Garfunkel's song America is, for many, the first reference point for Greyhound buses. And British people who have never been to the US probably haven't seen the big metal bus on the road - just on screen. |
In the 1930s, Greyhound made its first stop in Hollywood as the main setting for a romance between Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert in the film It Happened One Night. | In the 1930s, Greyhound made its first stop in Hollywood as the main setting for a romance between Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert in the film It Happened One Night. |
Since then, the bus has featured in more films, including Breakfast at Tiffany's in 1961 and Midnight Cowboy in 1969. Singers from John Mellencamp to Garth Brooks and Guy Lombardo have recorded songs mentioning the bus, cementing the Greyhound as a cultural symbol representing great journeys of (self) discovery. | Since then, the bus has featured in more films, including Breakfast at Tiffany's in 1961 and Midnight Cowboy in 1969. Singers from John Mellencamp to Garth Brooks and Guy Lombardo have recorded songs mentioning the bus, cementing the Greyhound as a cultural symbol representing great journeys of (self) discovery. |
En route from Chicago to Mississippi | En route from Chicago to Mississippi |
"It's a great cinematic shorthand for adventure," says film critic Jason Solomons, chairman of the Film Critic Circle. "You always see people on these very epic, poetic journeys. Nobodies step off the Greyhound bus in Los Angeles, having travelled from God knows where in the US, to become a star." | "It's a great cinematic shorthand for adventure," says film critic Jason Solomons, chairman of the Film Critic Circle. "You always see people on these very epic, poetic journeys. Nobodies step off the Greyhound bus in Los Angeles, having travelled from God knows where in the US, to become a star." |
But to many Americans, the bus is more than just a symbol. It's a way of connecting to small towns all over the country. | But to many Americans, the bus is more than just a symbol. It's a way of connecting to small towns all over the country. |
"The romance of the Greyhound bus is the romance of the open road. And that's an American romance," says Irma Kurtz, author of The Great American Bus Ride, which chronicles her five-month journey to 47 states on a Greyhound. "It's miles and miles through wonderful territory." | "The romance of the Greyhound bus is the romance of the open road. And that's an American romance," says Irma Kurtz, author of The Great American Bus Ride, which chronicles her five-month journey to 47 states on a Greyhound. "It's miles and miles through wonderful territory." |
Wheels on the bus | Wheels on the bus |
Greyhound's beginnings read like an American Dream story. | Greyhound's beginnings read like an American Dream story. |
During a rest stop | During a rest stop |
The company was founded in 1914 by two immigrant miners to carry people to a town two miles away, says Gene Nicolelli, director and founder of the Greyhound Bus Museum in Hibbing, Minnesota, where the business began. | The company was founded in 1914 by two immigrant miners to carry people to a town two miles away, says Gene Nicolelli, director and founder of the Greyhound Bus Museum in Hibbing, Minnesota, where the business began. |
Those first miles kept on multiplying as Greyhound opened up travel to people from small towns without transport hubs, says Mr Nicolelli. "They used to stop at every rinky-dinky town. They'd even stop at the side of the road." | Those first miles kept on multiplying as Greyhound opened up travel to people from small towns without transport hubs, says Mr Nicolelli. "They used to stop at every rinky-dinky town. They'd even stop at the side of the road." |
Today, the bus may have a firm footing in the US - transporting about 22 million passengers each year, but the question is - can the American Greyhound make it abroad? | Today, the bus may have a firm footing in the US - transporting about 22 million passengers each year, but the question is - can the American Greyhound make it abroad? |
Alex Warner, managing director of Greyhound UK, says yes. "It's like when McDonald's was brought over to Moscow," he says. "There is a level of loyalty to iconic brands." | Alex Warner, managing director of Greyhound UK, says yes. "It's like when McDonald's was brought over to Moscow," he says. "There is a level of loyalty to iconic brands." |
The UK take on the bus | The UK take on the bus |
But can a cultural icon translate to a British reality? Take the epic bus trip from Simon and Garfunkel's song America. Can it work for UK cities? | But can a cultural icon translate to a British reality? Take the epic bus trip from Simon and Garfunkel's song America. Can it work for UK cities? |
For Pittsburgh, a fairly large industrial town, let's substitute Sheffield. For the arguably out of the way Saginaw? Let's try Accrington, Lancashire. The hitchhiking journey in the song took four days. At 60 miles, you'd be lucky to stretch out this British version to a few hours. | For Pittsburgh, a fairly large industrial town, let's substitute Sheffield. For the arguably out of the way Saginaw? Let's try Accrington, Lancashire. The hitchhiking journey in the song took four days. At 60 miles, you'd be lucky to stretch out this British version to a few hours. |
Instead, the distance is a bit more like the journey between London and Edinburgh - although an hour spent in London traffic may not be quite the same as watching the moon over an open field on the way to New Jersey. | Instead, the distance is a bit more like the journey between London and Edinburgh - although an hour spent in London traffic may not be quite the same as watching the moon over an open field on the way to New Jersey. |
Romance of the road | Romance of the road |
"It's a fantastic notion if you've got big open spaces," says Keith Lovegrove, a writer and designer who has published several books about the relationship between transportation, identity and culture. | "It's a fantastic notion if you've got big open spaces," says Keith Lovegrove, a writer and designer who has published several books about the relationship between transportation, identity and culture. |
IRMA KURTZ's TIPS Bad boys sit at the back - head for the rear if you want to meet oneAn unsavoury character boards. There's an empty seat next to you. Start coughing - loudlyPack lightly - the best adventures are had when you get off the bus unexpectedly | IRMA KURTZ's TIPS Bad boys sit at the back - head for the rear if you want to meet oneAn unsavoury character boards. There's an empty seat next to you. Start coughing - loudlyPack lightly - the best adventures are had when you get off the bus unexpectedly |
"I'm a bit sceptical about it working in this country when you've only got to go from Reading to central London." | "I'm a bit sceptical about it working in this country when you've only got to go from Reading to central London." |
Ms Kurtz agrees. "Greyhound has the mystique of the open road behind it - that endless American highway." | Ms Kurtz agrees. "Greyhound has the mystique of the open road behind it - that endless American highway." |
And these long journeys are the root of the Greyhound experience - visiting little known places and meeting new people. | And these long journeys are the root of the Greyhound experience - visiting little known places and meeting new people. |
"It was like going back in time to the Conestoga wagon days. You'd get off and there would be one lunch counter in town," Ms Kurtz says of her own journey. "You meet the other America." | "It was like going back in time to the Conestoga wagon days. You'd get off and there would be one lunch counter in town," Ms Kurtz says of her own journey. "You meet the other America." |
But that may not translate to the shorter journeys in the UK. | But that may not translate to the shorter journeys in the UK. |
"In America, a distance is so long that some of those people on that bus are in flight. They're getting away from something. Here [in the UK] that won't be true," she says. "This is an island, the romance here is the ocean. And the romance of the Greyhound stays in America." | "In America, a distance is so long that some of those people on that bus are in flight. They're getting away from something. Here [in the UK] that won't be true," she says. "This is an island, the romance here is the ocean. And the romance of the Greyhound stays in America." |
Grabbing some rest | Grabbing some rest |
Instead of the vehicle driving the great American adventure, Ms Kurtz says the British incarnation will be about the practicality of travelling from point A to point B. The new Greyhounds are based on the US BoltBus brand, and will offer wi-fi, power sockets, extra leg room and fast journey times, says Mr Warner. | Instead of the vehicle driving the great American adventure, Ms Kurtz says the British incarnation will be about the practicality of travelling from point A to point B. The new Greyhounds are based on the US BoltBus brand, and will offer wi-fi, power sockets, extra leg room and fast journey times, says Mr Warner. |
And even if the experience is different, some are hopeful that this may just be enough to put the British road film on the road map. | And even if the experience is different, some are hopeful that this may just be enough to put the British road film on the road map. |
Mr Solomons says maybe the Greyhound will give UK motorways a makeover, of sorts, by making them seem more glamorous. | Mr Solomons says maybe the Greyhound will give UK motorways a makeover, of sorts, by making them seem more glamorous. |
"We can always dream when we're stuck in traffic." | "We can always dream when we're stuck in traffic." |
Add your comments on this story, using the form below. | Add your comments on this story, using the form below. |
This will be different from a National Express coach journey how?KG, Coventry | |
As children growing up in Canada, my brother and I were ferried every second weekend between our divorced parents on a Greyhound bus. It was almost like a right of passage, and I've got many fond memories of our journeys. I am so pleased to hear that Greyhound will be making its way to the motorways of the UK, as my most recent journey with a similar carrier from London to Manchester was a sweaty and slow exercise in futility. I just hope that Greyhound are able to maintain the standards here that so many people enjoy back home.Kristy, London | |
We had Greyhound coaches or buses over here in England in the 60s and 70s - so there is nothing "new" about having them here now. I used to reside in Theale, near Reading in Berkshire, and the Greyhound bus used to go through the village from Reading to the West Country.Paul West, Maidstone, UK | |
I once took the Greyhound from Orlando to Atlanta in 1995. Well, the collection of social misfits, sociopaths and oddballs was a little unsettling, but for me the experience remains one of the most interesting I've had in the US. You get to see a side of American life that is not well documented. That is, those people who can't drive or aren't allowed to. At one point I was convinced the man next to me (complete with lace gloves and leather jacket) was going to murder me so I just couldn't fall asleep. Ah, the romance...Brendan Collison, Sheffield | |
Few years back I took the Greyhound service from Bellingham to Seattle. I hoped it would be a slow journey on an old coach, so that I could get that film-like feeling, but it turned out to be a modern coach, and the service was fast and efficient.Marc Belman, London, UK | |
It's less the mode of transport than the land travelled. I went from Dallas to Flagstaff years ago, met some interesting people and saw some fabulous sights. Britain is indeed a beautiful country but travelling its roads on a Greyhound bus probably won't make it more so.Andy Hulme | |
I still have amazing memories of a month spent criss-crossing the US on a Greyhound, using the buses as mobile motels between exploring the cities. Getting dropped off at the side of the road outside Alpine, Texas, or sharing a quick beer with fellow passengers on one of the leg-stretching stops. Wondering when the mad man next to you would stop talking. At 6' 6" the 50+ hour journey back from San Francisco to Wisconsin might not have been the most comfortable, but as experiences go, it certainly beat flying. Nathan Fulwood, Edinburgh, UK | |
My experience of Greyhound buses turned out to be a nightmare rather than a romantic dream as I was in a horrific crash in one from Pittsburgh to Harrisburg in 1951. Black ice and a driver who had been drinking at the rest stop caused it. It would be much better if the hype was about safety and environmental factors rather than romance.Marion Monahan, Bristol | |
This presents a certain mystic to these buses, when in reality they are the main transport for former criminals leaving prisons. The stench of an overnighter is the most unpleasant smell ever created. Take the plane!James, London | |
The BBC may edit your comments and not all emails will be published. Your comments may be published on any BBC media worldwide. Terms & Conditions | The BBC may edit your comments and not all emails will be published. Your comments may be published on any BBC media worldwide. Terms & Conditions |