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Post by Lord Emsworth on Oct 10, 2020 17:54:49 GMT
Essential viewing This is on Monday 12 October at 9 pm on BBC4 Drama out of a Crisis: A Celebration of Play for TodayPlay for Today was a series of single dramas broadcast by the BBC between 1970 and 1984. These were years of crisis, a time when the consensus politics of Britain’s postwar world had begun to unravel. Industrial relations, education and the health service faced fundamental challenges, the country was struggling with the end of empire, and the personal had become increasingly political.
Play for Today reflected and responded to all of this and more in 300 dramas, shown in primetime on BBC One to audiences numbered in millions. Many of the best actors, writers and directors of the time contributed to the series, with some of the best-remembered broadcasts being Mike Leigh’s Abigail’s Party, Dennis Potter’s Blue Remembered Hills and the strange fantasy, Penda’s Fen, written by Alan Rudkin and directed by Alan Clarke.
The series was contemporary, often controversial and occasionally censored. But it was also immensely varied, showcasing social realism with comedy, costume drama with fantasy, and personal visions with state-of-the-nation overviews. It was mischievous, critical and challenging, and unafraid to tackle taboos.
Marking the 50th anniversary of the first Play for Today in October 1970, this film is a celebration of the series, told by a number of its producers, directors and writers. It explores the origins of the series, its achievements and its controversies. Presenting a rich range of often surprising extracts from the archive, the film features interviews with, among others, producers Kenith Trodd, Margaret Matheson and Richard Eyre, film-makers Mike Leigh and Ken Loach, and writer and director David Hare.www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000ng9w
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Post by stu77 on Oct 10, 2020 20:18:47 GMT
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Post by Lord Emsworth on Oct 11, 2020 7:32:54 GMT
Thanks Stu This subject is like catnip
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Post by stu77 on Oct 20, 2020 14:11:45 GMT
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Post by Lord Emsworth on Oct 20, 2020 14:34:53 GMT
Thanks Stu
When I saw the documenatary I thought that...
A Hole in Babylon
.... looked well worth a watch
Great news that it's being repeated
10 pm tonight folks on BBC4
Play by Jim Hawkins and Horace Ove based on the events surrounding the ‘Spaghetti House’ siege, an armed robbery that went disastrously wrong.
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Post by stu77 on Oct 20, 2020 15:16:49 GMT
One I remember was Our Day Out, about Liverpool schoolkids on a day out.
Just watching the documentary now.
I have a few episodes on DVD somewhere can't remember which.
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Post by personunknown on Oct 20, 2020 18:00:58 GMT
Our Day Out was magnificent. Everyone knew a teacher like the one brilliantly portrayed by Alun Armstrong.
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Post by Lord Emsworth on Oct 20, 2020 18:28:15 GMT
That was indeed magnificent.
Also coming up is Just A Boy’s Game, the Peter McDougall play starring Frankie Miller
Frankie had a t-shirt that asked on the front "Frankie who?" whilst the the back stated "Frankie fucking Miller, that’s who"
It's here if you can't wait for BBC4...
Peter McDougall was also responsible for Just Another Saturday, Elephants’ Graveyard, and Down Among The Big Boys (all featuring Billy Connolly) as well as Boy’s Game
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Post by Deleted on Oct 20, 2020 19:27:17 GMT
Aye 'Just a Boys Game'was the best. As was 'Just Another Saturday'. Grew up with all those plays.
Frankie is the man👍
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Post by Lord Emsworth on Oct 27, 2020 8:12:29 GMT
Ahead of tonight's screening of Just a Boy's Game and from today's Glasgow Herald....
"THE Diary is looking forward to this evening’s BBC4 broadcast of the classic Peter Mcdougall drama, Just a Boys’ Game, a play so gritty it should be sprinkled on icy roads this winter.
Peter is a rather rugged fellow himself. We recall the time the Glasgow writer enjoyed a lengthy drinking session with old chum Billy Connolly, which culminated with Billy inside a phone box unable to figure out where the door was.
The confused comedian eventually phoned his agent to come and release him. Two conclusions can be deduced from this.
1) Boozing with Peter Mcdougall is a discombobulating experience.
2) Showbiz agents really do earn their 15 per cent cut."
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Post by Deleted on Nov 23, 2020 21:42:43 GMT
Just watched this documentary this afternoon.
Even though the plays came across as quite dated,they did set a precedence for the likes of Paul Abbot and Jimmy McGovern etc
Even more surprising is the fact that a lot of them were even aired given the right wing ideology of the stuff shirts who ran the BBC.
All credit to the producers for facing them down even though they were obviously fingering them to MI5 to be blacklisted.
In some ways'Play for Today' became sanitised as Channel 4 began to take over its mantle.
Still evocative of the era.
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