Everything about Play For Today totally explained
Play for Today was a
British television anthology drama series, produced by the
BBC and transmitted on
BBC1 from
1970 to
1984. Over three hundred original plays, most between an hour and ninety minutes in length, were transmitted during the fourteen-year period the series aired, and it's by far the most famous programme of its type to have been screened on British television.
History
It was in fact a successor to the
1960s anthology series
The Wednesday Play, with the title being changed after the transmission day moved and became variable. Occasionally
Wednesday Plays would be repeated under the
Play for Today banner, as would examples from another earlier anthology series,
BBC Two's
Theatre 625. There were also some groups of plays transmitted that — for various reasons — didn't go out under the
Play for Today banner, but which were funded from the same department, used much the same production team and are generally regarded in episode guides and analysis as being part of the
Play for Today 'canon'.
Plays could cover all genres, although comedy was usually reserved for the separate
Comedy Playhouse strand. In its time,
Play for Today featured gritty contemporary
social realist dramas, historical pieces, fantasies, biopics and science-fiction. Most pieces were written directly for television, but there were also occasional adaptations of stories from other media, such as novels and stage plays.
Writers who contributed plays to the series included
John Osborne,
Dennis Potter,
Stephen Poliakoff,
David Hare,
Willy Russell,
Alan Bleasdale,
Arthur Hopcraft,
Alan Plater,
Graham Reid,
David Storey, and
John Hopkins. Several prominent directors also featured, including
Stephen Frears,
Alan Clarke,
Michael Apted,
Mike Newell,
Roland Joffe,
Ken Loach,
Lindsay Anderson, and
Mike Leigh. Some of the most famous plays broadcast in the strand include
Edna, the Inebriate Woman (1971),
Home (1972),
Schmoedipus (1974),
Nuts in May (1976),
Bar Mitzvah Boy (1976),
Our Day Out (1976),
Abigail's Party (1977),
Blue Remembered Hills (1979), and
The Flipside of Dominick Hide (1980).
Some installments in the series spun-off into full-blown series. Probably the two best-remembered examples of this are
Rumpole of the Bailey, which was produced as a one-off in the
Play for Today strand in 1975 and three years later became a series for
Thames Television with the same star,
Leo McKern, and
Boys from the Blackstuff, a hard-hitting 1982
BBC2 drama serial by
Alan Bleasdale which spun-off from his play
The Black Stuff, made in 1978 although not screened until 1980, and only then as a one-off play and not part of
PfT. Other spin-offs include
Gangsters, and a single series of science fiction-based plays styled as
Play for Tomorrow.
The series inspired the song "Play for Today" by the band
The Cure, from their 1980 album
Seventeen Seconds.
Controversy
Two plays were controversially pulled from transmission shortly before broadcast due to concerns over their content: these were Dennis Potter's
Brimstone and Treacle in 1976 and Roy Minton's
Scum the following year. In the case of
Brimstone and Treacle it was due to concerns over the play's depiction of a disabled woman's rape at the hands of a man who may or may not be the
devil, and with
Scum the worry was its supposed sensationalism of life in a young offenders' institution (then still known as a
borstal).
Brimstone and Treacle remained untransmitted until it was shown on
BBC One in 1987, and
Scum until
BBC Two transmitted it in
1991. In the meantime, however, both had circumvented their withdrawal by being re-made as
films:
Brimstone and Treacle was filmed in 1982 with
Sting in the lead role, while the cinematic version of
Scum appeared in 1979 with most of the same cast and directed by the man responsible for
Play for Today version,
Alan Clarke. The film version of
Scum was shown on
Channel 4 in 1983, much to the chagrin of campaigner
Mary Whitehouse, who instigated a private prosecution despite the fact that the
Independent Broadcasting Authority had specifically approved the broadcast of the film. The
High Court found in her favour, but Channel 4 won on appeal.
Demise
The programme officially ended in 1984, although there was one further series not broadcast under the
Play for Today title in 1985. The general trend in 1980s television production was away from one-off plays and towards a concentration on series and serials. When one-offs were produced, they tended to be more cinematic and less theatrical than
Play for Today and the earlier series had been, and its style of dialogue and character-driven one-offs increasingly fell out of favour.
Nonetheless, the series is generally remembered as a benchmark of high-quality British television drama, and has become a byword for what many continue to argue was a golden age of British television. In 2000, the
British Film Institute produced a poll of industry professionals to determine the
100 Greatest British Television Programmes of the
20th century, and five of the programmes included in the final tally were from
Play for Today. Some of the better-known plays in the series, such as "
Abigail's Party", "
The Black Stuff", "
The Flipside of Dominick Hide" and several of the Potter plays, have been made available on
VHS and
DVD.
A revival of the single play for
BBC One, publicised as a return of
Play for Today, but under the working title of
The Evening Play, was announced at the beginning of March 2006, but nothing has been heard from it since.
Kevin Spacey, film star and director of the
Old Vic, in March 2008 told
BBC News that he'd like to see the return of the show,
but the
Conservative MP Michael Gove and journalist
Mark Lawson expressed disagreement, Gove condemning them as "dreadfully earnest exercises in socialist-realist art". Jan Moir in
The Daily Telegraph wrote in support of Spacey though, saying "the British loved
Play for Today once, and would do so again. A good piece of drama looks at the human condition, and tells us something we should know about ourselves."
Further Information
Get more info on 'Play For Today'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://play_for_today.totallyexplained.com">Play for Today Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |