Play For Today

Operation, The

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1973 on BBC1

George Lazenby stars as a suave, rich, moustachioed, soulless asset stripper in series producer Roger Smith’s perfect parody of the garishness of the Seventies, amazingly detached and dripping with irony considering it was made slap bang in the middle of the veryperiod it deftly satirises. Big business, corruption, bribery, blow-jobs and surburban swingers parties abound, all in lurid exploitation-style colour, complete with Dallas-style titles and glamorous camera angles to show off the shag pile and chrome decor, and simultaneously point up the shabbiness of the asset stripper’s world.

Screen-grabbery:
The name's Lazenby Swinging pad action All hail the Beeb's first on-screen blow job!
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Access to the Children

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1973 on BBC1

Joss Ackland plays a reluctant divorcee, pondering chances of reuniting with his wife while taking his kids on a day trip to the zoo in another William Trevor character study. Ackland later mused that his roles in the Play for Today strand always saw him as a man on the point of collapse – whether in drag (The Lie), talking to worms (The Bankrupt) or communing with other wildlife, as here. Sadly he stopped short of offering any possible reasons for this emotional typecasting.

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Hard Labour

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1973 on BBC1

After the no-budget success of his cinematic debut Bleak Moments, Mike Leigh made an incursion onto television under the wing of series producer Tony Garnett. Shot on location in the Higher Broughton borough of Salford, a working class district that was home to Leigh in his formative years, the story centres on the lot of stoical middle-aged Catholic house-cleaner Mrs Thornley (Liz Smith), who leads a life bereft of cheer. Her day fluctuates between resignedly cleaning the windows and polishing the silverware of the upwardly mobile households in the district, notably the supercilious Stones (Vanessa Harris and Cyril ‘Sling Your Hook’ Varley), and dreading the arrival home of husband Jim (market trader and amateur actor Clifford ‘Kiss of Death‘ Kershaw), who works as a night watchman in a warehouse full of rubber ducks and similar ephemera, constantly upbraided and put down by his (far younger) superior colleague, and subsequently takes his frustrations out on his wife, with violent demands of dinner and drunken, brutal Saturday night sexual lunges.

On the new nearby council estate, Mrs Thornley’s son Edward (Bernard Hill) and his prissy, nagging wife Veronica (Alison Steadman making her TV debut) mark time in the ‘new’ Broughton, a world of near-identical municipal housing (‘Every house is just that little bit different’, avers Veronica) and empty suburban routine. As with much of Leigh’s work, a synopsis of the plot makes the play seem rather aimless and uninspiring – save for two major events. Mrs Thornley’s daughter Ann is, after much soul-searching on both her and her mother’s part, persuaded to undergo an abortion with the help of charming local cabbie-cum-grocer Naseem (Ben Kingsley), and a subsequent, guilt-ridden trip to the confessional box brings from Mrs T the admission she doesn’t love people enough, followed by the cathartic confession that she no longer loves her husband at all – upon hearing which, the attending priest blithely gives her five Hail Marys, an Our Father and a Glory Be before returning to his newspaper.

The lack of conventional plot, while arguably contributing to the shapeless, ‘vignette montage’ feel of the film, is entirely appropriate – neither circumstances nor personalities of the characters depicted here are going anywhere. The cast of characters is the chief pleasure here – Ben Kingsley’s terrific turn, Louis ‘Comedians’ Raynes’ larger than life rag and bone man, Steadman’s embryonic suburban harpy, and most of all Liz Smith’s amazing central performance, which does the most to hold the film together. Subsequent entries by Leigh would prove more popular, and more successfully integrate his actor-centric writing-rehearsal methods with a satisfactory story structure, but already in this early outing a unique voice is making itself heard.

Screen-grabbery:
Liz makes up Quiet tonight... Sauce bottle on table, fag on the go - that's it!
New from Waddingtons! Very Dickensian Down the high street
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Man Above Men

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1973 on BBC1

Lawyers, defendants and even his own daughter all have it in for a maverick judge, Alexander Knox. David Hare’s first play for television, now, as he’ll be the first to tell you, long since wiped.

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Speech Day

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1973 on BBC1

Barry Hines revisits the Yorkshire secondary school territory of Kes with this meandering look at the class politics dragged up by a prizegiving speech day. Ronnie Warboys (David ‘Flaxton Boys‘ Smith) and fellow school-leavers from underachieving form 5G1 find themselves roped into various menial tasks in preparation for the ‘prestigious’ afternoon – mowing the lawn, shifting chairs, etc. This they carry out with heroically sarky reluctance. As the event draws near, battle lines are drawn up between the haves and have-nots – senior staff are separated from juniors (including a debuting Paul Copley as woodwork teacher), prizewinning pupils are slagged off in absentia on the bus by Ronnie and pals, and most telling of all, the mayor, a former steel factory compadre of janitor George (Bill ‘Harry Cross’ Dean) blanks him completely.

The action cuts to flashbacks of Ronnie’s hard home life – everyone else in the family works: his dad (Brian Glover) at the steelworks, brother Danny at the factory which looks like Ronnie’s likely destiny, and mum sewing seams. Ronnie pops round to his Grandad’s, to be regaled by some unreconstructed Old Socialism, while George tells him how the mayor sold out from his Labour roots for a spot of social climbing. The progressively liberal stance of the school (the head reads out Martin Luther King speeches, and there are “modern folk songs” instead of hymns) is shown up as the same old divisive guff, leaving kids like Ronnie, unqualified but, clearly from their winningly sharp dialogue, far from gormless, on the industrial scrap-heap.

Screen-grabbery:
Glover for breakfast Write that down It was stools before 1976, trowels after, right?
Dear Lord and father of mankind... A PiF waiting to happen Regulation mucking about
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Steps Back

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1973 on BBC1

By David Halliwell. David Hill returns home to Brighouse with his new fiancee after being driven away 15 years earlier.

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Three’s One

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1973 on BBC1

By Penelope Mortimer. Couple Hywel Bennett and Caroline Mortimer are rocked by the arrival of an old flame of Mortimer’s. With Fulton MacKay.

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Edward G: Like the Filmstar

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1973 on BBC1

By John Harvey Flint. Robert Lang’s dull life takes a turn for the dramatic after he reluctantly takes on the role of Santa at a children’s Christmas party – while he regales the assembled kids with a tale, one child slips into a coma.

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Blooming Youth

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1973 on BBC1

Two male students have to sort themselves out when a girl moves in with them. An improvised character piece, overseen by Les Blair and Tony Garnett.

Screen-grabbery:
Caution: flammable Adolescent angst couldn't wish for a groovier bacdrop Classic student scene number 68
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Stretch, The

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1973 on BBC1

Rosalind Ayres finds she can cope on her own when her husband goes to prison for two years. When he gets out he finds it hard to accept the change. Another gentle barnstormer from Julia Jones.

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Making the Play

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1973 on BBC1

Barbara Ferris and James Bolam are an estranged couple still trying to reconcile with each other by sending drafts of a co-written play to each other through the post. Co-written, coincidentally enough, by Terence Brady and Charlotte Bingham.

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Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont

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1973 on BBC1

Celia Johnson turns in an award-winning performance as the titular new tenant in a retirement home, desperately trying to keep up appearances. By Elizabeth Taylor. Not that one, the other one.

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Her Majesty’s Pleasure

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1973 on BBC1

Life-sentenced prisoners with little hope of release busy themselves with activities, in particular a panto production of Goldilocks. By ex-lag Jimmy O’Connor. With Bob Hoskins, Peter Firth, Derek Griffiths.

Welcome to another Top of the Pops Panto grief
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Jack Point

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1973 on BBC1

Old and young members of a Gilbert and Sullivan society get under each other’s feet in the run-up to a special Jubilee production of the titular play. An early example of what some people these days call ‘cringe-inducing comedy’ from the pen of Colin Welland.

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Emergency Channel, The

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1973 on BBC1

By John Bowen. Richard Pasco lives out of a suitcase in Battersea and is tormented by his rapidly fading memory of his life and loves. With Patrick Stewart.

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Mummy and Daddy

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1973 on BBC1

By Douglas Livingstone. A retired couple begin to find life tough going after a year in a seaside bungalow bought for them by son Mike Savage.

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Private Practice

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1973 on BBC1

By Peter Hankin. Respectable snob Priscilla Morgan is unduly worried about a visit from her daughter’s schoolfriend.

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Shutdown

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1973 on BBC1

By Tony Perrin. In a deserted Potteries factory, closed for the mass holiday excursions of Wakes Week, young electrician Freddie Fletcher arrives to put one over on two old hands.

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Baby Blues

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1973 on BBC1

By Nemone Lethbridge. Zena Walker finally has a baby after receiving specialist treatment for ten years – then the problems really start.

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Jingle Bells

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1973 on BBC1

By Arthur Hopcraft. Colin Farrell’s various Christmas and Boxing Day gatherings with family and mates bring issues and problems to the surface.

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