Posts Tagged With 'Mark Wing-Davey'

Thriller

Posted in T is for... by TV Cream | 8 Comments »

A SUPERLATIVE anthology of hour-long suspenseful playlets about well-tailored middle class types methodically doing each other in, THRILLER was a textbook example of straightforward, unpretentious telly drama doing its job to perfection. Mastermind BRIAN CLEMENS conceived and wrote most of the six series: forty three stories of suspense and horror, sometimes with supernatural overtones, often with an American guest star on the books for export purposes, always with plenty of plot twists.

The pre-title sequences were reassuringly formulaic, setting the tone for each week’s dose of macabre happenings in, more often than not, a superficially cosy remote provincial setting.. A charming cottage was seen being cased by a sinister type in a Gabardine coat, or maybe a flashy TR7 would pull into the driveway of a well-appointed country house, arousing the suspicions of the gardener. Something was clearly afoot. Then came the credits, a blood-tinged fish-eye lens title sequence with jarring musical chords, signalling ‘suspense’ in no uncertain terms. Corny episode titles belied the finely-tooled drama they would herald. ‘The Eyes Have It’ was a case in point: a daft pun introducing a largely silent, almost unbearably suspenseful tale of blind medical students (including DENNIS WATERMAN and SINEAD CUSACK) thwarting PETER VAUGHAN’s gang of taciturn terrorists. Elsewhere, the likes of ‘Murder in Mind’ and ‘K is for Killing’ served up exactly what they promised, and needless to say, if Clemens could bodge up a title by working the word ‘scream’ into a well-known expression, he did.

Primark Hitchcock it might have been, but the suspense was well-made for all that. Essentially, the series toyed with clichés. Young married couple freshly moved into mysterious rural location, stranger turning up who may not be all he seems, unidentified killer on the loose etc. It was the masterly variations and wrong-footings wrought from these familiar scenarios that made the programmes riveting, even when acting and production values started to exhibit the tell-tale signs of mid-series sag. Quite often, however, there were great performances, both from name actors (witness DIANA DORS’s sinister country nurse, ‘taking care’ of a bed-ridden American diplomat’s daughter in ‘Nurse Will Make It Better’) and those yet to find fame, particularly one that stops everyone in their tracks, HELEN MIRREN as the potential victim (or – ahem – is she?) of serial wife-knobbler MICHAEL JAYSTON in ‘A Coffin for the Bride’. DINSDALE LANDEN’s turn as suave private eye Matthew Earp was so popular he became the series’ only recurring character, when he was brought back for a second episode. When everything came together, as with the endless double-crosses and revelations and a brilliant cast led by PETER BOWLES in ‘The Double Kill’, you couldn’t ask for a better way to pass an hour of prime time.

This was, as you might expect, a very early ’70s kind of intrigue. Try and play a postmodern drinking game, quaffing along with the hero, or taking a sip every time a detective is seen entering a living room refracted in a crystal decanter, or a white shag-pile carpet is stained crimson with blood, or an anonymous black-gloved hand picks up a telephone receiver and slowly dials a very long number, or a blonde American in a trouser suit merrily announces that she’s ‘new in town’ and you’ll be under the glass coffee table before the first victim. And, quite frankly, serves you right. The show signalled its era in other ways: ‘If It’s a Man, Hang Up’ had Clemens’ stock glamorous soubrette-in-peril (more often than not called ‘Suzy’, the significance of which remains a mystery) menaced by an unknown stalker leaving threatening messages on a big, clunky old telephone answering machine. One of the main things mitigating against any modern revival of the programme is the number of plots that revolve around young women not being able to get to a phone box in time, or killers cutting the phone lines to a remote country cottage. In that sense, as well as that of the many swish glass-’n'-chrome bachelor pads dreamt up by the set designers, this is period drama.

They weren’t wall-to-wall classics. Each of the six seasons served up a couple of makeweights and duffers. (As a rule, seasons three and four were the closest to perfection, while five and six became increasingly silly.) ‘File It Under Fear’ was a library-oriented serial kill-in which had JOHN LE MESURIER, JAN FRANCIS and MAUREEN LIPMAN to play with among others, but still fumbled its chance, while mystical entry ‘Someone at the Top of the Stairs’ was fantastic for forty minutes, then ran smack into one of those tediously long-winded explanatory denouements that plague so much bad telefantasy, even if the masterly DAVID DE KEYSER was delivering it (with his fingers placed on the tip of his chin just so). At the very bottom of the pile, ‘Murder Motel’s daffy PSYCHO homage, despite the appropriately-cast RALPH BATES, stank the place out.

Even in otherwise grand entries, Clemens’ unabashed disregard for research (particularly his habit of just sort of guessing what the police might decide to do) got the goat of the more pernickety viewer, along with the inevitable ‘yes, but what about..?’s and ‘hang on, why didn’t she just..?’s that always plague the best laid plots of Agathas and Roalds. Oh, and the dialogue, with the possible exception of one or two Matthew Earp bon mots, never rose, or even aimed above speakable. But even when it was unspeakable, even when the plots were riddled with inconsistencies, and even when the entire set-up seemed like a dead goose from the off (“there’s this professor of Pavlovian psychology, right, and he’s trained some murderous psychos as his servants, and he invites some young students to dinner…”) the twists, turns and sheer gusto of the whole thing kept your attention front and centre, niggling doubts only edging their way in as the end credits wound to a close. Which, Clemens would argue, was his job done.

One thing that initially puts off the modern viewer is Thriller’s directorial style, which, if it could be said to exist at all was very much the old school approach: four days in the studio, one day on location, bash it out, onto the next one. What would nowadays be considered glacial pacing (the long, deliberate tracking shot across an empty room accompanied by sinister oboe cadence was something of a motif, for instance) was integral to the atmosphere. Rather than cut rapidly from shot to shot, the direction took its time, almost taunting the viewer with its creeping progress. When all the other elements were working, a vivid sense of foreboding was the result. Lew Grade’s ITC hired a roster of big names and gave the scripts relatively lavish treatment, but, being mainly studio-bound, with a couple of sets (all of them meticulously dressed, with nary a wobbling column in sight) and a minimal amount of location filming, they look visually primitive these days. However, this simplicity had the virtue of putting the emphasis firmly on script and action, in lieu of fancy camera angles. In fact, the technical limitations had an atmosphere all of their own: the videotaped interiors were claustrophobic and tense, while the grainy, overcast countryside film inserts looked like they could be hiding untold menaces.

Various ITV series followed in kind – the supernatural ARMCHAIR THRILLER and HAMMER HOUSE OF HORROR, and the twist-happy TALES OF THE UNEXPECTED, which was the one that ran off with all the nostalgia value, more through being repeated a lot during ITV strikes than anything else – but for sheer no-nonsense cliffhanging effect, nothing beats the original.

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BBC Television Shakespeare, The

Posted in B is for... by TV Cream | No Comments »

HERE WAS a prime cut of your actual Public Service Broadcasting with a capital “p”, illuminated in red with a filigreed gold border on the finest vellum WH Smith’s could supply. All 37 of Big Willie’s plays were to be filmed (actually, taped in the studio for the most part), largely uncut, with the best actors the Corporation could lay their hands on, forming an authoritative record of the finest English drama and preserving the classic canon for the ages. Cedric Messina, the bumptious producer-at-large who helmed the Beeb’s Chekhov-by-the-yard heritage drama stalwart Play of the Month, was the man in charge. Monetary support came courtesy of several American institutions, including Exxon and Time-Life (who’d helped the Beeb out with previous heritage drama flagship Churchill’s People, although they didn’t like to talk about it). But the cash came with strings attached. The Yanks, typically, took our historic literature very seriously (possibly due to not having much of their own), so they wanted this series done properly. And properly meant as trad-as-you-please. So, right, no setting the plays in the future, or in space, or on trapezes, or in modern day Lebanon, or in the mind of a mentally challenged eight year old homeless girl on the Fall’s Road. We want spears, we want castles, we want codpieces. And we want them Tuesday.

And this was what BBC2 and PBS viewers got. At least, initially. Wisely deciding not to screen the plays in chonological order (which would have meant opening with limb-hacking miseryfest Titus Andronicus, not a very good gambit for a Sunday evening prestige drama), they kicked off with a nice, traditional, mild cheddar adaptation of Romeo and Juliet. Some of what followed was better, some worse, a fair bit just as dull. The whole affair looked like it was going to play out in this respectful but unremarkable fashion, and critics cocked a snook (the best snook, as ever, belonged to Clive James, who dubbed the whole hubristic enterprise the ‘Bardathon’). But two years in, the creaking vessel was shaken up as Messina was replaced on the bridge by everyone’s favourite magpie intellectual, Jonathan Miller. Getting in a fresh load of directors and technical types, as well as getting his hands dirty himself, Miller pushed the ‘trad’ stipulations as far as was humanly possible. Recreating old masters in televisual form was a favourite game, and the plays started to look fantastic, as opposed to just very bright and rather cheap. (Any dullard who reckons videotape is doomed to look shoddy next to film should be shut in a room with the beautifully lit All’s Well That Ends Well and told to shut up.)

On the less famous productions, mucking about was the order of the day. Stylised minimalist sets came into force, leading Clive James to waspishly express his concern for the actor’s welfare in The Winter’s Tale, fearing that if one of them “sat on a cone instead of a cube, the blank verse would suffer”. (Admittedly, it didn’t completely work – that production’s brave attempt to realise the infamous stage direction “Exit, pursued by a bear” owed a lot to the set dresser of Steptoe and Son.) Popular parallels with the tragic milieu were drawn out: in particular medieval royal courts were shot like scenes from Dallas (which, ironically, was what most people were watching instead, over on BBC1). Elsewhere Miller busied himself with recreating tricky perspectives in that oft-neglected sixteenth century building medium, untreated plywood, and turned Trojan war epic Troilus and Cressida into a tunics-’n'-togas version of M*A*S*H, complete with saucy pin-up etchings and an antiquarian Corporal Klinger. (He even, in a manic on-set bout of sub-Python whimsy, envisioned the prologue being spoken by Richard Baker, in full Renaissance garb, wandering around Troy with a BBC microphone in hand, until a passing Trojan points out that microphones haven’t been invented yet, and Baker stomps off in a huff. Sadly, somewhere along the line common sense prevailed.) Best of all, director Jane Howell, faced with presenting the titanic three-part Henry VI, shot the whole thing in a brightly-coloured recreation of a children’s adventure playground. Combine this with an electronic soundtrack by ‘Deadly’ Dudley Sutton, a swathe of randomly-applied regional accents, weird It’s a Knockout suits of armour looking like a cross between an American football quarterback and a DFS sofa, loads of really really long one-camera shots, a host of knowing looks to camera and a swordfighting Brenda Blethyn and the ten-odd hours practically flew by. And hardly anyone could moan about playing fast and loose with the Bard as the usual pernickety whingeing types knew damn all about the more obscure plays anyway.

As ever with these massive period pantechnicons, the casting was a source of endless off-topic fascination. You couldn’t chuck a halberd in most of the plays without clobbering a brace of famous names, and some came from well off the RSC-approved beaten track. Miller’s decision to cast John Cleese as an uptight puritanical Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew proved to be comedy gold, and Leonard Rossiter, sporting exactly the same beard as Cleese, was the only great thing in the otherwise rather flimsy Life and Death of King John. Further down the list, Johns Birds and Fortune were arch artisans in Timon of Athens, Rikki Fulton was a Scotch and wry pedlar in Winter’s Tale, and Phil Daniels did a punked-up Puck for A Midsummer Night’s Dream. (The choice for Bottom was less unexpected – yep, Brian Glover.) Other experiments weren’t so successful. Again, the opening Romeo and Juliet stank the place out with much of its acting, especially the stilted turn from Anthony ‘Oh then. I see. Queen Mab. Hath been. With you.’ Andrews, and while it must have seemed like a wheeze to get Roger Daltrey in to play both Dromios (with a little Colour Separation trickery) in The Comedy of Errors, the results squeaked for themselves. Actually, perhaps the most unusual aspect of the productions was an inexplicable casting anomaly: 37 plays. Almost 150 hours of solid period television drama. Number of appearances by Brian Blessed: zero. What giveth?

Well, we may josh, but the best of the plays did live on, through the cheerfully ramshackle medium of the educational VHS cassette, which ensured that English students for the next decade would be all over the madly varying tones and production values, albeit increasingly wondering, as telly advanced in technique, why the camera never cut away, why they were always indoors even when they said they weren’t, and why Hannibal Lecter is being so easily duped by that bloke off the British Gas ads. Which was, perhaps, not the sort of grand immortality the BBC governors had envisaged for the series, but it’s a legacy nonetheless. “If I should die, think only this of me: that there’s a dusty old VHS in some corner of an English Lit resources cupboard that is forever Sunday night on BBC2 circa 1980.”

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HitchHiker’s Guide To The Galaxy, The

Posted in The Programmes by TV Cream | 1 Comment »

The cast and crew of The HitchHiker's Guide To The Galaxy, seen here thumbing a lift out of the Week Ending studiosDOUGLAS ADAMS’ superior sci-fi send-up, as overenthusiastic towel-wielding blokes hunting for off-airs of Marvin on Studio B15 are wont to remind you at every given opportunity, started off very much down to earth in late night Radio 4 land. Snowballing cult following, critical reaction and cross-platform in-jokes inserted by Adams into Doctor Who scripts convinced the powers that be that something was happening here, and before long we had the books, the albums, the computer game, the stage show, the TV show, the graphic novels, the script books, Young Zaphod Plays It Safe, and (*spit*) the film, but there are legions of followers who will attest that you just can’t beat the originals. And they’re right too. Rights complications prevented the third, fourth and fifth books from heading radio-wards for many years, but recently Adams’ own preferred producer Dirk Maggs did the honours for well-recieved quirky all-star (Christian Slater, Joanna Lumley, Leslie Phillips et al – and, in a neat in-jokey gambit, TV Ford and TV Trillian David Dixon and Sandra Dickinson) adaptations with a ‘proper’ ending to boot (we’ll have none of that Eoin Colfer pointlessness around here, thanks). If you only know it from Martin Freeman sulking “now I’ll NEVER get that toy”, do yourself a favour and search out the original ‘phases’. Steer clear of Marvin’s singles, though.

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Play Not-Quite-For Today: Series One

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In the autumn of 1983, BBC1 showed a strand of single plays in the Play for Today slot which, though sharing many themes, and indeed writers, directors and actors, with the strand proper, were not produced or promoted as Play for Today, but as stand-alone plays (or ‘films’) in their own right – and generally got rather more publicity than Play for Today was then garnering. They’re included here, seeing as we’re damned if we don’t by the pedants anyway, as ‘unofficial’ entries in the canon.

Being Normal

By Brian Phelan
Couple David Suchet and Anna Carteret enlist the help of writer friend William Simons to draw attention to the plight of their daughter Sadie, who suffers from growth restriction disorder Turner’s Syndrome.

Gunfight At The Joe Kaye Corral

By Alan Shinwell
Kaye (Mark Eden) becomes a desperate man when the recession starts to bite, and the bank forecloses on his clothing factory. So desperate, he’s open to any offers of work, even from (literal) cowboys… This and the following three plays were promoted together as a series “in which people try to find new ways of life”.

Ring Of Keys

By Frank Ash
Nineteen-year-old Iain Andrew takes advantage of a Highland hostelling holiday to escape his stifling home life and overbearing mother (Jan Wilson).

Bazaar and Rummage

By Sue Townsend
A self-help group of female agoraphobics attempt to overcome their fears by running a charity jumble sale at the town hall. The group, led by ex-agoraphobe Gwenda (Frances Tomelty) comprises obsessive-compulsive cleaner Bell-Bell (Brigit Forsyth), Katrina, a cabaret singer who was traumatically driven off stage in a hail of plastic pineapples and never recovered, and Margaret, who has remained indoors since being raped as a teenager fifteen years ago. Social worker Fliss (Juliet Stevenson) is brought in to keep things under control as the quartet battle with their neuroses. Adrian Mole author Townsend’s jokey treatment of a largely taboo subject angered many real agoraphobics, but the play remains popular in rep to this day.

Floating Off

By Stephen Davis
Businessman Peter Woodthorpe pushes through a deal with Graham Crowden’s merchant bank behind his son’s back, in order to try and start a new life with his secretary, Brenda Blethyn.

Stan’s Last Game

By Willis Hall
James Grout and Bert Parnaby are rival chairmen of a northern football club in the run-up to an important cup match. As tempers fray, retiring president Charles Lamb provides a calming voice of sanity.

Submariners

By Tom McClenaghan
Strange, near-farcical take on tensions, eccentricities and sexuality among the crew of a Polaris submarine, on a six-week tour of duty off the coast of Faslane in Scotland. Among their number, Neil Pearson is the wily, mascara-wearing, cross-dressing messhand AB Seaman ‘Cock’ Roach, using his Bilko-esque charm to scale the naval pecking order and positively thrive in this tiny, cloistered world

Martin Luther – Heretic

By William Nicholson
Transmitted on the 500th anniversary of the Protestant church founder’s birth, Jonathan Pryce takes the lead role in this dramatised account of his life (with plenty of flint-eyed to-camera addresses), alongside Maurice Denham, David de Keyser, Valentine Dyall and The Medieval Players.

Reith

By Roger Milner
Two-part dramatisation of the career of the BBC’s founding father, taken from his copious diaries and scrapbooks. Tom Fleming plays the guardian of the nation’s morals.

One of Ourselves

By William Trevor
In an Irish village (Cappoquin, Co. Waterford) in the late ’50s, young boy Stephen Mason turns fifteen and starts leaving his childhood behind, especially childlike, harmless ‘village idiot’ Cyril Cusack.

An Englishman Abroad

By Alan Bennett
Dramatised account of actress Coral Browne’s encounters with exiled spy Guy Burgess while touring the Soviet Union with the Royal Shakespeare Company’s production of Hamlet in 1961. Homesickness for the country he betrayed looms large, as does the lack of bath plugs in Muscovite hotels. Browne plays herself, Alan Bates is Burgess, and Mark Wing-Davey and Charles Gray are among the touring players. Suitably austere bits of Northern towns play Moscow. John Schlesinger directs. A BAFTA award-winning play, contrasting with Dennis Potter’s Traitor, on much the same subject, in 1971.

The Aerodrome

By Rex Warner
Warner adapts his own 1941 novel of a small village being slowly engulfed by the nearby RAF base. Peter Firth, son of the village clergyman (Richard Briers) sees the Air Force, with it’s exciting new jet fighters, as a glamorous escape from the stifling rural life, and enlists, only to find the base being run by a malevolent Air Vice-Marshal (Richard Johnson) with fascistic, dictatorial ambitions. Controversial in 1941 for suggesting the military is a breeding ground for fascism (with good reason – both Hermann Goering and Sir Oswald Moseley were former WWI ‘flying aces’) this play was immensely popular on transmission, perhaps because what had by then become period trappings and nostalgic recreation lent a pleasant sugar coating to the story.

The Crystal Spirit: Orwell on Jura

By Alan Plater
Ronald Pickup plays George Orwell, writing 1984 in his remote Scottish farmhouse in the late 1940s, believing he has only a few years left to complete his work due to the onset of tuberculosis. Fiona Walker plays his wife. The title was taken from a poem he wrote in honour of an Italian militiaman he encountered during the ish Civil War (“But the thing that I saw in your face/No power can disinherit/No bomb that ever burst/Shatters the crystal spirit.”)

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Stronger Than the Sun

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By Stephen Poliakoff. Nuclear power catastrophe drama with plant worker Francesca Annis obsessively liberating a consignment of plutonium from a power station, before succumbing to its radioactivity, washing her face with it in the bath, and eventually being taken out of her house in a radiation tent, clearly bound for death. Support from Tom Bell and Mark Wing-Davey.

Apolcalyptic wilderness Radioactive denouement
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After Dinner Game, The

Posted in Play For Today by TV Cream | No Comments »

Social and sexual intrigue from Malcolm Bradbury/Christopher Bigsby set at a dinner party for the manipulative vice-chancellor of a cash-strapped new university (very similar to Bradbury and Bigsby’s own UEA stomping ground, as revisited in Bradbury’s The History Man). With Timothy West, Mark Wing-Davey and Connie Booth.

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