Posts Tagged With 'Robert Hardy'

Churchill’s People

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“OI, CHURCHILL! Can you save me money on my quality drama output?” It must have seemed like a sure-fire prestige dramatic endeavour at the time. Nip out to the library, fetch down the whopping four-volume History of the English-Speaking Peoples that Winston Churchill dashed off single-handed (taking a brief comfort break to doff Hitler on the napper), dish out the various historical lessons contained therein to the best writers, directors and actors the Corporation can scare up, add lashings of period pomp and classy costumery, sit back and wait for the pools jackpot of posterity which will surely be yours.

It didn’t quite work out like that, of course. Adapting Winnie’s wonderful wodge of text was a nightmare. Quite apart from the fact that the book, understandably, came loaded with the sort of pro-American, pro-Empire Tory agreeableness that didn’t sit too well with your average crypto-Trot BBC drama operative of the time, it was a bloody dry read, chock full of the requisite details of kings, battles and political upheavals, but a bit light on memorable characters, thrilling incident and snappy dialogue.

So it was up to the adapters to provide these themselves. The results… varied. Though never very far into the ‘any good’ bracket. You can’t blame the writers that much: you try capturing the end of the Bronze Age in fifty minutes of prime-time telly. The People team scrabbled round for ways to make Winnie’s lofty overview resonate with the common man. Having Arthur Lowe play a Celtic barber picking up news of the spread of European Christianity was the sort of thing the early episodes came up with. Dialogue was either of the over-explanatory type (characters telling each other who they were, who their ancestors were, what they’d just done, what they were about to do, what year it was etc.) or packed with comedy anachronisms (Danish Invader: “I’ll smash your face in!”)

Still, BAFTAs have found themselves hanging out of worse than that. What really caused the concept to cark was money. The enterprise was conceived by Head of Plays Gerald Savory (later to become notorious as the arbitrary wiper of much classic drama – funnily enough, all 26 episodes of Churchill’s People are very much still with us) in the heady days of early 1973. The Beeb was booming, drama was going from strength to strength, and to top it all those nice American chappies at Time-Life had offered a little cash help with a new prestige series. Savory made the necessary phone calls, gathered his team, and set the wheels in motion for six months’ worth of lavish epic storytelling.

Then: the oil crisis! In short order, there was a lot less of everything. Especially BBC TV. Still, as Kenneth Williams noted in another classic historical epic, the British are used to cuts, and Savory pressed on undaunted. Everyone indoors! “You can put forty extras wisely in a studio and make them look effective,” he assured the viewers. True, but if you’re not careful they can come out looking like a handful of blokes covered in imitation goatskin milling aimlessly about waiting for the pubs to open. Visually the whole show was touched by the hand of cod. Costumes stood up by themselves, boulders suspiciously lacked inertia when shifted, and primeval fog spewed from barely concealed nozzles over perfectly flat Scottish heaths. The look was supposed to be black cloth austerity stylisation, but there’s no hiding the fact that the concrete floor of studio one is the concrete floor of studio one, no matter how much straw you bung over it. Critics compared the threadbare results to a schools programme – no small insult to the accomplished shoestring recreations of How We Used to Live.

To put the old tin lid on it, the series opened with the least crowd-pleasing fifty minutes of prime time drama ever broadcast. Picking David ‘Penda’s Fen‘ Rudkin, obscurantist weirdbeard pagan expert, to sketch the goings on in 43AD was a courageous choice for BBC1 to say the least. His offering of primitive grunts, long passages of Latin, ritual disembowellings and that all-purpose symbol of edgy 1970s classical drama, loads of severed rubber hands, may have been as historically accurate as the room-size remnants of butcher’s grass and Boots No 7 woad would allow, but it acted like syrup of figs on the ratings. By the time they got round to signing Magna Carta, Alasdair Milne decided enough was enough, and turfed Winston’s chums out of their 9.25 Monday fastness into an ever-changing post-10PM graveyard, parachuting Kojak in to take up the slack. The series did, in fairness, calm down a bit when more recent periods were tackled by less wayward writers (including Roger Woddis on the Wars of the Roses!) but who would ever know? The show crawled on in painful obscurity up to the Peterloo massacre, then quietly fell off the air with nary a polite cough to mark its passing.

Mind you, it’s not without unintentional interest, featuring as it did absolutely everyone who was available for work at the time. Where else could you see Dennis Waterman as King Harold? Fulton Mackay and Michael Sheard as archbishops? Arthur Mullard and Rita Webb speculating on the South Sea Bubble? Or Rodney Bewes colonising the subcontinent? For that alone, it was surely worth both pennies.

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Box of Delights, The

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"In my box are such delights!"“HAVE YOU HAD YOUR POSSET, KAY?” Archetypal Edwardian “moral” fantasy for kids by John Masefield gets archetypal “big” budget BBC treatment with varying results. It’s Christmas in posh Edwardian England and, in that perpetual snowy Edwardian wonderland, a posh Edwardian boy is given an Edwardian box by visiting Edwardian hobo Cole Hawkins (played by DR WHO) which, when opens, transports him into a Lion, Witch and Wardrobe rip-off “magical” Edwardian fantasy land. Quantel Paintbox palaver then follows, including deer-deforming Herne the Hunter, a bird thing, and much flying about in sewers. Effects variable at the time, but the intervening years have smoothed all that out – they now look uniformly shite. Baddie got killed by a sack of flour.

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Troubleshooters, The

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TOP BOARDROOM soapfest with sub-DALLAS “black gold” backstory. GEOFFREY “MINISTER OF DEFENCE” KEEN was Brian Stead, number one at Mogul International, with PHILIP “PALLISERS” LATHAM (Willy Izard) attending the books and RAY “OZ” BARRETT (Peter Thornton) and ROBERT “SIEGFRIED” HARDY (Alec Stewart) bestriding the globe as rival titular meddling bastards. Familiar mix of studio-bound office scotch-and-telex chicanery and glossy film location bust-ups. Memorable pacy titles promised fast cars and jets that never appeared again. Focus shifted over time from boring internal politics to shameless foreign junkets, including much-vaunted West Indies expedition, plus stop-offs in Rhodesia, Vietnam and, famously, Alaska – in reality oft-mocked DR WHO Chief Gravel Pit at Gerrards Cross. Hardy pissed off after four years, and various minor replacements (e.g. DAVID BARON as Mike Szabo) ushered in late-era decline, but primetime schedule mainstay throughout.

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Hot Metal

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“PAPER! NEWS, NEWS! Paper! News, News!” screamed the blustering, bombastically-obvious signature tune, so as to avoid anyone tuning in expecting a meditation on sizzling metallurgy. And 28 minutes of blustering, bombastically-obvious journo-satire ensued, but of defiantly broadsheet-bristing quality thanks to a) Andrew Marshall and David Renwick (WHOOPS APOCALYPSE, END OF PART ONE) on script duties b) the likes of ROBERT HARDY, GEOFFREY PALMER, RICHARD WILSON and JOHN GORDON-SINCLAIR peddling their wares and c) infamous “moving breast” glasses gimmick of playground legend. The Daily Crucible was where it all went down, ditto circulation, governments trousers, generous helpings of whisky and super soaraway punchlinery.

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Manhunt

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ROISTERING RESISTANCE tales from World War Two France, clearing its throat by way of Beethoven’s Fifth and a cartwheeling Islamic procession of swastikas. Each week PETER BARKWORTH tried his damndest to stop the filthy vile Hun from discovering neither the lovely CYD HAYMAN nor “plucky” British pilot ALFRED BURKE, all the while giving dastardly local Obergrumphenabwehrfunfencommandanten bastard ROBERT HARDY the slip. Went on for 26 weeks, (the show, not the war) but then again it was the only thing the LWT drama department could afford to make at the time.

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Incredible Robert Baldick, The

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ROBERT HARDY unsheathed his best eccentric credentials for this bonkers Hammer-esque Victorian yarn wherein our hero, a psychic ghostfighting doctor, goes about his business replete with private steam train boasting lab, living quarters, and assistants. Quasi-alien spooks invading 19th century England? That’d never work on telly.

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All Creatures Great and Small

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Now *she* wouldn't have gone on to do Loose Women This Siegfried? The purest distillation of a Sunday night drama'

SUBLIME SUNDAY night adaptation of James Herriott’s tales of life as a 1930s Yorkshire Dales vet, blessed with an excellent cast led by ROBERT HARDY as Siegfried Farnon, gruff, patrician head of practice, always ready to sound a note of caution as they gathered around the huge wireless (loads of period detail) to hear the latest war news; and CHRISTOPHER TIMOTHY as Herriott himself, stolid, caring practioner, always ready with a reassuring word when it was time to put down a kid’s pet or a pensionable heifer (“‘E’s been a faithful servant to me, Mr ‘Erriott”), and married to CAROL DRINKWATER who regenerated into LINDA BELLINGHAM. Speaking of which, Dr Who was in it as well as perennial wet-behind-ears young tyro Tristan, plus there was haughty village matriarch Mrs Pumphrey, who had a little dog named Tricki-Woo who lived on a cushion, and that indecipherable bloke who called Herriott ‘vet’narian’. The whole thing was topped off by those timeless driving-through-the-Dales-in-a-lovely-old-car titles, with Hardy and Timothy sharing a joke.

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