Drama Out of a Crisis: A Celebration of Play for Today
- TV Movie
- 2020
- 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
34
YOUR RATING
Celebrating 'Play for Today', the acclaimed series of controversial single dramas broadcast on BBC One between 1970 and 1984.Celebrating 'Play for Today', the acclaimed series of controversial single dramas broadcast on BBC One between 1970 and 1984.Celebrating 'Play for Today', the acclaimed series of controversial single dramas broadcast on BBC One between 1970 and 1984.
Photos
Martina Laird
- Self - Narrator
- (voice)
Tony Garnett
- Self - Producer, filmed in 1993
- (archive footage)
Dennis Potter
- Self - Writer, recorded in 1973 & 1977
- (archive footage)
Huw Wheldon
- Self - Managing Director, BBC TV, 1968-1975
- (archive footage)
David Rose
- Self - Producer, filmed in 1988
- (archive footage)
William Hardcastle
- Self
- (archive footage)
Alasdair Milne
- Self - Managing Director, BBC Television
- (archive footage)
Alan Clarke
- Self - Director, 'Scum'
- (archive footage)
Horace Ové
- Self - Director, filmed in 1982
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe title "Drama out of a Crisis" is well known in the UK as the advertising slogan ("We won't make a drama out of a crisis") of the Commercial Union insurance company.
- ConnectionsFeatures The Wednesday Play (1964)
Featured review
I have a confession to make. I never had much regard for Play for Today.
Then again I was never the target audience. I was still at school when the strand finished so I was never going to appreciate those dramas on industrial strife, life on the dole and the Troubles in Northern Ireland. The plays tended to have a more left of centre viewpoint, something not appreciated during the Thatcherite 1980s.
Plays like Our Day Out or The Flipside of Dominick Hide were more accessible to me. Although I remember films like Spend, Spend, Spend or the controversy caused by the showing of Psy-Warriors.
It was only when several productions were repeated some years later on Channel 4 that I began to appreciate them. By then I was older. Over the years the highly regarded Plays for Today have been repeated. The not so good ones are left in the archives.
This celebration has been timed for the 50th anniversary of Play for Today starting. The shock was to learn that 37 of the plays have been wiped. Missing and unlikely to be recovered. Cultural vandalism by the BBC.
It ran through some of the greatest hits. Clips from Abigail's Party, Licking Hitler, Penda's Fen. Omissions were Rumpole of the Bailey, Blue Remembered Hills.
The changing face of Britain was noted. The latter years of the strand had more women writers but diversity was generally neglected.
Controversy came from the non transmission of Scum and Brimstone and Treacle. Both were remade as feature films, although the BBC later broadcast them in the 1990s.
What Play for Today was responsible for was fostering writers and directors who would later go on to make feature films, some through Channel 4's filmmaking arm in the 1980s. It eventually led to the formation of BBC Films as well. Small scale independent British movies.
Then again I was never the target audience. I was still at school when the strand finished so I was never going to appreciate those dramas on industrial strife, life on the dole and the Troubles in Northern Ireland. The plays tended to have a more left of centre viewpoint, something not appreciated during the Thatcherite 1980s.
Plays like Our Day Out or The Flipside of Dominick Hide were more accessible to me. Although I remember films like Spend, Spend, Spend or the controversy caused by the showing of Psy-Warriors.
It was only when several productions were repeated some years later on Channel 4 that I began to appreciate them. By then I was older. Over the years the highly regarded Plays for Today have been repeated. The not so good ones are left in the archives.
This celebration has been timed for the 50th anniversary of Play for Today starting. The shock was to learn that 37 of the plays have been wiped. Missing and unlikely to be recovered. Cultural vandalism by the BBC.
It ran through some of the greatest hits. Clips from Abigail's Party, Licking Hitler, Penda's Fen. Omissions were Rumpole of the Bailey, Blue Remembered Hills.
The changing face of Britain was noted. The latter years of the strand had more women writers but diversity was generally neglected.
Controversy came from the non transmission of Scum and Brimstone and Treacle. Both were remade as feature films, although the BBC later broadcast them in the 1990s.
What Play for Today was responsible for was fostering writers and directors who would later go on to make feature films, some through Channel 4's filmmaking arm in the 1980s. It eventually led to the formation of BBC Films as well. Small scale independent British movies.
- Prismark10
- Oct 24, 2020
- Permalink
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- Drama out of a Crisis: A Celebration of Play for Today
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
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By what name was Drama Out of a Crisis: A Celebration of Play for Today (2020) officially released in India in English?
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