Play for Today

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Season 9

Episodes

1. Nina
Oct 17, 1978

The story of two Soviet dissidents living in London and slowly coming apart under the strain of his drinking and her enforced separation from her child

0.0 75 min
2. Victims of Apartheid
Oct 24, 1978

George, a black South African, finds it hard to settle down in London after his experiences in South Africa.

0.0 75 min
3. A Touch of the Tiny Hacketts
Oct 31, 1978

A young man is declared a hero when he catches a burglar until it's discovered that the burglar is a dwarf.

0.0 75 min
4. Dinner at the Sporting Club
Nov 7, 1978

A story about young boxers whose fighting provides entertainment for diners at a sporting club

0.0 75 min
5. Donal and Sally
Nov 14, 1978

Adolescent love can be difficult at the best of times, but Donal and Sally have special problems - problems which alarm their families and the instructors at Strathvale Centre.

0.0 75 min
6. Sorry
Nov 21, 1978

Consists of two plays ""Audience"" and ""Private View"" about a brewery worker and writer who incurs the wrath of the autocratic government

0.0 75 min
7. Butterflies Don't Count
Nov 28, 1978

"Whether priest or thespian, never once let yourself doubt that the role you're playing is real. Lead your little flock from childhood to the grave via God's sweet sacraments and let no doubts intrude - ever."

0.0 75 min
8. Soldiers Talking Cleanly
Dec 5, 1978

A freelance TV presenter has been hired by the BBC to film a documentary about the British army stationed in Germany. Unfortunately the budget is so low he is only allowed to film soldiers talking, and all bad language must be censored.

0.0 75 min
9. One Bummer Newsday
Dec 12, 1978

What happens to provincial journalists when there's nothing in the news and they have a paper to fill?

0.0 75 min
10. The Out of Town Boys
Jan 2, 1979

"This could be a bit special, Maggie. This could be the first case of an office block falling down during the topping-out party."

0.0 75 min
11. Vampires
Jan 9, 1979

Three boys watch horror films on late night TV and see a man in a local cemetery whom they believe to be a vampire.

0.0 75 min
12. The Chief Mourner
Jan 16, 1979

For a successful man with public responsibilities Alan Berry is strangely reluctant to help the police when his wife is murdered.

0.0 75 min
13. Waterloo Sunset
Jan 23, 1979

A young man and an old woman try to fit in when their neighborhood goes West Indian

0.0 75 min
14. Blue Remembered Hills
Jan 30, 1979
Episode 14

The play activities of seven children living in the countryside during the summer of 1943 end in tragedy; the children were played by adults in childrens clothing. The title is taken from A.E. Housman's 1896 poem: "Into my heart an air that kills; From yon far country blows; What are those blue remembered hills..." It's 1943 on a summer's afternoon and 7 children play in the fields & woods of old England. The children's roles are all played by adults to act as "A magnifying glass to show what it's like to be a child." "When we dream of childhood," said Dennis Potter, "we take our present selves with us. It is not the adult world writ small; childhood is the adult world writ large." Since Potter viewed childhood as "adult society without all the conventions and the polite forms which overlay it," he repeated the device he had introduced 14 years earlier (in "Stand Up, Nigel Barton"); children's roles were cast with adult actors in this naturalistic memory drama of a "golden day" that turns to tragedy. On a sunny, summer afternoon in bucolic England of 1943, seven West Country children (two girls, five boys) play in the Forest of Dean. Their games and spontaneous actions (continuous and in real time) reflect their awareness of WWII, but no adults are present to intrude. As the group moves through the woods and back to the grassy hills, their words and actions illustrate how "childhood is not transparent with innocence." When the two girls push a pram into a barn to play house, the casting concept is heightened, doubling back on itself in a remarkable moment: adults are suddenly seen to be acting as children who are pretending to be adults, and lines from Housman echo across the years: "That is the land of lost content/I see it shining plain/The happy highways where I went/And cannot come again."

0.0 75 min
15. Who's Who
Feb 6, 1979

A story about a dinner party given by the managers and employees of a brokerage house

0.0 75 min
16. The Last Window Cleaner
Feb 13, 1979

The Irish troubles as seen by residents of a boarding house called ""The Crumlin View""

0.0 75 min
17. Ploughman's Share
Feb 27, 1979

"Ploughman. Nobody calls you that. You're a has-been. Your head and heart went into a museum wi' that lot you keep in there. Face it: you're redundant."

0.0 75 min
18. Degree of Uncertainty
Mar 6, 1979

"I'm 37 years old, remember? I'm not a dead-pan, genned-up, discreetly nymphomaniac ex-head-girl like the majority of your female students. I'm an innocent. I'm vulnerable."

0.0 75 min
19. Light
Mar 13, 1979

A village in Cheshire. A deserted cinema. A poet murdered by Stalin. A blown fuse. Victor Silvester. Pickets on trial. Trimmers and fishwires.

0.0 75 min
20. Coming Out
Apr 10, 1979

A closeted homosexual writer is content to lead a double life

0.0 75 min
21. Don't Be Silly
Jul 24, 1979

A young wife tries to cope with her abusive husband.

0.0 75 min
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