Ken Loach At The BBC (UK-import)
1965 saw Ken Loach working as one of the "in house" directors of the groundbreaking The Wednesday Play series at The BBC which included Three Clear Sundays, Up the Junction and The End of Arthur's Marriage. Of these plays, Up The Junction had the most impact, telling the story of three young women factory workers in their work and home lives, focusing on Rube as she meets her first boyfriend, and chronicles the significant life changing events that follow including an illegal abortion. Not only controversial at the time, Loach's inter-cutting of real life interviews mixed in with drama became a signpost for his future directing style striving for naturalism and realism. 1966 saw Ken Loach's breakthrough piece, Cathy Come Home. The play follows the lives of young sweethearts Cathy (Carol White fresh from Up The Junction) and Reg (Ray Brooks) starting out as a newly married couple, moving into a new place and having children. Reg then suffers an accident which means he is unable to work and they end up being evicted and separated. With Cathy homeless but still looking after the children, she faces having her children taken away from her by Social Services. This is perhaps the play that has had more impact than any other on television, highlighting the very real problem of homelessness. Even some forty years later the power of Cathy Come Home remains undiminished. In Two Minds charts the turbulent life of a young woman who endures a difficult family life and, after throwing a kitchen knife at her mother, is diagnosed as a schizophrenic. Much like Cathy Come Home, the realistic documentary style helps provide veracity to the story. Written by Jim Allen, The Big Flame is a story of striking Liverpool dock workers, who decide that to safeguard their futures they must control the port themselves. This was the first of several Ken Loach / Jim Allen collaborations - many of which would be starkly political. The BAFTA nominated Days of Hope was Jim Allen's tale of a working-class family in the period from 1916 to 1926, taking in the First World War, events in Ireland and the General Strike of 1926. Running to well over six hours, the series tells an epic story particularly in the light of the parlous state of the economy and labour relations in Britain at the time. A radical series in every sense, Jim Allen was able create real parallels in Days of Hope that resonated with the working class of the mid 1970's and the political climate at that time. Loach returned to the BBC with The Price of Coal (written by Kes author Barry Hines) a film which depicted the lives of those living in a coalfield community. The first part subtitled, Meet The People, is a comic tale surrounding the story of a colliery community in preparation for a visit by Prince Charles, and the efforts being put on by the management to make the pit fit for a future king, involving grassing over an unsightly coal slag heap and whitewashing everything in site. The second part, Back To Reality,...