The Boys From The Blackstuff
1
9 8 2 (UK)
5 x 50 minute episodes
Beginning life in January 1980 as a single drama
entitled The Black Stuff, writer Alan Bleasedale's hard hitting
black comedy, set against the harsh backdrop of struggle and
hopelessly bleak unemployment in the Liverpool of Thatcher's Britain,
chronicled the lives of a group of tarmac layers as they sought to
find work, whilst suffering the despair and indignity of life on the
scrap heap.
Encouraged by the enthusiastic audience and critical
reception to the stand-alone play, the BBC approached former English
teacher Bleasedale with a request to create a linked series of plays
focusing on each of the central characters in turn. BBC executives
were so impressed with the end-result that they ordered the first to
be reworked into a one-off drama entitled The Muscle Market,
whilst the remaining five were combined to form the series proper.
Bernard Hill's BAFTA winning depiction of the tragic
decline of Yosser Hughes was superb. Yosser had been systematically
stripped of job, pride and ultimately, his family, and reduced to a
shattered shell of the proud and self-confident man he had once
been. The plight of the Yosser character, which all too painfully
mirrored the real life distress of millions of the nations unemployed,
was summed up in the hauntingly simple catch phrase, which would
almost immediately find a lasting place within the vocabulary of the
national consciousness. "Gizza job..I can do that."
Although the series is best remembered for Hill's
character there was also a moving performance from Michael Angelis as
Chrissy Todd, a man reduced to looking down the back of the sofa for
money, whilst being constantly nagged by his wife (Julie Walters),
until finally, at the end of his tether he cracked up and slaughtered
his pet geese.
Dixie
(Tom Georgeson), once the gang's foreman, had become embittered and
unforgiving, his pride as a working man shattered. George (Peter
Kerrigan), the oldest, was a wise and respected trade union official
who refused to give up hope even on the remarkable wheelchair ride
through the decaying Albert Dock which precedes his death.
Like Cathy Come Home before it, Boys From
The Blackstuff had an impact on British society at large. It
painted an uncomfortable but nevertheless warranted portrait of a city
and a country teetering precariously on the brink of social and
economic disaster, where the only real victims were those who were
prevented by circumstances beyond their control from leading
fulfilling and productive lives.
The city of Liverpool and its people were never so
faithfully represented by television drama as they were in this
series. Its indirect influence is detectable in the proliferation of
Liverpool-based television and film drama of the 1980s, including the
sitcom Bread and the long-running soap Brookside.
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