The Black & White Minstrel Show
1 9 5 8 - 1 9 7 8 (UK)
No doubt this BBC show would be condemned as terribly politically
incorrect in this new and enlightened (ahem) age with white performers
'blacked up', but The Black and White Minstrel Show was
incredibly popular in it's day (up there with The Good Old Days).
The show certainly seems surreal in retrospect, but a gaggle of Al
Jolson clones in traditional "blackface" was prime variety
television back then. Probably the most offensive thing about the show
was the repertoire of old crap the group would trot out and sing every
weekend. The sort of material that even Max Bygraves used to throw out
. . .
Reflecting the American Deep South the songs would be about Mammy,
The Swanee River or Old Black Joe, but as time went on the
performances were seen as derogatory and politically incorrect and in
1978 the show was finally dropped.
The George Mitchell Minstrels had already enjoyed success on the
West End stage when they featured in a one-off special called The
1957 Television Minstrels. The occasional television specials soon
developed into a regular series with a forty-five minute non-stop
format of Mississippi tunes and Country and Western songs.
The series featured music conducted by George Mitchell and
showcased the 36 Mitchell Minstrels, featuring solo performances from
Tony Mercer, John Boulter and Dai Francis - accompanied by the
24-piece Television Toppers dance troupe. During the early years,
various comedians such as Leslie Crowther, Stan Stennett and George
Chisholm acted as "fillers" between the slick song and dance
routines.
What accounts for such immense popularity? Part of the explanation
was undoubtedly the pleasure many got from the program, with its
meticulously choreographed dance routines and popular songs and
melodies. George Inns combined white dancers with black-faced singers
and this was believed to be visually striking, particularly when
colour television was introduced in 1967.
The Black And White Minstrel Show harked back to a specific
period and location - the Deep South where coy White women could be
seen being wooed by docile, smiling black slaves, except in this case
the black men were white artists "Blacked-up." The racist
implications of the premise of the program were yet to be widely
acknowledged or publicly discussed. But it was this which largely led
to the program's eventual demise. The show does have the distinction
however, of being the first ever recipient of the Golden Rose of
Montreux, an annual international contest for light entertainment that
was organised by the Swiss Broadcasting Authority under the patronage
of the European Broadcasting Union, in 1961.
On 18 May 1967, the Campaign Against Racial Discrimination
delivered a petition to the BBC signed by both black and white people,
which requested that the program be taken off television. Despite the
controversy, the program continued until 1 July 1978. Ultimately, its
removal from the air coincided with the demise of the popularity of
the variety genre on British television.
TRIVIA NOTE
The live show Memories of the Black and White Minstrels
toured the UK to packed houses in 2004 and 2005. The show was
performed white-faced and featured the stars, medley's and costumes
from the original TV series.
Thanks to Chris Gidney
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