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To: don-o

You can watch the the December 1954 BBC tv version here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNkFn8wPK3Y

It’s really bizarre to watch and it upset the British public who watched it.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nineteen_Eighty-Four_(TV_programme)

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The play provoked something of an upset. There were complaints about the “horrific” content (particularly the infamous Room 101 scene where Smith is threatened with torture by rats) and the “subversive” nature of the play. Most were worried by the depiction of a totalitarian regime controlling the population’s freedom of thought. There was also a report in the Daily Express newspaper of 42-year-old Beryl Merfin of Herne Bay collapsing and dying as she watched the production, under the headline “Wife dies as she watches”, allegedly from the shock of what she had seen.

Political reaction was divided, with several early day motions and amendments tabled in the Parliament. One motion, signed by five MPs, deplored “the tendency, evident in recent British Broadcasting Corporation television programmes, notably on Sunday evenings, to pander to sexual and sadistic tastes”.[2] An amendment was tabled which sought to make the motion now deplore “the tendency of honourable members to attack the courage and enterprise of the British Broadcasting Corporation in presenting plays and programmes capable of appreciation by adult minds, on Sunday evenings and other occasions.” It was signed by five MPs.[3] Another amendment added “but is thankful that the freedom of the individual still permits viewers to switch off and, due to the foresight of her Majesty’s Government, will soon permit a switch-over to be made to more appropriate programmes.”[4] A second motion signed by six MPs, applauded “the sincere attempts of the B.B.C. to bring home to the British people the logical and soul-destroying consequences of their freedom” and calling attention to the fact that “many of the inhuman practices depicted in the play Nineteen Eighty-Four are already in common use under totalitarian régimes.”,[5] Even the Queen and Prince Philip made it known that they had watched and enjoyed the play.

Amidst objections the BBC went ahead with a live repeat on Thursday 16 December, although the decision went to the Board of Governors, which narrowly voted in favour of the second performance. This was introduced live on camera by Head of Drama Michael Barry, who had already appeared on the Monday’s edition of the topical news programme Panorama to defend the production. The seven million viewers who watched the Thursday performance was the largest television audience in the UK since the Coronation the previous year.

Videotape recording was still in development and television images could only be preserved on film by using a special recording apparatus (known as “telerecording” in the UK and “kinescoping” in the USA) but was used sparingly in Britain for preservation and not for pre-recording. It is thus the second performance, one of the earliest surviving British television dramas, that is preserved in the archives.


3 posted on 08/10/2015 12:47:27 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine (Pubbies = national collectivists; Dems = international collectivists; We need a second party!)
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To: Jack Hydrazine

Thanks. Fascinating.


5 posted on 08/10/2015 12:52:37 PM PDT by don-o (I am Kenneth Carlisle - Waco 5/17/15)
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To: Jack Hydrazine
I need to watch that BBC version, as I have heard great things about it. I also like the film version that came out in 1984 with John Hurt as Winston Smith and Richard Burton as O'Brien.

The story itself does not scare me and never has. It's when I read news stories that show where we are heading that I get a little uneasy.

8 posted on 08/10/2015 1:11:59 PM PDT by Sans-Culotte (''Political correctness is communist propaganda writ small''~ Theodore Dalrymple)
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