The Big Flame
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''The Big Flame'' is a 1969 BBC television play by socialist playwright Jim Allen (playwright), Jim Allen, produced by Tony Garnett and directed by Ken Loach. The play tells the story of 10,000 dockworkers occupying the Liverpool docks in a "work-in". Filmed in a gritty, social realism, realistic Docudrama, drama documentary style, it was first broadcast on 19 February 1969 on BBC One, BBC1, at a time when unemployment was rising in Britain. The play was shown in the BBC's ''The Wednesday Play'' anthology strand, which was noted for tackling social issues. Following its broadcast, Mary Whitehouse, president of the Mediawatch-uk, National Viewers' and Listeners' Association, wrote to both Prime Minister Harold Wilson and Leader of the Opposition Edward Heath, demanding that they review the charter of the BBC in light of its transmission of "a blueprint for the communist takeover of the docks." Unofficial strikes were the subject of political debate at the time, and the government had proposed a ban on unofficial strikes the previous month in the paper ''In Place of Strife''. Last broadcast on 26 August 1971, the name of the play was later used by a Big Flame (political group), revolutionary socialist organisation founded in Liverpool in 1970. Jim Allen and Ken Loach, along with many of the same cast, also collaborated on the 1971 film ''The Rank and File (Play for Today), The Rank and File''. The two films have been noted as being similar in many ways. In September 2011, the play was released on DVD as part of the 6-disc box set, ''Ken Loach at the BBC''.


Cast


See also

*Upper Clyde Shipbuilders - a famous work-in at the shipyards on the River Clyde, Scotland, in 1971 *1971 Harco work-in - a famous work-in by steelworkers in Campbelltown, New South Wales, Australia, in 1971 *Workers' self-management


References


External links

* * 1969 plays 1969 television films 1969 films 1969 television plays BBC television dramas British docudrama films Films directed by Ken Loach Films set in Liverpool Black-and-white British television shows Social realism 1960s British films British drama television films {{tv-drama-film-stub