Man Alive (BBC TV series)

Man Alive (BBC TV series)
Man Alive
Genre Documentary and current affairs
Country of origin  United Kingdom
Language(s) English
No. of episodes approx. 500
Production
Editor(s) Bill Morton
Desmond Wilcox
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) BBC TV
Broadcast
Original channel BBC2
Audio format Mono
Original run 4 November 1965 (1965-11-04) – 1981
Chronology
Followed by 40 Minutes
Related shows Man Alive Debate

Man Alive is a documentary and current affairs series which ran on BBC2 between 1965 and 1981. During that time there were nearly 500 programmes tackling a range of social and political issues, both in the UK and abroad. It was often accused[by whom?] of trying to sensationalise its subjects or interviewees.[citation needed]

British television journalist and presenter Esther Rantzen worked on Man Alive in the mid-1960s. She went on to marry one of the programme's most prominent reporters, and series editor Desmond Wilcox. Wilcox contributed directly to about 50 Man Alive programmes. The series was commissioned by Sir David Attenborough, while he was BBC2 Controller between 1965 and 1969. The Man Alive theme music was composed and played by Tony Hatch and his orchestra.

Contents

Early days

The first Man Alive programme, "The Heart Man", was broadcast on 4 November 1965. It focused on heart surgeon Michael Ellis DeBakey in the Methodist Hospital, Houston, Texas. There were a further eight programmes that year - Wilcox was also the programme's executive producer. Man Alive became a strand. Each edition of the programme had a sub-title which reflected its content.

Man Alive returned in 1966 with 48 programmes followed by 51 in 1967. The documentary strand covered several stories on sex, the sex industry and exploitation, and in 1967 it broke new ground by showing the first ever bare female breast on British television (Daily Express). For its time, Man Alive had thought provoking titles for many of its programmes. The programme also faced accusations of sensationalism. Writing in The Times in 2005, Paul Hoggart said "I had not realised that BBC Two's landmark 1960s documentary strand Man Alive was accused at the time of cynical sensationalism, with producers rejoicing when they got some poor sod to weep on camera..."

Man Alive began to push the boundaries further. In 1966 a programme called "Lift up Your Skirt" explored the Playboy club scene with Malcolm Muggeridge. In 1971 sex education was the subject for scrutiny in "Sex and Common sense" followed in 1975 by "X-ploitation" which looked at the seedy side of the film industry.

At a time when television was still a relatively new medium, sex, class and religion were then seen as controversial issues. This was in an era long before reality TV shows that are now internationally commonplace, and long before 24 hour rolling news channels existed. The ITV company Granada Television was also an emerging force in documentary and current affairs television including its own long running anthology series World in Action, although its remit was similar to the BBC's Panorama programme, which began its run in 1953, and is still running in 2008.

Many of the films can now be seen as invaluable snapshots of British life in a bygone age. In the early Seventies, episodes ranged from "The Other Woman", which looked at mistresses, to "The Office Party", with all that comes with it. "The Alternative Press" looked at not just Oz and IT but also small independent community newspapers that were appearing all over Britain to challenge the fat cats of Fleet Street with a more moral and intimate attempt at bringing relevant news to people. "Don't Call Us" looked at out-of-work actors, "The Possessed" was alook at suburban housewives involved with the occult, and "Soho" was a leisurely trek around a fast-changing corner of Bohemian London. "The Fallen Idols" looked those who had been to the top and back, two of its subjects being Bill Maynard and Anthony Steel.

"Twinkle Twinkle Little Star", filmed in July, 1973 and broadcast on Wednesday, October 24 of that year, dealt with the British record industry's efforts to find a new pre-teen (or weenybopper) boy singing star to rival Americans such as Donny Osmond. Although it featured, among others, eleven years old Ricky Wilde (son of Marty Wilde), the programme primarily concerned itself with the ill-fated eleven year old Darren Burn, an ex-Christ Church Senior Chorister from Southgate in north London and the son of EMI executive Colin Burn. EMI spent a lot of money promoting him and, although his initial record releases in 1973 were produced by Eric Woolfson, his record career failed to take off....although his first single, "Something's Gotten Hold of My Heart", backed with "True Love Ways" (EMI 2040), did manage to get to number 60 in the charts. The programme contains an interview with Darren Burn by reporter John Pitman, in which Burn comes across as very intelligent and sophisticated for his age. In July, 1988, during his last BBC Television interview ("People...Whatever Happened To Darren Burn?"), Burn, then aged 26, referring to his ill-fated launch in 1973, told John Pitman that it had been "a very strange thing for a young child to go through" and that it had left him "with a feeling of failure." He also appeared to be blaming his parents for allowing him go through the whole affair and told Pitman: "I certainly wouldn't allow one of my children to do that...should I ever have any." He took his own life in October, 1991, aged 30, in his flat in Southwark, south London, after taking an overdose of anti-depressants. Music critic Roy Carr, a contributor to "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star", said on the programme: "There are a lot of charlatans in this business who are out to make a quick buck and they don't care who they get it off!".

In October 1979, Man Alive also covered the contraction of the Triumph motorcycles factory at Meriden with many original members of the workers' co-operative that was keeping the last British motorcycle in production being made redundant. Their leaving enabled Triumph to survive a further 4 years although, as shown on the programme, there was much bitterness and regret surrounding their departure, particularly as many participated in the original sit-in that stopped the new owners, NVT, closing Meriden down.

One of Man Alive's most eloquent, if least known, films was "Alone", which was broadcast over Christmas 1970. Looking at loneliness through a range of candid interviewees, including a widower who was desperate not to burden anyone else but could find no solace in his life since the death of his wife, a man who had found himself gradually losing touch with his family, and a girl who dwelt at busy railway stations to feel a sense of company.

By 1975, there were fewer Man Alive programmes being made: 28 that year, followed by one in 1976, eight in 1978. The number of programmes commissioned did go back up to beyond 20 a year for the last three years; though the final documentary series in 1981 included a notable polemic on road accidents called "The biggest epidemic of our times" which was directed by Nick Ross and which went on to be transferred to BBC1 and repeated and updated for several years, and turned out to have a major impact on government policy.[1]

But overall, the film which perhaps best sums up the series' strengths is "Gale is Dead", the story of 19 year old Gale Parsons, who died a drug addict on 11 January 1970, during the making of the film. She had been brought up in no less than 14 institutions and was convinced that she mattered to no one. Her story was told mainly through the eyes of Mrs. Nancy David, a teacher who became a key figure in her life.

Beyond Man Alive

The Man Alive films were followed in 1982 by an attempt to create 'studio documentaries' called the Man Alive Debate, each of which tried to created a live documentary-style narrative with the story's cast of characters gathered at the BBC Television Centre in west London. Although it held its own for a while the strand was eventually replaced by 40 Minutes, which returned to the all-film format but without presenter or reporter, thus marking a turn towards the so-called fly-on-the-wall documentary. The new replacement for Man Alive was edited by Edward Mirzoeff. (The Times 1989).

Wilcox set up the Man Alive Group, an independent production company formed with original Man Alive producer Michael Latham - he died in January 2006.

Desmond Wilcox continued to make television programmes as an independent producer, in 1983 his film, "The Boy David" for the BBC's The Visit strand earned him critical acclaim (Observer obituary). It centred on David Lopez, abandoned as a baby in Peru, who had a disease eating away at his face. Desmond Wilcox died in September 2000.

Notable Man Alive reporters

References

  • The Daily Express newspaper, 15 May 2006
  • The Times newspaper, 17 May 1989 by Bryan Appelyard
  • The Times newspaper, 11 April 2005 by Paul Hoggart
  • The Observer newspaper, Obituary, 7 September 2000
  1. ^ Morgan, Adam Eating The Big Fish, London: Wiley, 2009, pp.134-136

External links


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