- Cathy Come Home
"Cathy Come Home" was a British
television play byJeremy Sandford , produced byTony Garnett and directed byKen Loach . Filmed in a gritty, realistic drama documentary style, it was first broadcast on16 November 1966 on BBC1. The play was shown in the BBC's "The Wednesday Play " anthology strand, which was well known for tackling social issues.Plot summary
The play tells the story of a young couple, Cathy (played by
Carol White ) and Reg (Ray Brooks). Initially their relationship flourishes and they have a child and move into a modern home. When Reg is injured and loses his job, they are evicted by bailiffs, and they face a life of poverty andunemployment , illegallysquatting in empty houses and staying in shelters. Finally, Cathy has her children taken away bysocial services .Reaction
The play was watched by 12 million people — a quarter of the British population at the time — on its first broadcast. It broached issues that were not yet widely discussed in the popular media, such as
homelessness ,unemployment , and the rights of mothers to keep their own children. It may have helped to influence changes in British law and in public opinion about these social issues. It also helped raise the profile of the issue of homelessness (coincidentally, the new homeless charity Shelter was launched soon after the film was first broadcast).Production
The play was written by
Jeremy Sandford , produced byTony Garnett and directed byKen Loach , who went on to become a major figure in British film. Loach employed a realistic documentary style, using predominantly16mm film on location, which contrasted with the vast amount of BBC drama of the time which was commonly shot in studios onvideotape . Loach's realistic style helped to heighten the play's impact, particularly the scene in which Cathy and Reg are forcibly evicted with their children bybailiff s from the home in which they have been unable to keep up rent payments. This powerful sequence, largely improvised, is often repeated in the UK in documentaries both about UK television history and the changing awareness of social issues in the 1960s.Criticism and reception
In a 2000 poll of industry professionals conducted by the
British Film Institute to determine the100 Greatest British Television Programmes of the 20th century, "Cathy Come Home" was voted second, the highest-placed drama on the list, behind the comedy "Fawlty Towers ". In 2003, it was released onVHS andDVD by the BFI as part of their "Archive Television" range but is now out of print. In 2006 the film was re-shown for the first time in many years (on BBC 4), as part of a series highlighting the issue of homelessness.External links
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* [http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/C/htmlC/cathycomeho/cathycomeho.htm "Cathy Come Home"] at theMuseum of Broadcast Communications
*imdb title|id=0059020|title=Cathy Come Home
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