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    Thread: The Curse of Steptoe

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      Default The Curse of Steptoe

      Wednesday 19 March 2008, 9pm, BBC Four

      The Curse of Steptoe
      Steptoe and Son remains a landmark in the history of British television. The series gave birth to the modern sitcom and transformed its actors - Harry H Corbett and Wilfrid Brambell - into national treasures.

      Starring Jason Isaacs (The State Within) as Harry H Corbett and Phil Davis (Five Days) as Wilfrid Brambell, The Curse of Steptoe uncovers an unexpected and incredible tale of life imitating art.

      The sitcom told the story of two rag-and-bone men trapped together for all eternity. But out of the public eye an even stranger story was playing out, of two men yoked together unable to escape their inner complexities or each other.

      How their personal problems helped the show achieve success is one of the most revealing stories from the annals of BBC light entertainment history.

      Based on interviews with colleagues, friends and family of Harry and Wilfrid, and Steptoe writers, Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, The Curse Of Steptoe explores the incredible story of life behind the scenes.

      Cast

      Jason IsaacsHarry H CorbettPhil DavisWilfrid BrambellBurn GormanRay GaltonRory KinnearAlan SimpsonRoger AllamTom SloaneCrew

      Brian Fillis writerMichael Samuels directorBen Bickerton producer
      "I've been torpedoed!"
      Askey replies..
      "Well I didn't do it!"

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      Default Telegraph iPlayer pick: The Curse of Steptoe (BBC4)

      Click here to watch or download The Curse of Steptoe from BBC iPlayer
      (If you have not already registered with BBC iPlayer, click here to do so before trying to download programmes)
      The Curse of Steptoe was made squarely in the now-established tradition of BBC4 drama. It took some much-loved figures from British showbiz and demonstrated how miserable they were in real life, while providing a particularly sharp sense of period. Above all, like TV drama of old, its roots clearly lay in the stage rather than in film.
      Apart from suiting a BBC4 budget, the advantages of this theatrical approach include a refreshing lack of flashiness and a chance for the actors to shine. The main disadvantage, not surprisingly, is that the result can be a bit stagey, with every scene carefully designed to make a single point.
      At the start, for example, last night
      "I've been torpedoed!"
      Askey replies..
      "Well I didn't do it!"

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      Default The Curse of Steptoe

      Now for me having seen this I know look at 'Steptoe and son' as something really sad. Its very hard to watch it in the same light as before.

      "I wasted time and now doth time waste me," muttered Harry H Corbett early in The Curse of Steptoe. And he was not playing Harold – fantasising about thespian greatness from the clutter of the rag-and-bone yard – but Richard II. And his director, Joan Littlewood, was pleased. "That was a Richard for the masses you just gave," she told him, before suggesting that he'd soon be ready for "the Danish ditherer". Unfortunately, Corbett's career was just about to be ambushed by success, in a way that would eventually bring that Shakespearean line back to haunt him. In an office that Mussolini would have regarded as vulgarly ostentatious, a BBC commissioning editor urged the scriptwriters Galton and Simpson to give him "something gritty, something with balls", and what they come up with was "The Offer", a one-off episode for a series of comedy plays about the grating relationship between a Shepherd's Bush junkman and his son.

      Galton and Simpson wanted to cast straight actors for their playlet, perhaps conscious that established comedians would have noticed that conventional punchlines were thin on the ground. And that fact proved crucial in getting Corbett on board, a rising theatrical star who was looking for scripts that had political bite. What he saw in "The Offer" was not the embryo of a light-entertainment hit but a slice of kitchen-sink realism shot through with existential doubt. "It's not a sitcom," he told his wife. "You haven't read it... it's practically Beckett." And the point of The Curse of Steptoe was that, by the end, it really was, the huge success of the series effectively trapping its stars alive, buried from the neck down in their own comic personas. Whether the curse here was comedy, rather than that old villain fame, is debatable, but there was no doubting that both Corbett and Wilfrid Brambell came to hate the roles that had made them rich and instantly recognisable.
      Jason Isaacs played Corbett – "the British Marlon Brando" – and Phil Davis appeared as Brambell, two performers who were almost as much at odds in the rehearsal room as they were on screen. When he arrived for their first read-through, Corbett was already "off book" and in character, while Brambell, representative of an entirely different theatrical generation, grumbled about Method affectations and delivered his lines in cut-glass RP. And though Galton and Simpson had already embedded antagonism and mutual dependency into their script, the cruel genius of the series that followed was the almost vampiric way in which they moulded the comedy around the characters of their lead performers. Harold's poignant aspirations for a better life – his stumbling attempts at wine connoisseurship, his pretensions to intellectual superiority, his dreams of escape through acting – all had connections to Corbett's real life. And though Brambell was a lot further out of the closet than was implied here, the line that came to be associated with Albert – "You dirty old man" – must have felt peculiarly pointed when thrown back at him after his arrest for cottaging. Anyone who remembers David Barrie's Channel 4 documentary When Steptoe Met Son, broadcast in 2002, won't have found all this particularly revelatory, but Isaacs and Davis played it so well that it had a fresh life.
      "I've been torpedoed!"
      Askey replies..
      "Well I didn't do it!"

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      Default

      CORBETT WAS GOOD IN THE OLD FORGOTTEN B MOVIE THE COVER GIRL KILLER ,SHOWED HE COULD MANAGE A SERIOUS ROLE.WITHOUT A DOUBT A GREAT ACTOR,SADLY TYPECAST AND BURNT OUT
      I say there boy..

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      Watched it this evening thanks to your post, very good, and welcome drama. Well acted and all that, but, the same studio audience at every show, never mind though, I still liked it. Good way to end it I thought....
      'THE LIFE AND TIMES OF A MISANTHROPE'

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      Default

      Really I never noticed so it was the same people?

      I must admit i find it hard to laugh at them now realising what tortured souls they were. I think Corbetts lot was mainly due to his own actions. Although i wasn't there he seems to have lost out on a good wife due to an obsessive nature.
      "I've been torpedoed!"
      Askey replies..
      "Well I didn't do it!"

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      Default The Corbett family respond

      "I've been torpedoed!"
      Askey replies..
      "Well I didn't do it!"

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