Another Sunday and Sweet F.A. explained

Series:ITV Sunday Night Theatre
Series No:4
Episode:12
Director:Michael Apted

"Another Sunday and Sweet F.A." is a television play written by Jack Rosenthal and directed by Michael Apted for Granada Television and which was first broadcast on 9 January 1972 in the ITV Sunday Night Theatre strand. It stars David Swift, Freddie Fletcher and Gordon McGrase. It also features Anne Kirkbride, who as a result of her performance was cast in Coronation Street in the role of Deirdre Barlow.[1]

The play won the TV Critics' Circle Best Play of the Year Award.[2] [3]

Plot

Eric Armistead (David Swift) is a Sunday league association football referee. Rosenthal explained that for him "life is an Immorality Play. Right never triumphs over wrong. Good never vanquishes evil. No one knows the meaning of 'fairness'. Which is why he's a Sunday morning referee – hoping that in his own small way, in a foreign field that's forever Manchester, he and his whistle might change the world."[2] He referees a match between Sunday league teams Parker Street Depot XI and Co-Op Albion XI, but the game is ugly and violent, and it ends with the referee, driven to exasperation by the players, heading the ball into the net for the winning goal.

Cast

Critical reaction

At the time of broadcast, Chris Dunkley in The Times was critical calling it "not a bad play" that "failed continually to live up to a feeling of promise, and a hint of something better to come". However, Dunkley praised Swift's performance in what was "an unusual part for any actor".[4]

Later appraisals have been more favourable. Peter Sharkey in 2005 called it "possibly the greatest dramatic portrayal of football ever seen on our screens", praising details like players arriving clutching cigarettes and the goalkeeper arguing with his girlfriend as he leans against the posts, as well as the atmosphere of alcohol and bad pitches.[5]

The BFI website says "Not much happens ... but the accumulation of detail exudes authenticity."[2] Leslie Halliwell in his Teleguide (1979) calls it an "amusing north-country comedy".[6]

It is held in high esteem by specialist sports writers. Frank Keating called it a "classic" of sport-themed drama.[7] Peter Seddon of The Times included in his list of ten classic football dramas.[8]

DVD

It was included in the 2006 DVD box set Jack Rosenthal at ITV.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Deirdre Barlow . Stv.tv . 2008-12-17 . 2013-09-04 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140113210539/http://www.stv.tv/weather/65749-deirdre-barlow/ . 13 January 2014 .
  2. Web site: Another Sunday and Sweet F.A. (1972). BFI Screenonline. 24 April 2013.
  3. Web site: Jack Rosenthal | Tv Greats | A Television Heaven Biography . Televisionheaven.co.uk . 2013-09-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121015144151/http://televisionheaven.co.uk/jackrosenthal.htm . 15 October 2012 . dead .
  4. Chris Dunkley "Another Sunday and", The Times (London, England), 10 January 1972; p. 8; Issue 58371.
  5. "Putting on their Sunday worst", Sharkey, Peter, South Wales Evening Post, 21 October 2005, section Sport, p. 48
  6. Leslie Halliwell Halliwell's Teleguide, 1979, p. 12
  7. Sixty-six and all that. Frank Keating. The Spectator. 15 November 2006. 2013-09-04.
  8. "Box to box", Peter Seddon, The Times, 10 November 2001
  9. "Out this week DVDs", The Sunday Telegraph, 18 June 2006, Nexis. Web. Date accessed: 2013/04/24.