Hard Labour (Play for Today) explained

Series:Play for Today
Series No:3
Episode:20
Director:Mike Leigh
Producer:Tony Garnett
Prev:Access To The Children
Next:Man Above Men

"Hard Labour" is the 20th episode of third season of the British BBC anthology TV series Play for Today. The episode was a television play that was originally broadcast on 12 March 1973. "Hard Labour" was written and directed by Mike Leigh, produced by Tony Garnett, and starred Liz Smith in her first major role.

The episode is the most clearly drawn in all Leigh's work from the background in Higher and Lower Broughton where he grew up. "Though elements of autobiography are buried in all Leigh's films and plays, only Hard Labour is set in Salford, – the scenes in the Stones' house were shot in a house just two doors along from where the Leighs had lived in Cavendish Road."[1]

Cast

Theme

"The polarity between the worlds of Mrs Stone and the lady who cleans her house (the central figure, Mrs Thornley, the Catholic house-cleaner) is icily delineated. In the middle is the new housing estate, where Mrs Thornley's son, Edward, (played by Bernard Hill in his professional début), a car mechanic, lives with his wife Veronica (Alison Steadman)."[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Coveney, Michael . The World according to Mike Leigh . 53.
  2. Book: Coveney, Michael . The World according to Mike Leigh . 91.