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Phil
Redmond is the most well-known drama producer in Britain, and his
name is familiar in most households as the creator of the long-running
children's school drama, Grange Hill, and the soap opera,
Brookside. Redmond rose from a council estate childhood in north
Liverpool to become a media celebrity and owner of a large private
production company. As for most working-class children, a career
in the media lay outside his reach, and in 1968 he left his local
comprehensive school to train as a quantity surveyor in the building
trade. However, by 1972 he had abandoned this, and had resolved
instead to become a writer, and to take a university degree in social
studies to help him in the task. The course had a profound effect
on his career, and his writing and programs continually draw on
forms of social observation.
The
producer's career in television began as a scriptwriter for comedy
programs, but his major breakthough came in 1978 when his proposals
for a new children's drama series were adopted by Anna Home at the
BBC. What set Grange Hill apart from other high school dramas
was the program's realism and its interweaving of serious moral
and social issues, such as bullying, teenage sex and heroin addiction
into the story lines. The programme's unsentimental approach to
schooling and controversial subject matter has frequently provoked
complaints from pressure groups. Despite the objections, however,
the series has always been hugely popular with young people and
successive generations of school students have grown up with the
programme and enjoyed exposure to the problems of the "real" world.
Redmond wrote over thirty episodes for Grange Hill in its
first four seasons, but his ambitions were driving him towards becoming
a producer in his own right and following up the opportunities created
by the advent of the fourth terrestrial channel in Britain. He approached
the Head of Channel 4, Jeremy Isaacs and David Rose, its commissioning
editor for fiction, and succeeded in convincing them that they should
adopt his proposals for Brookside, a twice-weekly soap opera
focusing on social issues based around family life on a new private
housing estate. The setting up of Channel 4 brought a new style
of television company to Britain that operated by commissioning
independent production companies to make programs. In 1981 Redmond
secured a £4 million pound investment from Channel 4 to establish
his own company, Mersey Television, and to begin work on Brookside.
Much of the money was spent purchasing and fitting-out the real
Liverpool housing estate that was to serve both as the production
and company base.
The development of Redmond's soap opera is of considerable importance
to the history of the British television institution. Since its
launch in 1982, Brookside has provided Channel 4 with by
far its most popular program, and has played a major role in establishing
the viability of the channel. The setting up of Mersey Television
in Liverpool to produce the program represents a considerable innovation,
for it has created not only the largest independent production company
in Britain, with over a hundred full-time jobs for the local work
force, but has also significantly extended the opportunities for
television production outside London. With his production base secure,
Redmond has continued to maintain an anti-metropolitan stance and,
going against the industry's received wisdom, has championed the
cause of regional television.
Redmond
has always contended that the audience of popular drama will respond
positively to challenging subject matter. With Brookside
he was to prove his point. After a slightly shaky start, the program's
realist aesthetics, pioneering single-camera video production on
location, and engaging major social issues such as unemployment,
rape, drugs, and lesbian politics has won over an up-market audience
group not normally interested in soaps. The program has in this
way helped to raise the stakes of production thinking and has added
a new seriousness to popular drama. So a new generation of realist
drama programs, including top programs such as EastEnders
and Casualty, have followed Brookside's example and
explored contemporary social problems.
Redmond's
success as a producer necessarily stems as much from his shrewd
business instincts as his ability to generate creative ideas. The
making of a soap opera has much in common with other industrial
manufacturing processes, and Redmond's early training as a surveyor
instilled in him a respect for the kind of strict budget control
and resource management that underpins the whole Brookside
operation. The permanent locations then do not just contribute to
the realist look of the program, but are a way of reducing production
overheads. He has been equally adroit in marketing the program and
creating media events out of the dramatic sensations that are introduced
into the storylines from time to time.
The producer's wider business activities provide a conspicuous example
of the new entrepreneurial spirit that pervades broadcasting in
Britain following deregulation. In 1991 he was at the centre of
the £80 million consortium bid for the new ITV franchise in North
West England, that had been held by Granada since 1956. Though the
bid was unsuccessful the additional premises that had been acquired
to substantiate it have strengthened the power-base of Mersey Television
and enabled it to extend its production. In 1990 the output of Brookside
was increased to three episodes a week. In 1995 Redmond successfully
bid for a new youth soap opera, and Hollyoaks has been introduced
into Channel 4's early evening schedule. Currently the annual turnover
over the company is more than £12 million pounds.
Redmond
is also active in helping to formulate new training policy for the
television industry. He is particularly concerned with the vocational
opportunities for new entrants, and as Honorary Professor of Media
Studies at the Liverpool John Moores University he is helping to
develop a media degree programme with close industry links.
-Bob
Millington
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Phil Redmond
Photo courtesy of the British Film Institute
PHIL
REDMOND. Born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England, 1949. Began
career as a television scriptwriter contributing to Z Cars
and other series; established reputation with the realistic school
series Grange Hill for the BBC; subsequently moved into independent
television, setting up Mersey Television and creating Brookside
soap opera for Channel 4.
TELEVISION
SERIES
1978- Grange Hill
1981 Going Out
1982- Brookside
1990/91 Waterfront Beat
FURTHER READING
Geraghty, Christine. Women and Soap Opera. London: Polity,
1990.
_______________.
"Brookside: No Common Ground." Screen (London), 1983.
Redmond,
Phil. Brookside, The Official Companion. London: Weidenfeld
& Nicolson, 1987.
Tunstall, Jeremy. Television Producers. London: Routledge,
1993.
Vahimagi,
Tise, editor. British Television: An Illustrated Guide. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1994.
See
also British
Programming; British
Programme Production Companies; Brookside;
Grange Hill
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